Posted on 05/01/2011 11:36:53 AM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks
Milk might do a body good, but if it’s unpasteurized milk sold by an Amish farmer across state lines, it’s a whole other story… or at least according to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The Washington Times reports:
A yearlong sting operation, including aliases, a 5 a.m. surprise inspection and surreptitious purchases from an Amish farm in Pennsylvania, culminated in the federal government announcing this week that it has gone to court to stop Rainbow Acres Farm from selling its contraband to willing customers in the Washington area.
The product in question: unpasteurized milk.
Its a battle thats been going on behind the scenes for years, with natural foods advocates arguing that raw milk, as its also known, is healthier than the pasteurized product, while the Food and Drug Administration says raw milk can carry harmful bacteria such as salmonella, E. coli and listeria.
And so, let the nanny state regulation begin. Well, actually, let it continue. We’re seeing an awful lot of it these days, especially when it comes to food. Take vending machines, for example. Heritage’s Diane Katz writes:
To temper the snack food cravings we are supposedly incapable of controlling, Congress is forcing vendors to post the calorie counts of vending machine items. Thus, well supposedly pick the healthier brand of potato chips, cookies, candy, and soft drinks.
Expect to see more of it. Last year, President Barack Obama signed the FDA Food Safety Modernization Act, which grants the FDA a host of new powers. Katz explains:
The FDA Food Safety Modernization Act would authorize the FDA to dictate how farmers grow fruits and vegetables, including rules governing soil, water, hygiene, packing, temperatures, and even what animals may roam which fields and when. It would also increase inspections of food facilities and tax them to do so. And, fulfilling the dream of a long line of agency officials, the bill grants the FDA unilateral authority to order recalls.
On top of being costly ($1.4 billion in new spending between 2011 and 2015), the necessity of new regulatory powers is questionable. The motivating force behind FDA regulations — and the reason for the crackdown on Rainbow Acre Farms — is a concern over food-borne illness. Katz says that incidents of such illnesses “have actually been declining for more than a decade, in spite of higher consumption of the raw foods that are most often associated with outbreaks of food-borne illness.”
These things get lumped together in government statistics. At the end of a year they can claim they did that and the other thing to justify their budgets.
Even so, I would neither drink raw milk from an Amish farm, nor eat food at their kitchen tables. I know the Plain People quite well — I’ve lived in Southeast and Central Pennsylvania for going on sixty years and have been on dozens of their farms — and their standard of cleanliness is simply not acceptable.
Even so, I would neither drink raw milk from an Amish farm, nor eat food at their kitchen tables. I know the Plain People quite well Ive lived in Southeast and Central Pennsylvania for going on sixty years and have been on dozens of their farms and their standard of cleanliness is simply not acceptable.
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Fair enough, I don’t know much about the Amish, so I’ll take your word.
>>>> Even so, I would neither drink raw milk from an Amish farm, nor eat food at their kitchen tables. I know the Plain People quite well Ive lived in Southeast and Central Pennsylvania for going on sixty years and have been on dozens of their farms and their standard of cleanliness is simply not acceptable>>>
But are you in favor of the government forcing folks who WOULD choose to drink their milk to stop? THAT is the question, not whether or not you are one of those customers.
No, not at. Please see my original post, which addresses this exact question. If you want to drink milk produced under late eighteenth - early nineteenth standards of cleanliness and sanitation, go right ahead. As long as people are warned about the danger, that's fine. It's none of my business if you and your bridge club want to play Russian Roulette at the end of your every-other-Wednesday game. It's also not part of governance at any level: local, state, or federal.
Ok, thanks for clearing that up. And FTR, I choose NOT to.
Garden list ping?
Thanks for the ping!
I’m wondering how I’ll see the teeny tiny print on the back of the vending machine food, while it’s in the machine.
Maybe I’ll just select what I want, without consulting the government’s opinion first.
They were busted fby the FEDS for crossing state lines.
Raw milk sales still require a permit in PA.
http://www.das.psu.edu/pdf/rawmilkpacode62008.pdf
Without the permit, the state will get you:
http://www.pennlive.com/midstate/index.ssf/2008/05/nolt_farm_protest.html
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