Posted on 04/21/2007 3:19:07 PM PDT by Flavius
hemNutra, the Las Vegas importer of the contaminated wheat gluten that led to the original 100-plus packaged pet food recallÑalso imports pet sickening rice protein concentrate from China, "though from another source". "The company has been testing those shipments," according to spokesman Steve Stern. (Andrew Bridges, AP, April 18, 2007).
In other words, ChemNutra, whose Chinese headquarters are within 50 miles of wheat gluten-producing Xuhou Anying Biologic Technology Development Co. Ltd., is up to its bag brim in the rice gluten poison pet food scandal.
Binzhou Futian Biology Technology Co. Ltd. is suspected as the company making the rice protein.
In the poisonous path leading to dead or sickened animals, first came North America, then Puerto Rico. Now 30 pets are dead from contaminated pet food in South Africa.
(Excerpt) Read more at canadafreepress.com ...
TANKS for the ping...
there is a problem
a front quisling companies are putting up stores in swamp land
for specific purpose to be able to hide country of origin
how much tea does one have in their harbors now
Of all the possible chemicals that could have been added accidentally, melamine just happens to be one that is 2/3 nitrogen by weight.
bump
bump
“Now, I’m not one for embargo’s, or tariffs, but I think our trade situation with China needs a major reevaluation.”
It needs reevaluated for a whole host of reasons, one of which is the suicidal tendencies of our corporations, who send manufacturing over there and end up developing their own competition.
A perfect example was in the WSJ on Friday. Favorite car of the up-and-coming Chinese? A Chinese-produced Buick. Oh, excuse me, it USED to be that Buick. Now, the company that was producing Buicks for GM has come out with their OWN upscale car.
GM’s response? “We were told early on that it might come to this, but we felt it was important to be in China anyway.”
It’s happening in industry after industry. As Bugs Bunny said: “What a bunch of maroons!”
It needs reevaluation, but that's not the cure. The cure will be when the markets for Chinese goods/ingredients begins to dry up because the public is no longer interested in products that stem from them. THAT's what will drive a market correction.
And, I'm ready. And so are people I talk to in my weekend retirement fun job as demo rep. I think this pet food situation has put the problem front-and-center, and now with the possible (probable?) inclusion of melamine in human food, I think the situation will overwhelm the food industry and the FDA very quickly. People simply aren't going to stand for it.
Was it just practice for the big one: human food?
And we all appreciate your hard work.
Could you add me to your ping list? Thank you.
TY Carolyn
Would you please add me to the dog food recall ping list? THANKS!
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