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Chicken
Think the subject of contaminated
chicken has been done to death?
Think again.
Find out just how foul eating
fowl can be.
Consider these realities:
The average North American eats more than 50 pounds of chicken
per year roughly double the amount consumed just 20 years ago.
At least 1,000 US citizens are killed each year by contaminated
chicken. As many as 80 million others are sickened.
Inspectors have about two seconds to visually examine the
inside and outside of each chicken. At this rate, inspectors
may examine 12,000 or more chickens in one day.
There are presently 1,370 unfilled federal meat inspector
positions. In 1994 and 1995, more than 1.9 million inspection
tasks went unperformed because of these vacancies.
A 3-ounce serving of chicken breast
contains 75 mgs of cholesterol. A 3-ounce serving of ground
beef contains 72 mgs. No plant foods contain cholesterol.
The owner of the nation's largest
chicken producer Don Tyson earns about $5 million in salary,
dividends and bonuses each year. Pay for workers on the poultry
line are less than for any other manufacturing industry except
apparel.
More than 90 percent of US chickens
and eggs are produced on factory farms. Roughly 7.5 billion
chickens were slaughtered in the US in 1995.
In a single year, US poultry operations
use enough water to meet all the domestic needs of nearly 4.5
million North Americans.
Producing one egg takes about
63 gallons of water.
Full citations for this brochure are available
upon request or see www.earthsave.org.
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Eating chicken is proving
to be an especially hazardous enterprise...
For starters, approximately 30 percent of chicken
is tainted with Salmonella and 62 percent with its equally virulent
cousin, Campylobacter.
Time magazine calls raw chicken "one of
the most dangerous items in the American
home," and each year in the US alone, contaminated chicken
kills at least 1,000 people while sickening as many as 80 million
others.
It's no surprise really that chicken is decidedly
foul. Desperately crowded factory farms--where more than 90
percent of US chickens and eggs are raised--are fertile breeding
grounds for disease. Additionally, slaughterhouses do an excellent
job of spreading pathogens from one bird to the next.
Even if chicken was pathogen-free (clearly an
unsafe assumption for any shopper to make), it would hardly
qualify as wholesome. Not only is chicken nearly devoid of health-promoting
compounds found only in plant foods--things like complex carbohydrates,
antioxidants, phytochemicals and fiber--it also contains other
suspect ingredients rarely recommended as part of a healthy
diet.
Cholesterol. You'll find just as much
artery-filling cholesterol in chicken as in beef and pork. Cholesterol
is found exclusively in muscle tissue and can't be trimmed away.
Protein. People can meet or exceed their
protein requirements simply by choosing a varied plant-centered
diet and eating ample calories, says the American Dietetic Association.
No animal foods are necessary. Many North Americans already
eat twice the protein they need, and excessive protein has been
linked to osteoporosis, kidney disease and other medical problems.
Antibiotic Residues. Roughly half of
all antibiotics used in the US are fed to farm animals. If meat
contains drug residues, it's highly unlikely to be detected,
as these tests are rarely conducted.
Mystery Feed. Each year billions of pounds
of slaughterhouse leftovers are made into animal reed, much
of it for chickens. Chickens are also sometimes fed manure,
which may contain pesticides, drug residues, pathogens, heavy
metals, hormones and microbial toxins.
If you took a raw chicken and dropped
it in a cow pile or in a pile of chicken manure, would you
pick it up, wash it off and cook it for dinner? That's just
about what's happening at these plants.
-- Pat Godfrey, Inspector
Tyson's chicken processing plant, Springdale, Arkansas
Despite millions of people falling ill each
year, the US Department of Agriculture (the government agency
responsible for meat safety) continues to stamp every thigh,
breast and wing with its seal of approval, prompting many to
ask, "Who's minding the henhouse?" Sadly, USDA has
historically placed the interests of the influential poultry
industry ahead of those of the poultry-consuming public. A new,
more-scientific governrnent meat inspection system has been
agreed upon in principle, but tangible improvements remain years
away.
A poultry plant is not a good place
to work. When you miss a day they punish you. If you're
sick they punish you. The supervisors holler at you, but
you can't say anything. They treat you like a child.
-- Wonder Sims, 23, poultry worker.
The horrors found routinely inside chicken slaughterhouses
are not limited to grisly scenes of disassembled chickens. They
also include treacherous working conditions and dismally low
wages. In 1994, a Wall Street Journal writer described the work
he experienced first-hand in several slaughterhouses as, "faster
than ever before, subject to Orwellian control and electronic
surveillance, arid reduced to limited tasks that are numbingly
repetitive, potentially crippling and stripped of any meaningful
skills or chance to develop them... The work was so fast-paced
that it took on a zany chaos, with arms and boxes and poultry
flying in every direction."
Chicken production also exacts a steep environmental
toll. It takes up to 700 gallons of water, six pounds of grain, and
the equivalent of about one-fifth a gallon of gasoline to produce
one pound
of chicken. In addition, manure from the chicken industry is
directly responsible for wide-spread pollution of waterways
and groundwater.
Unless we dramatically curb our appetite for
chicken, the future seems grim. We can expect more people hospitalized
and killed by contaminated chicken, and more families mourning
the loss of loved ones. We can look forward to more rivers ;and
drinking water fouled with manure, more workers facing perilous
tasks and lousy pay, and much more animal suffering. Despite
the present horrors and bleak forecast, however, consumers continue
to sleepwalk through the checkout line with shopping carts full
of fowl. One can only wonder, when will we awaken from this
nightmare?
For references and more information on this
subject, please see: http://www.earthsave.org/chicken.htm
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