WillsC
Why should herbivores be feed blood products?
Is candy/corn optimal nutrition for a cow?
Is there a difference in the quality/nutrition of a cow that grazes on a variety of grasses in a pasture vs. a cow confined to a feedlot fed corn, hormones & antibiotics?
You have much faith in your government:
"it is 100% safe. It is allowed only from inspected cows that are fit for human consumption which means no sick or down animals."
" There is no difference feeding the candy than feeding corn."
You may be aware that recently in the E.U. consumers were buying "100% certified beef" products that had varying ranges of horse meat in them. And the issue isn't whether horse meat is safe or not. It's the fraud perpetrated on people who are told they are buying 100% certified French beef when it reality they are eating Romanian horse meat.
From wiki regarding our regulations in the U.S.
Practices in the United States relating to BSE
Soybean meal is cheap and plentiful in the United States. The 1.5 million tons of cottonseed meal produced in the U.S. every year that is not suitable for humans or any other simple-stomach animal is even cheaper than soybean meal. Historically, meat and bone meal, blood meal and meat scraps have almost always commanded a higher price as a feed additive than oilseed meals in the U.S., so there was not much incentive to use animal products to feed ruminants. As a result, the use of animal byproduct feeds was never common, as it was in Europe. However, U.S. regulations only partially prohibit the use of animal byproducts in feed. In 1997, regulations prohibited the feeding of mammalian byproducts toruminants such as cattle and goats. However, the byproducts of ruminants can still be legally fed to pets or other livestock, including pigs and poultry, such as chickens. In addition, it is legal for ruminants to be fed byproducts from some of these animals.[48] A proposal to end the use of cattle blood, restaurant scraps, and poultry litter (fecal matter, feathers)[49] in January 2004 has yet to be implemented.[50]
[edit]Regulatory failures
In February 2001, the USGAO reported the FDA, which is responsible for regulating feed, had not adequately enforced the various bans.[51]Compliance with the regulations was shown to be extremely poor before the discovery of the Washington cow, but industry representatives report that compliance is now total. Even so, critics call the partial prohibitions insufficient. Indeed, U.S. meat producer Creekstone Farms alleges theUSDA is preventing BSE testing from being conducted.[52]
The USDA has issued recalls of beef supplies that involved introduction of downer cows into the food supply. Hallmark/Westland Meat Packing Company was found to have used electric shocks to prod downer cows into the slaughtering system in 2007.[53] Possibly due to pressure from large agribusiness, the United States has drastically cut back on the number of cows inspected for BSE.[54]
For those interested; If you live in the Bay Area, here is where you can get pastured meat (I personally use these guys, good stuff):
http://www.marinsunfarms.com/
They have a nice "Meat Club" program, kind of like a CSA.
Also, This site might help you find pastured meat in your area of the country.
http://www.eatwild.com/products/