Kroger made a business decision so "they" didn't need to do anything.

Now that Kroger has protected their brand, "they" can inspect the farm and 
declare the farmer's produce safe.

Not that you can trust "they" to do their jobs, especially since "they" messed 
up the first time around.

And one would hope that Americans are smart enough that they don't have to be 
told that lettuce shipped 2000 miles and handled by numerous unwashed masses 
may pick up some nasty stuff, even if it has been washed immediately after 
picking.

On Jan 1, 2012, at 5:12 AM, Mugsy Lunsford wrote:

> Hey Bruce, 
> 
> Sad to see this, we have enough trouble getting the kids to eat their veggies 
> http://www.wtvr.com/news/us--stores-pull-lettuce-20111230,0,7044475.story
> 
> pretty daggone weird to me that they pull all the lettuce because of one 
> field next to theirs, wouldn't it make more sense to send out teams and test 
> the lettuce in situ? 
> 
> One would hope that all lettuce is thoroughly washed before being sold, I 
> mean, they do wash it, right? 

Francis Drouillard
[email protected]



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