Tag Archives: chicken

OMG! Help! Would YOU eat this chicken??

I just bought it yesterday…for dinner tonight.

And then, I just read this…
POSTED: 5:33 a.m. EDT, May 5, 2007
“Federal officials on Friday placed a hold on 20 million chickens raised for market in several states because their feed was mixed with pet food containing an industrial chemical.”

“…a risk assessment to determine whether the chickens would pose a threat to human health if eaten…” a USDA spokesman said…”may be completed as early as Monday.”

The Story:

http://www.cnn.com/2007/HEALTH/05/05/petfood.recall.ap/index.html

Monday? This bird is for dinner later today, Saturday.

What do I do? What would YOU do?
(btw…I’m in Oregon…the chicken is a Foster Farms, fresh)
Thanks for all the advice so far…especially s7lmb.
I posted this mainly for others who might also have concern about a recently purchased chicken.

I went online to Foster Farms…

http://www.fosterfarms.com/faq/quality.asp

and called the 800 number and left a message. I bought the chicken at my local Safeway and I’ll give them a call later to see what they have to advise.
Thanks all.

Raw food for your cat?

I’ve been reading alot about how raw food is good for cats. My cat is currently on a moist and dry food diet. She gets a small can of moist food in the morning and a small can of moist food in the evening and I leave dry food for her 24 hours to free feed. She’s 10 months old and very active and happy and healthy. I have read though that a raw diet is the best but I’m curious if cats can contract the same diseases we can from raw food like worms and e-coli. People tell me they feed their cats raw chicken but what about bird flu. Is this really healthy for cats?? Let me know your experiences and if you feed your cat raw food.

What do you think of this article?? truth or fiction…?

FACTORY FARMED CHICKEN

Almost all chicken meat in the United States is produced through the “factory farming” system, in which animals are closely crowded together in filthy, disease-ridden conditions. Because of these unhealthy conditions, many chickens die even before they get to the slaughterhouse. For example, in an operation with 100,000 broiler chickens, approximately 250 birds die per day. Before being caught for the trip to the slaughterhouse, food and water are withdrawn; at the slaughterhouse, birds wait in trucks another 1 to 9 hours to be killed, sometimes in very hot or very cold weather.

Chicken is far worse than beef in terms of contamination and bacteria. The Atlanta Constitution reported in 1991: “Every week throughout the South, millions of chickens leaking yellow pus, stained by green feces, contaminated by harmful bacteria, or marred by lung and heart infections, cancerous tumors or skin conditions are shipped to consumers.” Salmonella is present in over one-third of all chickens, and many millions of Americans are infected each year. The symptoms of salmonella poisoning are very similar to the flu (though only occasionally fatal), and thus many who are infected may never even be aware of what they have. To prevent these problems, chickens are usually heavily dosed with antibiotics (more than half of all antibiotic use in the U. S. is on factory farms!), but this indiscriminate use of antibiotics in turn helps create resistant strains of salmonella and other disease-causing germs, decreasing the effectiveness of antibiotics to fight human infections.

HEART DISEASE, CANCER, AND MEDICAL COSTS

And even if bacterial contamination were eliminated, we still have the tremendous problems of heart disease and cancer, the leading causes of death in the United States. Repeated efforts to lower cholesterol levels through switching from beef to chicken have ended in failure. Chicken is somewhat lower in fat than beef, but it still contains quite a bit of fat and even more cholesterol per calorie than does beef or pork.

Moreover, meat which is lower in fat is always higher in protein, and excess protein is damaging to health just as is excess fat. Chicken which has 29% of its calories as fat contains 71% of its calories as protein, while ground beef which has 49% of calories of fat has 51% of its calories as protein. In terms of excess protein consumption chicken is worse than beef or pork. Problems caused by or related to excess protein consumption include kidney stones, kidney disease, osteoporosis, bladder cancer, and lymphoma. Chicken meat also completely lacks fiber; lack of fiber is linked to a variety of digestive disorders ranging from constipation to colon cancer. The three basic problems with our American-style diet—too much fat, too much protein, and lack of fiber—are thus all made worse by chicken consumption. Those who switch from beef to chicken are at best trading one set of health hazards for a different set.

Chicken has done little for the nation’s health. In the past twenty-five years, we have seen a huge increase in poultry consumption; but health care expenditures during the same period showed phenomenal growth, now costing us hundreds of billions of dollars each year in the United States. The “switch” from beef to chicken has evidently had little, if any, effect on rising medical costs.

ENVIRONMENTAL RISKS

Raising chickens affects the environment as well. Feeding grain to chicken may be somewhat less inefficient than feeding grain to cattle, but it is still wasteful—you must feed at least three times the amount of protein, calories, and other nutrients to the chickens in the form of plant foods than you retrieve in animal flesh at the end. Each year millions of children die due to malnutrition or starvation, and yet the Western countries continue to waste this grain by creating more and more chicken flesh.

Moreover, chicken production results in incredible quantities of manure; a one-million hen complex produces 125 tons of wet manure each day. Animal agriculture in the U. S. produces many times more waste products than humans do. In many areas of the country livestock manure causes dangerous contamination of the drinking water due to nitrates. Even when used as a plant fertilizer, chicken manure can cause difficulties, as in Texas several years ago when cantaloupe fertilized with chicken manure caused sickness in human beings. The fault lay not with the cantaloupe but with the disease-ridden chicken manure.

COMPASSION FOR ANIMALS

And what about the effect of the “factory farming” system on the animals themselves? Over 7.5 billion birds are killed each year in the United States. We would probably like to believe that these animals at least lived fairly comfortable lives until they were taken to the slaughterhouse, and would also like to believe that chickens are then quickly and painlessly killed. Unfortunately, this is not true.

Chickens are crowded together in cramped, windowless sheds, and must breathe concentrated excretory ammonia fumes which damage their eyes and lungs. They are mutilated by “debeaking”—the practice of cutting off most of the chicken’s beak when the chicken is young. The reason for “debeaking” is that without it, chickens in their cramped circumstances would peck each other and even attack and kill each other. Obviously, a chicken which needs to be “debeaked” in the first place is not a happy chicken; and the process of debeaking (akin to partial amputation of a human finger, without anesthesia) is quite painful in itself. Birds are deliberately bred to gain more weight than their legs and feet can support, leading to more pain.

Turkey production is no better than chicken production. Turkeys, like chickens, are kept in intensely overcrowded quarters; they must be heavily dosed with antibiotics, are subject to many diseases, and have their beaks and their toes partially amputated (without anaesthetic, of course). Turkeys over the years have been bred to be fatter and fatter; today’s turkey is so overweight that it cannot mate and must be bred through artificial insemination.

“Humanely raised” poultry avoids some of the worst abuses, such as debeaking and overcrowding. But chickens and turkeys are still killed long before their natural lifespan has elapsed, and it still is not a healthful food, as meat from any chicken or turkey—no matter how “humanely” raised—is going to be high in fat or protein (or both), and completely lacking in fiber.

Chickens do not die easy deaths, either. The “humane slaughter” laws do not cover chicken or any other poultry. Slaughterhouses are operated as mechanical “disassembly” lines with as little human intervention as possible. Stunning devices are not required by law, and even where used only 1/3 of the chickens are effectively stunned. Some chickens have their throats slit and bleed to death while fully conscious. Millions of unfortunate chickens also escape the automatic knives that slit their throats, and thus go into the next stage—the scalding tank—alive and fully conscious.

In Chicago, where can I find Miller’s Pride Amish Chicken? And is it really natural/organic? any more brands?

I am looking for Organic and/or Natural chicken in the Chicago area. Can anyone give me a store(s) location where I might purchase it. I recently discoverd that Perdue feeds their birds “biotechnical” feed. Another term for GMO. Please, somebody help me?

Is it okay to feed my bird some turkey or BBQ chicken?

I think he has the right to know what it tastes like.

Simple 3D CAD software – free or cheap?

What’s a simple CAD software I can use to design simple stuff like a bird house or a chicken nest box? I want to make nice technical drawings in 3d, but don’t need all the extras that expensive CAD software offers.

Is it wrong morally to feed chicken nuggets to my mothers cockateil?

She says I am forcing it to be a cannibal, but I am not forcing it. Anything fried, french fries, nuggetts, this bird loves. And it begs me to feed it some. So do you think there is something wrong with feeding a bird to a bird?