bigstockphoto_Cannons_1193620.jpgI’ve always thought of state agencies—be they auto registries, tax collectors, or agriculture departments—as being fairly independent of each other, and the federal government. The idea that they might coordinate policy on a nearly national basis seems foreign.

Traditionally in this country, the states resist intrusion of Washington’s authority into their locally-oriented turf, which has long been part of the beauty of our federal system (though at times a problem, particularly in the area of civil rights).

But we may be seeing widespread coordination to stamp out the scourge of raw milk. Ohio agriculture officials previewed the trend for me last November when the head of the state’s dairy division declared, "When I go to (national) meetings of my cohorts, (raw milk) is the No. 1 issue that comes up.”

The federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA) certainly seems to be egging the locals on, as Don Neeper suggests in his comment on yesterday’s posting. On March 1, the FDA not only issued a warning with the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) about “the dangers” of raw milk, but also placed a new 66-slide anti-raw-milk Powerpoint presentation on its web site.

And wouldn’t you know, slide #5 says that the “FDA has been providing information and assistance to states dealing with raw milk issues, including to legislative committees.” The FDA’s campaign isn’t confined to simply trying to scare people away from raw milk. It says (on slide #48) that a warning letter to a Washington state farm “establishes FDA’s position that cow sharing is another form of introduction of raw milk into interstate commerce.” So those cow share proposals in Ohio and elsewhere may be in trouble, even if state legislatures pass them.

Clearly, major states are taking the FDA’s message to heart. Pete Kennedy, a lawyer with the Weston A. Price Foundation, sees the anti-raw-milk campaign in full force. “There have been a number of farms in Pennsylvania, New York, and South Carolina whose milk has tested positive for pathogens lately, and from what I understand, there hasn’t been a single reported illness in any of those states.”

No illness? Why let a detail like that get in the way? In its slide show (#45), the FDA goes into amazing detail recounting a situation in Oklahoma in 2005 in which raw milk from a cow infected with rabies led to “10,000 consumers potentially exposed.” Oh, by the way, we learn on slide #46, no one actually contracted rabies. But it sure was a scary situation (to the FDA).

I had just recently begun thinking that quite possibly the political tide was turning with regard to raw milk. The legislative initiatives in Ohio and Maryland, the settlement in Michigan, the seeming reasonableness of agriculture officials in Pennsylvania—all had me encouraged.

I keep thinking that raw milk is just too small a matter to be seriously occupying kingpins from the FDA and various state agencies. Boy, am I off base. These opponents of nutritional freedom obviously see raw milk as a litmus test. “If we lose on raw milk, next thing you know they’ll be after our eggs, meat, and Pepsi.” I’m not sure what their big fear is, but there are probably lots of scenarios I can’t even imagine that scare these people and their corporate backers. Like the possibility that lots of people may realize health benefits from raw milk.

If farmers can begin making money selling raw milk, all kinds of possibilities open up. Maybe more individuals will want to buy small farms and try to make a living off the land.

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Back in the 1970s, there was a television ad in which an auto mechanic, encouraging regular oil filter changes, said, “You can pay me now, or you can pay me later.” The “later,” of course, was a reference to the huge expense associated with tearing an auto engine apart and rebuilding it.

The comments about my Friday posting on personal experiences with factory agriculture reminded me of that ad. I think that philosophy helps answer the question Dave Milano and others raise about why we as a society accept the terrible health consequences associated with nutritionally dead food like V8.

The big concern of health care officials is making sure people don’t get immediately sick from contaminated food…on their watch. Our media obsess endlessly about why factory farms seem unable to eliminate the risk of food contamination.

But the long-term effects of dead food? Let the doctors and hospitals and pharmaceutical companies make money off that by treating all the chronic illnesses that result years down the road. No one will be the wiser as to how the illnesses started and progressed.

The approach is not dissimilar to the approach by manufacturers for many years in polluting our rivers and streams. As long as no one notices now, we’re okay. When people start getting sick years later, no one will be able to say for sure we were responsible.