FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
THE DOUBLE
STANDARD ON TRADING CONTAMINATED
CHINESE AND U.S. CONSUMER PRODUCTS
CHICAGO, IL, July
30, 2007 --/WORLD-WIRE/--The
dangers of cheap Chinese exports of
contaminated consumer products have
received extensive media coverage,
besides the formation of a
Cabinet-level Product Safety Panel.
These exports include personal care
products, such as toothpaste
contaminated with the anti-freeze
diethylene glycol, honey
contaminated with dangerous
antibiotics, and food contaminated
with banned drugs, pesticides and
carcinogens. In contrast, Congress
and the media remain silent on the
export of dangerous U.S. consumer
products, besides their decades-old
domestic sale.
U.S. personal care and cosmetic
products contain a wide range of
avoidable toxic ingredients, notably
multiple carcinogens, hormones and
allergens, which remain unregulated
by the FDA. These products include
leading brands of toothpaste with
carcinogenic ingredients.
In sharp contrast, the 30-member
state European Union has developed a
Cosmetic Directive, which bans the
manufacture and import of products
suspected of causing harm to human
health. Highlighting FDA's
indifference is the State of
California's 2005 Safe Cosmetic Act,
requiring cosmetic companies to
disclose information on toxic
ingredients.
Of major concern is U.S. milk from
cows injected with Monsanto's
genetically engineered recombinant
bovine growth hormone (rBGH) to
increase milk production. According
to Monsanto, about one third of
dairy cows in the nation are in
herds where the hormone is used.
This milk contains abnormally high
levels of a natural growth factor
known as IGF-1. As documented in
over 30 scientific publications,
detailed in our May 2007 Citizen
Petition to the FDA, increased
levels of IGF-1 in milk increase
risks of breast cancer by up to
seven-fold, besides risks of colon
and prostate cancers.
Not surprisingly, the import of U.S.
rBGH dairy products has been banned
by Canada, 29 European nations,
Norway, Switzerland, Japan, New
Zealand, Australia, and South
Africa.
Also, in June 1999, the United
Nations Food Safety Agency,
representing 101 nations worldwide,
voted unanimously to reject a safety
standard for rBGH milk.
Nevertheless, there are no FDA
restrictions on its continued sale
in the U.S., nor any requirement for
warning labels.
U.S. beef is heavily contaminated
with natural or synthetic sex
hormones. When U.S. beef cattle
enter feedlots, pellets of these
hormones are implanted under the ear
skin, a process repeated at the
midpoint of their 100-day
pre-slaughter fattening period.
These hormones increase carcass
weight, adding about $80 profit per
animal.
Not surprisingly, but contrary to
the claims of the FDA and USDA,
residues of these hormones in meat
are up to 20-fold higher than
normal. Increased levels of sex
hormones are linked to the
escalating incidence of reproductive
cancers in the U.S. since 1975, 36%
for post-menopausal breast cancer,
50% for testicular cancer, and 88%
for prostate cancer.
Based on these concerns, Europe
banned imports of U.S. beef in 1989,
and Japan followed up with its own
ban in 2003. Before the ban, Japan
was the most lucrative overseas
market for American beef, importing
more than $1.5 billion worth in
2003.
These concerns are not new. As
evidenced in a series of General
Accountability Office investigations
and Congressional hearings, FDA
registration and residue-tolerance
programs and USDA inspections are in
near total disarray, aggravated by
brazen denials and cover-ups.
A January 1986 report, "Human Food
Safety and the Regulation of Animal
Drugs," unanimously approved by the
House Committee on Government
Operations, concluded that "the FDA
has consistently disregarded its
responsibility - has repeatedly put
what it perceives are interests of
veterinarians and the livestock
industry ahead of its legal
obligation to protect consumers -
jeopardizing the health and safety
of consumers of meat, milk and
poultry."
CONTACT:
Samuel S. Epstein, M.D.
Professor emeritus, Environmental &
Occupational Medicine
University of Illinois at Chicago
School of Public Health
Chairman, Cancer Prevention
Coalition
Chicago, Illinois
312-996-2297
epstein@uic.edu
http://www.preventcancer.com/
and
Ronnie Cummins
National Director
Organic Consumers Association
Finland, Minnesota
218-349-3836
ronnie@organicconsumers.org
http://www.organicconsumers.org/
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