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Health & Wellness

Pet Food Politics: Why Our Pets Still Aren't Safe

By Jill Richardson, AlterNet. Posted September 10, 2008.


The author of Pet Food Politics exposes how the '07 pet food crisis happened and why it is a sign of a larger problem with our own food system.
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In 2007, American pet owners found out about a large-scale experiment the food industry carried out on our pets. What happens if you streamline, centralize and outsource food production with no goals other than profit? In the case of pet food, the system worked until it didn't. And when it didn't, thousands of dogs and cats died due to eating more than 100 brands of pet food contaminated with melamine and cyanuric acid. Like a dead canary used to alert miners of methane and carbon monoxide, our dead pets are a warning about our own food safety.

Marion Nestle, professor of nutrition, food studies and public health at New York University, recognized the significance of the 2007 pet food crisis immediately. She did what our government should have done: She researched how melamine and cyanuric acid could have entered the pet (and human) food supply under the guise of wheat gluten and chronicled the story from start to finish in her newest book, Pet Food Politics: The Chihuahua in the Coal Mine.

Nestle points out in previous books that it can be hard to prove the effects of any one food because humans eat diets of many foods, making it almost impossible to identify the effects of any specific one. Pets serve as our canaries because they do eat diets consisting almost entirely of one food. Also, the pet food business is even more centralized than the highly consolidated human food supply. With difficult nutrition and taste specifications and expensive manufacturing equipment required to make pet food, companies find it most economical to outsource production to specialized operations like Menu Foods, the company responsible for importing the tainted wheat gluten. When the Chinese supplier substituted wheat flour dressed up with melamine and cyanuric acid for wheat gluten, pets died on a mass scale.

Pet Food Politics reads like a gripping murder mystery, exposing how the pet food crisis happened, what it means for the human food supply, and why the current system of government oversight is insufficient for pets, farm animals and humans. I've enjoyed each of Nestle's books more than the last, and I found Pet Food Politics the most entertaining of all. I also appreciate Nestle's compassion for animals, as she understands that we parents of furry children love our cats and dogs as more than "just pets." I asked Nestle a few questions about Pet Food Politics; you'll find her answers below.

Jill Richardson: At what point did you know you needed to write about the pet food crisis of 2007? What in particular about the story made it a compelling topic for you?

Marion Nestle: This is a long story. My book What to Eat came out in 2006. It's not really a book about what to eat; it's about how to think about what to eat using supermarkets as an organizing device. I went through supermarkets, aisle by aisle, trying to answer every question anyone might have about the issues related to food choices, from nutrition to environmental impact. I kept seeing this huge aisle devoted to dog and cat foods and would look at the products but couldn't understand their labels. If I didn't understand them, I suspected other people might not either. My partner, Mal Nesheim, is a retired animal scientist. He had no trouble understanding them. Aha! Let's do a book together! We signed a contract with Harcourt in February 2007 to write What Pets Eat. And then, one month later, came the recalls. I knew we would have to talk about the recalls in our book. I started working on what I envisioned as a 10-page appendix to What Pets Eat about the recalls, but I totally got into trying to figure out what had happened. The piece got ridiculously out of hand. Fortunately, University of California Press picked it up as a separate book.

JR: What was the top reason that allowed the pet food problems to reach the magnitude they did? Was it preventable?

MN: The number one reason is that nobody was paying any attention to food ingredients imported from China. After that, the reasons multiply. Pet food companies had no idea where their ingredients came from. The manufacture of pet foods is complicated, so it is centralized in a few manufacturing facilities that make many different brands. The food supply for pets is so tightly linked to the food supplies for people and farm animals that the food supplies cannot be separated; what affects one, affects all. The FDA has lost so much funding over the last 10 years or so that it can't do its job. And China is an important trading partner as well as an exporter of cheap goods. This is a hugely complicated, interconnected story that I thought was well worth telling.


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See more stories tagged with: pets, pet food, pet food politics

Jill Richardson is the founder of the blog La Vida Locavore and a member of the Organic Consumers Association policy advisory board. Her first book, about food politics, is due out in June 2009.

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Fresh Garbage
Posted by: Nicnic on Sep 10, 2008 3:22 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Once again we find the incredible, although tragic service animals provide us. We can see clearly how we’ve been made diseased by examining how they’ve been made diseased. I grew up in a small isolated town in the Middle Eastern dessert during the 50’s. Everyone had cats since dogs we’re not permitted. There’s a lot we didn’t have, including commercialized cat food. Never once during my 16 year in that town did I ever hear of a cat getting sick and dying from anything other than natural causes. I’m sure it must have happened but it wasn’t on the radar. Now, we have pet meds to supplement pet foods and I’m hard pressed to find someone’s pet that doesn’t have leukemia, cancer or some costly degenerative condition.

Simply put, it’s easier to see the results of this industrial campaign in pets given their generational turnaround. But I have to tell you, the most amazing creature of risk ever raised is the current generation of US children. By and large it is the first human anomaly of it type so we can only imagine how bad the scenario will be. Each one of them is a literally ticking time bomb. Their average life span will be less than 50 at best. My niece has had cholesterol levels of 260 since the age of 10 and she still believes she got it from her parents. Her favorite food at the age of 15 is still Pixie Sticks. They are the first generation to be totally raised on absolute garbage and artificiality. You can see it already in their distorted physical and mental characteristics. But it’s even more telling in the statistics. As with pet food, in our town of 5,000 we had 1 kid that I know of that had asthma. I believe the stats here in the US are now close to 1 in 4. And that's just for starters but it's really across the spectrum. I highlighted asthma because they are only now linking it to systemic levels of artificial ingredients like dyes, sweeteners and preservatives prevalent in morning cereals, sugary snacks, fast foods and the general fare of today's unfortunate youth.

For these reasons and more I’ve been an organic vegan since 1989. Animal food, especially meat is not the enemy per se. It’s just that you have to see it for what it is. It’s the equivalent of your air conditioning filter through which thousands and thousands of pounds of contaminated, unregulated, discarded and diseased food and water is collected and retained by a single pound of flesh that is consumed in a single day. The reality of how bad this situation is has been hidden from you for years. You just need to adopt a rational humane mindset, unplug from it all for a short period time and you’ll be amazed at the truth about what you see and discover.

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too close
Posted by: SekhmetsatRa on Sep 10, 2008 4:21 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Tufts university and Illinois U are doing research into how canned seafood for cats causes hyperthyroid. what do you think it does to people?

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Great observations
Posted by: clvngodess on Sep 10, 2008 7:46 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'd like to add that I don't know of any cats in my circle of friends and family that have fed their pets commercial foods that don't have in later life, kidney disease. Mine included. This is directly related to the foods we are feeding them. I now am forced to feed my elderly cats prescription formulations. Something that I find to be deceptive and a tad scandalous in the first place. The kidney issue related to the foods could be avoided all together if the manufacturing of the cat food was better regulated. The prescription aspect of the process is simply extortion by the vets and food vendors.

I too am an organic vegetarian. Not vegan, but leaning that direction.

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Be The Change!
Posted by: ilsewdm on Sep 10, 2008 9:42 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I changed my diet to RAW VEGAN and my dog's and cat's diets to RAW PREY, that is raw meat with bones & organs. I'm strong, healthy, and getting leaner by the day while eating fantastic fruits and vegetables. My animals are happy, energetic, healthy. Now, if there was just an easy way to deal with world politics, politicians, corporations, greed, etc. short of living in a cave.

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Never had a sick pet in my life.
Posted by: ciccio on Sep 10, 2008 10:31 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Growing up in a family of 4 children meant growing up with pets - the good old days. Everybody had one, my father had two dogs and a cat. The only manufactured food any pet ever got was condensed milk for the cat, my parents used only that in their coffee, come coffee time, out comes the cat.The rabbit ate what grew in the garden. We always cooked a bit more than needed, after dinner my father would gather all the leftovers and cook them up with some filler, oats, corn or stale bread and that was the cats and dogs dinner, we thrived, so did our pets. Forty years ago, in a developing country, I had the chance to have an extensive tour of a Fray Bentos corned beef plant, I have never eaten any canned or processed meat since, nor would I ever feed an animal any.

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Pets are people too WAPF
Posted by: ukeman on Sep 11, 2008 12:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I feed my pets as much healthy meat/veg/starch as I can afford. Usually it is a byproduct of what I want for myself. I mean I love my pets, and i have children too.
WAPF check it out online; learn about traditional optimal nutrition.
Low fat, politically correct diet dictocracy of the last 30 years has got it wrong. There is as much cancer and heart disease now as there was 30 yrs ago; in fact more. You need to go back about 75 years to see our animal food products were raised properly.

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I don't worry about my dogs and cats
Posted by: drSooz on Sep 11, 2008 1:21 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
because I've been feeding them organic cat and dog food for over five years. It contains no soy, corn, wheat, out and out garbage, or rendered road-kill. They are in great shape, despite the beagle being 12 and the shiba being diabetic.

Cheap pet food also contains the drugs used to put down pets, cows, pigs, horses, and so on. Vets have noticed a need for increased doses of the drugs to put them to sleep or put them under for surgery. Not my animals. They eat expensive and healthy food. THere are quite a few organic "wholesome" pet food companies. I'll gladly pay more for their food. They're worth it.

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