MAD COW DISEASE IS REAL
In
1986, a research professor of microbiology at Leeds University,
consultant to the World Health Organization (WHO), Dr Richard W. Lacey,
announced that scrapie, a form of Mad Cow Disease in sheep, Bovine
Spongiform Encephalopathies (BSE) and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) in
humans were one and the same thing.
In addition, he not
only said it could kill humans, but he warned that a wave of deaths
would soon hit Britain; he went still further and said that 100,00
people in Britain were already infected. In 1993, the WHO figures
indicated a total of 250 suspected, and 117 proven, CJD deaths with the
average age of the victims being 27 years (descending from the former
CJD average of 63 years).
The
greatest risk of infectivity could come from eating bones because the
procedures used to concentrate and purify gelatin could also create a
potent source of the BSE prion (the infecting organism). This would
include bone meal in food, i.e. calcium supplements, capsules, and
gelatin products. Milk is also a potent source of prions, and cannot be
destroyed by pasteurization; indeed the organism cannot be destroyed in
temperatures less than 800 degrees fare height.
Dr
Lacey’s advice was to stop eating meat now! Unfortunately this
advice was not readily accepted, in spite of the fact that by 1994 BSE
had been identified in 150,000 animals and in just over half of all the
cattle herds in Britain. But the disease is not only restricted to
Britain – in America –“ downer cow syndrome” (so called because the
infected cow just rolls over and dies); was spreading amongst cattle at
an alarming rate.
The
disease in humans first show symptoms of mental changes-such as problems
with co-ordination, recent memory loss, and slurred speech. Sometimes
obvious twitching of muscles can be seen, the facial expression becomes
fixed, and the person may stumble and
fall over. Over the next few weeks, the person becomes confused and
unaware, unable to read or recognize even close relatives. Towards the
end of the illness the patient is unconscious and not reacting to
anyone: often having fits or jerking spasms; and is incontinent, blind,
deaf, and speechless. Many of these symptoms are similar to those of
Alzheimer’s, but CJD has a totally different origin.

Why this
problem will get worse
1.
You can get BSE from any
part of an animal – blood transfusions, corneal transplants, and
hormonal injections, thyroid insulin and other medicinal injection
2.
Cattle and sheep are not
checked for the disease before they are slaughtered. The USDA in
America only studies the brains of 100 cows per every 100,000. That is
an extremely small sample.
3.
BSE/CJD cannot be
detected during incubation. BSE and CJD cause no antibody response.
When infection enters an animal or human, the victim’s immune system
shows no sign of fighting the infection as it does with bacteria,
germs, and viruses. This is because the immune system can neither
detect nor fight it. Scientists cannot use the antibody-search method
to see if someone is sick, as is done with AIDS.
4.
It can take years before
the full-blown disease appears. CJD disease takes between 10 and 50
years to eat away the human brain.
5.
BSE/CJD can be
transmitted to one’s children. Both cause a genetic mutation, which is
transmissible. Therefore, if you contract it, all your children will
get it too. Sheep and cows pass it to offspring. Chickens can put it
in their eggs.
6.
People have been dying
faster from CJD than earlier. It was once thought humans could
incubate the disease for up to five decades without going into the
final dementia stage, but lately British teens have been dying of it.
7.
It is extremely
difficult to kill prions. BSE and CJD prions cannot be killed the way
we fought the plague, cholera epidemics, or ebola-which is generally
done by burning bodies. BSE/CJD is passed on by means of prions, which
are proteins that degrade at 800 degree F. That is far higher than the
temperature, which would reduce them to ash.
8.
Prions infect every part
of the body, not just the brain. Although BSE/CJD attacks brains, it
is in every part of the victim. Therefore every part of the cow is
affected. None of it should be eaten. This contamination cannot
be removed by cooking.
9.
CJD deaths are occurring
now in America, but they are being mislabeled as Alzheimer’s disease.
A related problem is that labs will not test patients suspected of
having CJD, because they would have to burn down the lab in order to
be certain they had cleansed it of the prions.
10.
Even more than AIDS, BSE
is the most prevalent, virulent disease to hit this planet since the
plague. You can only avoid it by refusing to eat any thing which
contains meat
11.
Blood donors banned. On
January 17, 2001, the FDA ordered a ban on blood donations in the US
from anyone who has lived in Britain or Ireland longer than six
months, between the years 1980 and December 1996.
Conclusion
What about cooking the meat or milk? The
pasteurizing of milk, at 150 degrees F, and the cooking of meat at 212
degrees F has no effect on the prions. Therefore the only answer is to
go vegetarian. Choose vegetarian proteins like tofu, nuts, or beans. You
will be healthier in every way as these proteins do not tax the immune
system as much as flesh. Immune systems love a whole, live, raw food
diet; so raw dark green salads with nuts, sprouts and seeds. Cleanse
with enemas or colonics. Take periodic raw juice fasts.
Besides a vegan diet of vegetables grown on
organic soil, take “good fat” supplements like flaxseed. The oils and
proteins found in nuts and seeds are good. Be wary of dairy products;
they could be infected with prions. Make almond milk, brown rice milk,
and tofu milk. Take multi-vitamin supplements. Blue green algae,
spirulina, chlorella are complete foods with B-12. Animal source of B-12
is dangerous now. Get rid of other eco-hazards that stress the immune
system, such as fluoride toothpaste, perfume, dental fillings, and
solvents like propyl alcohol (used in all soap, detergent, shampoo, and
cleaning all factory food and juice machines.
Go 100% natural. Become a vegetarian.