200px-The_Illusionist_Poster.jpgI saw a very clever movie this weekend, “The Illusionist”. That movie, together with comments on my previous posting—citing evidence suggesting that potential dangers from listeria monocytogenes may be overstated—got me thinking. Since last December, New York state has branded as dangerous five of its farms for selling raw milk contaminated with listeria monocytogenes,. Yet, curiously, no one has become ill.

So I decided to re-review the data Pete Kennedy of the Weston A. Price Foundation obtained recently from the Centers for Disease Control about outbreaks of foodborne illness from milk between 1973 and 2005 (which I discussed in a previous post, and I have now posted separately; sorry about the sideways statistical pages).

Want to guess the number of raw-milk illnesses from listeria monocytogenes? After you deduct the 36 illnesses from queso fresco, the Mexican cheese sprinkled on tortillas, it is zero. That’s right, no illnesses from actual raw milk between 1973 and 2005. The vast majority are from campylobacter, with salmonella and E.coli 0157:H7 as way-distant followons.

The number of pasteurized-milk illnesses from listeria monocytogenes? There were 69 cases in 1983 and 69 more in 1994 (from chocolate milk), for a total of 138. Not a serious problem in the entire scheme of things, but a great deal more serious a problem than for raw milk.

Remember, we are dealing here with government-supplied statistics, certified under penalty of perjury to be “true and correct.”

So here’s New York’s Department of Agriculture and Markets shuttering and slandering small farms in the name of protecting citizens from…what? Nothing, as far as I can see. If they want to be searching out listeria monocytogenes, seems they’d have a better chance of protecting citizens by searching out problems in pasteurized milk.

If you haven’t seen “The Illusionist”, I highly recommend it, as a very entertaining illustration of the truism that what you see isn’t always what you think you’re seeing. I wonder if the New York agriculture authorities are taking a few lessons from it.