Dispositivo Alteracion Mental
by Malditos Cyborgs.org
__________________________________________________________________________
Milk...Help
Yourself
(To Cancer, AIDS, and Multiple Sclerosis?)
by
Michael Greger
Food
poisoning causes illness in at least a third of the entire
U.S. population every year and the fraction is increasing.
Thousands of people die. Most food poisoning is a result
of our eating nonhuman animals. What people don't realize
is that drinking milk can be just as deadly.
Listeriosis
is a virulent bacterial disease found in cow's milk striking
at least 1700 people each year in the U.S. 75% of those
infected suffer from potentially fatal meningitis or encephalitis
and 25% die. Infants, the elderly, and the immune suppressed
are at particular risk. Although frankfurters are commonly
infested also, listeriosis is an enormous problem for the
dairy industry, costing them millions of dollars a year.
The reason listeria bacteria are so frightening is that
they can survive pasteurization and can grow to dangerous
levels in refrigerated foods. In addition they survive the
manufacturing process for cheese, and ice cream production.
They can even survive at least 12 weeks in non-fat dry milk.
Reporting on a big outbreak in Massachusetts, researchers
from the Centers for Disease Control tried to down-play
the seriousness of the disease by urging people to remember
the potential benefits of milk. It is unclear if they are
talking about the high saturated fat or the cholesterol
content. That particular outbreak, and the ensuing deaths,
were strongly linked to the drinking of milk pasteurized
at temperatures and times exceeding current FDA regulations
in a facility that was "clean, modern, and well run"
according to the FDA and the Massachusetts Department of
Health.
There
are also some viral diseases that one may want to look out
for. As considerable doubt is cast on the green monkey theory
and the African origin of HIV in general, the scientific
community is looking elsewhere. Some are looking to BIV,
bovine immunodeficiency virus or "cow's AIDS"
as it has been dubbed. BIV can indeed infect human cells
and is morphologically identical to, and cross-reacts on
the Western Blot test with, HIV. The virus integrates itself
into the DNA of white blood cells of cows which are found
in milk. Even heat sterilization does not destroy this DNA.
BIV
is widely distributed among cattle in the United States.
Long time consumer advocate Jeremy Rifkin has called for
a quarantine of infected cattle while the human risk is
investigated and also for government testing of dairy products
to check for possible contamination. Our corporate-run government,
however, sees no reason to quarantine or test.
Human
beings are continuously exposed to other cow viruses also
through dairy products like milk. The scariest virus is
probably bovine leukemia virus (BLV). It was shown years
ago that chimpanzees fed milk from leukemic cows from birth
died of leukemia in the first year of life. Between 10-70%
of the cows in the US are infected with BLV and approximately
60% of the herds surveyed similarly infected. BLV has been
linked to acute lymphoid leukemia (ALL). ALL is a form of
acute childhood leukemia. Untreated children usually die
within 6 months of symptom onset from this disease. Properly
treated children have a 20-30% chance of survival. There
is a high correlation between ALL in human males and cattle
density and the presence of BLV infected herds. Dairy farming
in general has been linked to increased leukemia risk. Butcherers
and slaughterhouse workers also have a high risk of developing
ALL. They also have an increased risk of other lymphatic
malignancies and lung cancer. Human leukemia clusters have
often even been associated with cattle and dairy industry
exposure. Finally, some studies in Sweden and the former
USSR show that areas with the most bovine leukemia also
have significantly higher human leukemia.
To
infect humans through milk, the cancer virus must be able
to survive the pasteurization process, survive refrigeration,
survive the digestive tract and gain entry into the tissues.
Although there is still controversy whether the virus can
survive pasteurization, there is evidence to suggest that
all of the above are possible and even that BLV is probably
also insect borne. After gaining entrance to the tissues
the virus must of course be able to infect cells. BLV has
been shown to infect human, chimpanzee, and rhesus monkey
cells. In fact human nerve cells, in which BLV can replicate,
are highly susceptible to BLV infection.
The
virus's affinity for nerve cells brings up another dire
possibility. Its been known for some time that milk fat
consumption and multiple sclerosis incidence have been strongly
correlated. Among 40 occupations in one study, multiplesclerosis
was considerably higher than expected in dairy farmers.
In fact among 21 countries milk was found to be the major
statistical determinant of multiple sclerosis. In addition,
milk production and consumption both contribute significantly
to multiple sclerosis mortality. Diets involving a sharp
reduction in the use of dairy products is even said to help
MS patients. Although some studies have not been able to
find evidence of BLV infection in groups of MS and ALL sufferers,
others have found evidence and some infected cells do not
synthesize detectable viral substances.
According
to USDA Veterinary Medical Offcer Dr. Janice M. Miller at
the National Animal Disease Center "There has not been
any significant effort in the US to control the virus [BLV]...primarily
because of insufficient support from persons or groups representing
the livestock industry."