Up
to 90 percent of the infant formula sold in the United States may be
contaminated with trace amounts of melamine, the toxic chemical linked
to kidney damage, according to recent tests. The FDA's test results,
which the agency hid from the public and only released after the
Associated Press filed a Freedom of Information Act request, showed
that Nestle, Mead Johnson and Enfamil infant formula products were all
contaminated with melamine.
The AP is also reporting that Abbott Laboratories conducted its own
in-house tests that detected trace levels of melamine in its formula
products. Together, these infant formula manufacturers make about 90
percent of the infant formula sold in the United States.
Prior to these test results being made public, the FDA had published a
document on its website that explained there was no safe level of
melamine contamination in infant formula. Specifically, the FDA stated,
"FDA is currently unable to establish any level of melamine and
melamine-related compounds in infant formula that does not raise public
health concerns."
Once tests found melamine in U.S.-made formula products, however, the
FDA changed its story. As of today, the FDA has now officially declared
melamine to be safe in infant formula as long as the contamination
level is less than one part per million (1 ppm).
Astonishingly: The FDA has no new science to justify its abrupt decision declaring melamine to be safe!
Protecting Big Business instead of American babies
Rather than being based on science, the FDA's decision appears to be
based entirely on creating cover for U.S. infant formula manufacturers
whose products were found to be contaminated with melamine. The
"acceptable" level of contamination (1 ppm) is conveniently just above
the levels found in U.S. infant formula products, thus placing U.S.
infant formula in the "safe" contamination level category.
And yet the FDA has conducted no safety testing whatsoever to determine
whether 1ppm of melamine is safe for infants to consume. There is no
science involved in this decision whatsoever. Rather than this decision
being based on science, the FDA is once again resorting to
politically-motivated decisions that seek to protect the profits of Big
Business rather than the safety of infants and children.
Recall that the FDA also recently declared Bisphenol-A to be safe for
infants to consume, even while countries like Canada banned the
chemical from baby bottles. The FDA, it seems has never met a
corporate-sponsored chemical it didn't like.
Where did the melamine come from?
Laughingly, the FDA claims the 1ppm of melamine in U.S. infant formula
must have come from the manufacturing machines or food packaging
equipment. And yet the AP is reporting that the expected level of
melamine contamination from manufacturing equipment is only 15 ppb
(parts per billion).
But the FDA's own tests on Mead Johnson infant formula reveal it to
contain 245 ppb, or 1600% more than what would be expected to exists
due to melamine contamination from manufacturing equipment.
There are two really important questions that any intelligent consumer should be asking about all this:
Question #1) If the manufacturing and packaging equipment is
contaminated with melamine, does this mean that ALL food products
containing milk protein are similarly contaminated? The same companies
that make infant formula also make Slim Fast, Ensure and Boost -- all
are milk protein-based meal replacement products containing many of the
same ingredients as infant formula. Are they contaminated with
melamine, too?
Question #2) If manufacturing and packaging machinery should only
result in melamine contamination levels of 15 ppb, and yet 245 ppb were
found in the infant formula, then where did all the extra melamine come
from? The FDA has no explanation for this and seems to hope people will
forget to ask.
Two theories of melamine contamination
I offer two theories to explain the melamine contamination of these
products. Obviously, the contamination could not be caused by the
manufacturing and packaging of the product, because the melamine levels
already found in U.S. infant formula products greatly exceed the
expected levels from such manufacturing and packaging. The following
two theories may explain the additional levels of detected melamine.
Theory #1: The infant formula is adulterated with melamine
This is what happened in China: Infant formula manufacturers added
melamine to their milk protein to bulk up the product without adding
much cost (melamine is much cheaper than milk protein). Because
melamine's chemical profile is strikingly similar to milk protein, it
can often fool simple protein analysis tests and appear to be
legitimate.
If infant formula products use any milk protein from China, it could
very easily have been adulterated with melamine. However, this is just
a theory, and NaturalNews has no evidence that U.S. infant formula
manufacturers actually used milk protein from China. Thus, we do not
believe Theory #1 to be correct. Theory #2, below, seems more likely.
Theory #2: U.S. dairy operations are using animal feed contaminated with melamine
Because melamine is passed through cow's milk, the contamination of
U.S. dairy cows with melamine through their feed could result in high
melamine concentrations in the resulting milk proteins.
China has already admitted that melamine has been detected in alarming
quantities in animal feed there, and tests have already shown chickens
to be contaminated with the chemical. The question today is this: Do
U.S. dairy farms use animal feed containing ingredients imported from
China?
If so, then we may have a problem here that's much, much bigger than
infant formula. We may have a dairy industry that's producing
melamine-contaminated milk, which could mean that virtually all milk,
yoghurt, butter and cheese produced in the U.S. might be contaminated
with some level of melamine.
Again, NaturalNews has no proof that this is the situation, but the
melamine must have come from somewhere. It didn't just spontaneously
generate in the infant formula as the FDA would seemingly want us to
believe. If the milk proteins in infant formula are contaminated with
melamine, then it stands to reason that the milk proteins used
throughout the food supply may also be contaminated.
We may, indeed, be looking at an industry-wide problem here. Powdered
milk, meal replacement products and even milk protein drinks may all be
contaminated with melamine at levels similar to the infant formula
products.
Because you have to follow the logic here: Either the infant formula
manufacturers ADDED melamine to their products (highly unlikely), or
the entire milk product industry has a melamine problem.
You can't logically conclude that these infant formula manufacturers
somehow got all the melamine-contaminated milk proteins but everybody
else got melamine-free milk proteins. Milk proteins are a commodity in
the food industry, and milk from thousands of different cows can all be
mixed together in a single pound of milk protein. What could be
happening here is that one dairy farm may have highly-contaminated cows
because it used cheap feed fillers from China.
At this point, this is all just a theory, but it's a theory that makes
sense. It makes a lot more sense than the FDA's theory that there's no
problem and babies should just keep drinking melamine (and Bisphenol-A,
for that matter...) and the press should stop asking questions.
Secret tests and public lies
There's no doubt that these infant formula manufacturers are pursuing
the very same contamination theories I'm describing here. They're
probably scrambling to test their milk protein sources, trying to
figure out where all the extra melamine is coming from.
As usual, they'll try to keep the test results secret, preventing this
from exploding into a much larger public health issue. The FDA, for its
part, will continue to conduct any actual science in secret, preventing
the public from knowing the tests results unless it is sued by
organizations like the AP.
That's assuming the FDA conducts any science at all, because now the
FDA believes it can declare contaminants to be safe at a level it just
invents on the spot, without conducting any science whatsoever. The FDA
is playing "Wheel of Fortune" with public safety
(http://www.naturalnews.com/023681.html), and it's relying on guessing
games - rather than actual science - to declare safety levels of
chemicals it doesn't even understand.
The upshot of all this is really quite simple: People who feed their
babies manufactured, mainstream infant formula products are fools! If
there was ever a reason to breastfeed your baby, this is it. And if
you're looking for truly safe infant formula products, go with natural
brands such as Genesis Organics Goat Milk Formula
(www.GenesisOrganics.com) or other "natural" brands that don't use
cheap cow's milk proteins.
After all, it's quite clear at this point that the FDA doesn't care
about your baby's health. You're the only one who can protect your baby
from melamine. The FDA flat out refuses to do so. In fact, it's doing
the opposite by declaring melamine to be safe!
So stop buying conventional infant formula products and start feeding
your baby what it was meant to consume: Human breast milk from a
healthy, well-nourished mom who eats lots of omega-3 oils and
superfoods.
That's the best infant formula in the world. And by the way, human
babies shouldn't be drinking bovine milk in the first place. The whole
infant formula industry was a scam long before melamine came along. Now
it's a contaminated scam.
90 Percent of U.S. Infant Formula May Be Contaminated with Melamine
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