Bingo! The U.S. Food and Drug Administration thinks its
finally found the culprit in all the salmonella cases, and it says its
jalepeno peppers.

And where would we be in all this attention given to
foodborne illnesses, without a word from Bill Marler, the lawyer germ chaser.
Hes filed a suit on behalf of a couple that apparently got sick at a Georgia
rib joint. Whats interesting to me is his call for more legislation.

In a press release, he says, Where is the legislation to
prevent these illnesses?These people should not be in ICU, fighting for their
lives, just because they went out to dinner.  We have the ability to legislate,
regulate, and eliminate E. coli from our food supply, and we need to see
Congressional action.

Im not sure what legislation hes talking about that would
prevent such illnesses. Maybe the National Animal Identification System (NAIS)?
But would NAIS prevent such illnesses, by enabling regulators to track cattle
and pigs back to the source?

Michigan lawyer Steve Bemis, a board member of the Farm to
Consumer Legal Defense Fund, tried to put a damper on that thinking in
connection with the organizations suit against the U.S. Department of
Agriculture and the Michigan Department of Agriculture: “It is important to realize, that NAIS is not about food safety–the program supposedly is to track animals for issues of animal health, and besides doing this poorly or not at all…NAIS in fact would stop all tracking at the point of slaughter. And, as we have learned in many recent meat recalls, what happens after slaughter when meat may be contaminated and comingled is where the problem lies. NAIS would offer nothing, even if it were fully implemented, to assist in such food safety concerns. Food safety, as the meat and tomato recalls illustrate, is a far different problem. There is one commonality, however–the small diversified farms which will be harmed by NAIS, are the same farms which bring locally grown meat and produce to local farmers’ markets. Damaging these small farms economically IS a food safety issue, since local food is demonstrably some of the safest food which Americans can count on, as against the current broken system which corporate agriculture offers.”  

(The suit is in the process of being filed–it’s official filing has been delayed by some judicial technical issues, which should be resolved any day, says the FTCLDF.)

If there’s one thing Marler has right, it’s that there has been an increase in outbreaks of foodborne illness cases involving E.coli 0157:H7. But if you look at the evidence about how E.coli 0157:H7 originates–some of it per Sylvia’s links in her comment following my posting of July 16–much of it has to do with how cattle are fed in the factory food system, and can be improved with pasture feeding. Why don’t people like Marler talk about that?