Re: This Is Your Brain On Cow

2001-06-13 Thread David Honig

At 09:30 AM 6/12/01 -0700, Bill Stewart wrote:
At 08:01 AM 06/12/2001 -0700, David Honig wrote:
I know how to read, and I read _Science_.  A sidebar called American's own
prion disease describing Chronic Wasting Disease belonging to the
transmissable spongiform encephalopathies (like Creutzfeld-Jakob and BSE).
Vol 292 1 June 01 p 1641

Is this from feeding Soylent Green to prisoners,
or is this from unsanitary feeding of meat animals at prisons farms?

It may well be from an otherwise useful peptide sequence which
has  a slight, spontaneous, contagious potential for turning bad.

Sometimes, your illness is because your grandfather adsorbed a cosmic ray.

Myself, I prefer Slurm (tm)





 






  







Re: This Is Your Brain On Cow

2001-06-12 Thread David Honig

At 05:14 PM 6/10/01 -1000, Reese wrote:
At 03:59 PM 6/10/01, David Honig wrote:
 At 02:09 PM 6/10/01 -0400, Greg Newby wrote:
 This is because there are strict US FDA regulations concerning the use
 of infected beef in restaraunts, but they have little to say about
 what individuals in private homes eat.
 
 
 Indeed there's been a few cases of something like BSE in Americans
 who've eaten elk and / or deer.  But since the infected aren't fed
 back into the population, there's no way for it to spread.  (E.g.,
 if it arises spontaneously now and then.)

I'm on the Pro-Med list and if there were any positive link between
eating BSE-infected deer or elk, they'd be talking about it there.
They aren't.  Currently, there is only a recommendation that hunters
not eat brains or spinal cords.

What is it you know or think you know, that they do not?


I know how to read, and I read _Science_.  A sidebar called American's own
prion disease describing Chronic Wasting Disease belonging to the 
transmissable spongiform encephalopathies (like Creutzfeld-Jakob and BSE).
Vol 292 1 June 01 p 1641

Part of a larger article, Is the US doing enough to prevent mad cow disease
p 1639-1641





 






  







Re: This Is Your Brain On Cow

2001-06-11 Thread David Honig

At 02:09 PM 6/10/01 -0400, Greg Newby wrote:
This is because there are strict US FDA regulations concerning the use
of infected beef in restaraunts, but they have little to say about
what individuals in private homes eat.


Indeed there's been a few cases of something like BSE in Americans
who've eaten elk and / or deer.  But since the infected aren't fed
back into the population, there's no way for it to spread.  (E.g.,
if it arises spontaneously now and then.) 

Grass-eaters are not carnivores, much less cannibals, in the wild.  By
definition.







 






  







Re: This Is Your Brain On Cow

2001-06-11 Thread Bill Stewart

At 02:09 PM 06/10/2001 -0400, Greg Newby wrote:
Aha, yes.  Being a vegan, I don't need to worry about such things.  I
demonstrate my courage by snorting a line of caffeine, followed by
some guacamole.

An acquaintance of mine and his druggie friends decided that
since many drugs have different effects depending on whether they're
consumed in original plant form, refined powder, or smoked,
they'd try smoking some caffeine pills.
Crunched up their No-Doz, put it in their pipe and smoked it.
...
Do not try this.
...
Really.
...
Everything caffeine does to you, the jitters, the headaches, etc.,
all at once in a big unpleasant rush...
...
Stick to the brewed stuff.





Re: This Is Your Brain On Cow

2001-06-10 Thread Greg Newby

Aha, yes.  Being a vegan, I don't need to worry about such things.  I
demonstrate my courage by snorting a line of caffeine, followed by
some guacamole.

If I'm feeling up to pushing the edge, I may use non-organically
grown avocados.

BTW, the This Is Your Brain on Cow ads, which I saw while in NYC
recently, are done by McDonalds' advertising agency.  Evidently, the
real fear (but maybe this is just conspiracy theory) is that mad cow
will become so popular that McDonalds will suffer lost revenues.  

This is because there are strict US FDA regulations concerning the use
of infected beef in restaraunts, but they have little to say about
what individuals in private homes eat.

  -- Greg

PS: I hear that the Japan story is a hoax, as infected beef is
almost impossible to get there.  People pay money for the thrill,
but are really just getting marinated chicken.


On Sun, Jun 10, 2001 at 01:27:37PM -0400, Declan McCullagh wrote:
 
 
 http://www.madcowculture.com/madcow-00073.html
 
 Not surprisingly, the mad cow scare has gone underground and spawned a fan 
 club that professes to live on the edge. Club members usually wear black, 
 go to all-night clubs in Greenwich Village, and demonstrate courage by 
 doing a line of cocaine. The new fad is a line of spine that involves 
 inhaling through the nostrils a line of pulverized, powdered spine 
 ostensibly from a really mad-cow cow. So pervasive is this practice that 
 New York health officials have launched a television campaign called This 
 Is Your Brain On Cow, showing hapless young men and women braying at the moon.
 
 In a less dramatic manner some restaurants are simply adding a note of 
 intrigue to expensive, bland menus. For example in Japan blowfish is 
 considered a delicacy. However, it must be cooked properly or the consumer 
 could die a very painful death.
 
 A similar practice is currently the rage in England where enterprising, 
 risk-taking upper-class families actually seek out suspect meat for the 
 Sunday roast claiming their pedigree will protect them.