Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 > The state has blocked them from deliveries, which is why I used the phrase > 'effectively shut down'. > There is no evidence of contamination, so I believe the existing statute > allowing sales directly from the farm still holds. Isn't all raw milk supposed to be purchased at the farm of origin, anyway, in order for the sale to be legal? - Tipper Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 I do buy my food from local sources. And I would even agree that good quality, local, even raw food would be LESS likely to be contaminated than commercial products. I'm simply saying that I don't believe that my purchasing habits protect me 100 percent from possible illness. -Angie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 I do buy my food from local sources. And I would even agree that good quality, local, even raw food would be LESS likely to be contaminated than commercial products. I'm simply saying that I don't believe that my purchasing habits protect me 100 percent from possible illness. -Angie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 I do buy my food from local sources. And I would even agree that good quality, local, even raw food would be LESS likely to be contaminated than commercial products. I'm simply saying that I don't believe that my purchasing habits protect me 100 percent from possible illness. -Angie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 I'm sorry, , but you are quite falsely assuming that those who entertain the thought that this might not be merely a conspiracy are somehow proponents of factory farming. That's a false dichotomy. Like you, I believe that locally sourced and humanely raised animal products are safer to eat than products from factory farms. We have no disagreements there. Nor do we disagree that processed/pastuerzied can be horrible contaminated. Again, no disagreement. I'm merely surprised by comments here that seem to suggest that it is almost unbelievable that raw milk could ever sicken anyone. To me, that seemed like an odd assumption that has more to do with ideology than fact. That's all. -Angie > > > If you are " somewhat surprised that people take it on blind faith that the milk could absolutely have not been contaminated " I wonder where you buy your food- if you shop in a supermarket you take it on blind faith everyday. > > > > Well, no. I, for one, do not labor under the delusion that ANY food > > source is safe. I could grow something in my back yard and it could > > become contaminated with something-or-other. We take calculated risks > > when it comes to our food consumption. > > > > > You might not trust it- but I can tell you I would a million times over buy from a farm that I trust and one that I have personally gone to and toured and I felt comfortable with how the animals were raised. That is why you should know your farmer!! > > > > How the animals are raised has nothing to do with it. They can be > > raised impeccably and someone can slip up and contamination can > > happen. It just takes one thing not being cleaned properly. Accidents > > happen. > > > > It's not that I do not trust the entire concept of raw milk. It's that > > I would not trust raw milk from a farm that has had E. coli-infected > > milk traced to it, or, at least, not until it's verified that it did > > not come from there, or the contamination is traced and removed. The > > whole bit about trusting one's farmer or food provider is not that you > > trust that it will never, ever be free from contamination. You are > > trusting that if it does become contaminated, they will own up to it, > > take steps to remove the contamination, and try their best to ensure > > that it doesn't happen again. > > > > - Tipper > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 This " linked " idea is so ridiculous. Think of it this way: My family of 6 has had an unknown (high number) of servings of milk, cream and butter from the Hartman's MOM's dairy since May 1st. Multiply that by the number of other families, the gallons and gallons and gallons of milk and product that have been consumed from MOM's since then -- and sourced from the same tanks. What do we all have in common? No ecoli poisoning. I link our health back to the Raw milk, that's all! , we are assuming it's safe, for one, because we have experienced it to be. Plus, the tanks are cleaned everyday -- any milk that is ever contaminated with anything at the tank in a dairy – it's a single day thing. Or at the very least (with the high volume of Mom's especially) it a very short time and the tanks are cleaned between batches, anyway. Correct me, or clarify this anyone who has more knowledge of dairy operations. How is it logically possible that it could be the Hartman's milk that made three people sick? If their milk was contaminated, way WAY more people would be sick! , our experience also of an overreaching gov't is not conspiratorial thinking -- it's real life. They keep trying and we keep fighting back. I could give you example after example, but I'd suggest you, for a start, go to http://farmtoconsumerfoundation.org/ and ask them what their impression is of the many government agencies they've dealt with. See if you don't come to the same conclusion of trusting the farmer over the claim by the gov't as you are encountering here. I'm so very thankful for the Hartman's -- we are truly blessed to have access to their milk. This access should not be exceptional, it should be commonplace. But, if we let it happen, this access could not be at all. Open your eyes and if your eyes are open, open your mouths people. It's only we who know and letting others know too that has and will stop their attempts to control every part of our lives! That and some very brave people who get the brunt of it and still stand, like the Hartman's, God bless 'em! Please continue to pray for the Hartman's! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 The Supreme Court case also dealt with a farmer's right to sell their products without a license, which is broader than just meat vs. milk. Here is the actual statute: https://www.revisor.mn.gov/statutes/?id=32.393 & year=2003 32.393 Limitation on sale. Subdivision 1. Pasteurization. No milk, fluid milk products, goat milk, or sheep milk shall be sold, advertised, offered or exposed for sale or held in possession for sale for the purpose of human consumption in fluid form in this state unless the same has been pasteurized and cooled, as defined in section 32.391; provided, that this section shall not apply to milk, cream, skim milk, goat milk, or sheep milk occasionally secured or purchased for personal use by any consumer at the place or farm where the milk is produced. I find no reference in the statutes requiring consumers to supply their own containers. Based on this, it would be a mistake to conclude that the Hartmann's or any other raw milk farmer making deliveries have done anything illegal. The Associated Press is now running this story. Interesting exercise in semantics to see the changes from the strib version earlier today: " The Department of Health has definitely linked three cases of E. coli to unpasteurized milk from Hartmann Dairy Farm near Gibbon in southern Minnesota. The department says the fourth case matches the same DNA fingerprint but has not been definitively linked to the dairy. " Stronger language, but the key terms remain unchanged and undefined. http://www.startribune.com/local/95044099.html > > > On Thu, May 27, 2010 at 2:10 PM, Greg <gmiller99@...<gmiller99%40gmail.com>> > wrote: > > My understanding is that what defines on the farm sales was the basis of > the > > Supreme Court case, and since no ruling was ever issued, it would seem > that > > the Hartmann's interpretation that their delivery truck is an extension > of > > their farm makes raw milk deliveries legal. > > The Supreme Court case dealt with meat, not milk. Here's the full > court verdict, for anyone interested: > http://caselaw.findlaw.com/mn-supreme-court/1081314.html I might've > missed it, but I don't think there was any contention that the > delivery truck was part of their farm and therefore any deliveries > were legal, unless they were taken to court under another issue as > well. > > According to this website (http://www.realmilk.com/happening.html#mn): > The Department of Agriculture prohibits the sale of raw dairy with the > exception of " milk, cream, skim milk, goat milk, or sheep milk > occasionally secured or purchased for personal use by any consumer at > the place or farm where the milk is produced. " The farmer cannot > advertise and customers must bring their own containers. The state > interprets " occasionally secured or purchased for personal use " to > mean that farmers cannot sell raw milk to regular customers on a > routine basis. > > I suppose whether or not someone wants to break the law in order to > obtain or sell raw milk is up to them, but it wouldn't really be fair > to say that the government is effectively shutting them down by not > allowing them to deliver milk when it's not legal to do so in the > first place. > > - Tipper > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 > I find no reference in the statutes requiring consumers to supply their own > containers. Based on this, it would be a mistake to conclude that the > Hartmann's or any other raw milk farmer making deliveries have done anything > illegal. Hey, I got that information from a raw milk activism site. Do you not trust their information? In any event, the statute clearly states that raw milk for human consumption (I suppose the loophole is selling it as pet food) cannot be purchased anywhere but directly on the farm. - Tipper Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 I agree with this comment, Angie. We have to be objective and not lose sight of reality in our idealism. I am mostly worried about the baby who is sick with E.coli. Imagine if that happened to your baby. You wouldn't care where it came from or the politics of it. You would just want that baby to survive! I think we should stop arguing about the details and stop making it about *us* , and just hope that everyone comes out of this alive and that the farm survives this tragedy. dell " wrote: > > I'm somewhat surprised that people take it on blind faith that the milk could absolutely have not been contaminated. > > Although I understand a desire to support the farm and continue consuming raw milk products, I don't understand the belief that raw milk is impervious to contamination. It is simply a food that exists in the real world and is handled by real people (producers and consumers). > > It's not a miracle product. > > I guess I'm confused by the fact that people feel comfortable forming conclusions before all the facts are available. > > -Angie > > > > > > Sounds like the best thing would be to make a Memorial Day trip to the farm and buy as much as possible! > > > > Kathy > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 I just talked to and asked what he needed...he said to pray for the child..... is a good man... -- Sent from my Palm Pre Kathy.jo On May 27, 2010 4:43 PM, & lt;lisa_landen@... & gt; wrote: & nbsp; I agree with this comment, Angie. We have to be objective and not lose sight of reality in our idealism. I am mostly worried about the baby who is sick with E.coli. Imagine if that happened to your baby. You wouldn't care where it came from or the politics of it. You would just want that baby to survive! I think we should stop arguing about the details and stop making it about *us* , and just hope that everyone comes out of this alive and that the farm survives this tragedy. dell " & lt;angela.lindell@... & gt; wrote: & gt; & gt; I'm somewhat surprised that people take it on blind faith that the milk could absolutely have not been contaminated. & gt; & gt; Although I understand a desire to support the farm and continue consuming raw milk products, I don't understand the belief that raw milk is impervious to contamination. It is simply a food that exists in the real world and is handled by real people (producers and consumers). & gt; & gt; It's not a miracle product. & gt; & gt; I guess I'm confused by the fact that people feel comfortable forming conclusions before all the facts are available. & gt; & gt; -Angie & gt; & gt; & gt; & gt; & gt; & gt; Sounds like the best thing would be to make a Memorial Day trip to the farm and buy as much as possible! & gt; & gt; & gt; & gt; Kathy & gt; & gt; & gt; Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 > , we are assuming it's safe, for one, because we have experienced it to be. If you regularly drink milk from that dairy, you may have developed immunity. Plus, we all have different immune systems. > How is it logically possible that it could be the Hartman's milk that made three people sick? Â If their milk was contaminated, way WAY more people would be sick! That's how many are sick enough to be in a hospital and thus reported. E. coli and other food poisoning isn't necessarily so severe that you end up on the news. > , our experience also of an overreaching gov't is not conspiratorial thinking -- it's real life. They keep trying and we keep fighting back. Oh, I don't doubt that the government is overreaching in many aspects of our lives. However, I think that if this is some sort of " the government is just out to get them " thing, there are far more efficient ways to " get " them. I can't fathom being afraid of an entity that, if this is how they " get " someone, does so in such a long, drawn-out, inefficient, and ineffective matter. Maybe it's like my old nightmare of a room-sized Slimey-the-Worm coming to get me, but he was going so slowly I was begging JUST EAT ME, PLEASE, and the terror of the big, bad government coming to destroy raw milk is worse than the actual reality. - Tipper Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 It looked like they made a mistake, so I verified it by going directly to the source. Semantics again, is a farm delivery truck not an extension of the farm? Raw milk sales in FL are pet food only. > > Hey, I got that information from a raw milk activism site. Do you not > trust their information? In any event, the statute clearly states that > raw milk for human consumption (I suppose the loophole is selling it > as pet food) cannot be purchased anywhere but directly on the farm. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 It looked like they made a mistake, so I verified it by going directly to the source. Semantics again, is a farm delivery truck not an extension of the farm? Raw milk sales in FL are pet food only. > > Hey, I got that information from a raw milk activism site. Do you not > trust their information? In any event, the statute clearly states that > raw milk for human consumption (I suppose the loophole is selling it > as pet food) cannot be purchased anywhere but directly on the farm. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 From the MN Constitution: Sec. 7. NO LICENSE REQUIRED TO PEDDLE. Any person may sell or peddle the products of the farm or garden occupied and cultivated by him without obtaining a license therefor. http://www.house.leg.state.mn.us/cco/rules/mncon/Article13.htm And the Minnesota Statutes AGRICULTURE CHAPTER 32 DAIRY PRODUCTS 32.393 Limitation on sale. Subdivision 1. Pasteurization. No milk, fluid milk products, goat milk, or sheep milk shall be sold, advertised, offered or exposed for sale or held in possession for sale for the purpose of human consumption in fluid form in this state unless the same has been pasteurized and cooled, as defined in section 32.391; provided, that this section shall not apply to milk, cream, skim milk, goat milk, or sheep milk occasionally secured or purchased for personal use by any consumer at the place or farm where the milk is produced. > > I find no reference in the statutes requiring consumers to supply their own > > containers. Based on this, it would be a mistake to conclude that the > > Hartmann's or any other raw milk farmer making deliveries have done anything > > illegal. > > Hey, I got that information from a raw milk activism site. Do you not > trust their information? In any event, the statute clearly states that > raw milk for human consumption (I suppose the loophole is selling it > as pet food) cannot be purchased anywhere but directly on the farm. > > - Tipper > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 Yes, let's pray for a quick and full recovery for this child! Also comfort for the parents. Tipper and all, I think the reason why we're skeptical about this government intervention and pinpointing of MOM's Dairy as the culprit, is that in practice, we have seen raw milk falsely implicated as the cause of disease. At the recent Raw Milk Hearing in WI, there was a college student who got up and spoke, saying that her little brother had become sick. When he went to the doctor, he had every risk factor in the book, including drinking raw milk. Without any testing, it was decided that raw milk was the cause, even though he played down by the river, had contact with domestic pets, ate chicken and lettuce, etc., etc. So this is how it becomes a statistic. Can raw milk become contaminated? Sure. It does have some built-in protection factor, not to mention that the person drinking it may be healthier and more resistant. And as I said, I would be surprised to find E. coli O157:H7 in grass-fed cattle, but anthing is possible. And we can't expect a 100% guarantee with anything. The reason I would be willing to buy products from the Hartmann's, even now, is that I assume that it is their intention is to stay in business. They could not afford (in any sense of the word) to sell contaminated products and make anyone sick. I'm pretty sure has been consuming these products himself and he's apparently not sick. At least the majority of their customers are not sick. You realize, don't you, that the powerful " modern " dairy industry doesn't want this niche market to exist. It cuts them out and shrinks their market. And, as Governor Doyle has pointed out, the goal is to protect big business. Also did you know that there used to be a Milk Cure that was used successfully for the treatment of various diseases, at the Mayo Foundation, forerunner of the Mayo Clinic in the early 1900s? This is a nourishing, healing product that becomes a processed food in the hands of the commercial dairy industry. It is SO important that we maintain our right to food freedom. We do that by supporting those who provide that food- in good times and bad. I don't look at the world thru rose-colored glasses (anymore). There are always risks. But we can't have it if they can't sell it and he can't sell it if he can't make a living doing it. I choose to trust , trust the product and trust my own body. Kathy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 > If you regularly drink milk from that dairy, you may have developed > immunity. Plus, we all have different immune systems. Really? Wow an immunity to ecoli? Another benefit to drinking raw milk! Seriously, of course our hearts go out to the family of all sick children everywhere and this child in particular that has been brought to our attention, how could we not care?. Hartman is a class act and super nice guy and since there is that tiniest of a possibility it is true that the ecoli was from their dairy that is the appropriate response. But the State's assumption is not my assumption. I don't trust their approach in these situations -- they've trained me not to. It's nice for you that you haven't had the experiences that so many farmers have that lead to the perspective that you have such disdain for. Please respect what the farmers do for their customers and consider looking into the extent to which they have to fight with varying governmental agencies. It is not the gov't as a whole, the gov't is made of people and some people do not think raw milk should be a choice. These people are in local and the federal gov't. They don't just hold this belief they act on it, over and over until finally they make some progress. Does it happen fast? Well shutting down an individual dairy is fast -- putting them out of business doesn't take much time. One dairy at a time seems to be the approach. But they try and succeed at passing laws (or blocking laws) and tweak the regulations plenty too! Do we have our head in the sand (or are just " idealogical " )for our first reaction of the Hartman's aren't at fault in this? Or is yours and others in the sand for not being suspicious of the government in this? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 > Really? Wow an immunity to ecoli? Another benefit to drinking raw milk! Well, what doesn't kill you makes you stronger, right? > Well shutting down an individual dairy is fast -- putting them out of business doesn't take much time. One dairy at a time seems to > be the approach. But they try and succeed at passing laws (or blocking laws) and tweak the regulations plenty too! The contention, though, is that the government has been out to get the Hartmanns for a decade. Why did it take them a decade to invent some sort of E. coli outbreak in order to shut them down? I think it's a more logical assumption that there was, unfortunately, some contamination, and hopefully we'll find out exactly when, where, and how soon. When I say there may be contamination it's not from a place of judgment. Potential contamination is a reality with any food product. Liking the farmer and his practices isn't anti-microbial. > Do we have our head in the sand (or are just " idealogical " )for our first reaction of the Hartman's aren't at fault in this? Or is yours and others in the sand for not being suspicious of the government in this? What is the mechanism by which you're assuming this is the government's fault? Did they invent the whole scenario and there actually is no contamination? Did they sabotage the farm? Is there some other scenario I'm not envisioning? - Tipper Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 seriously what is your purpose at the moment? This is not worth the time.........Please ...................UGG! I don't think I am alone. > > > On Thu, May 27, 2010 at 6:05 PM, marasou <marasou@...<marasou%40aol.com>> > wrote: > > Really? Wow an immunity to ecoli? Another benefit to drinking raw milk! > > Well, what doesn't kill you makes you stronger, right? > > > > Well shutting down an individual dairy is fast -- putting them out of > business doesn't take much time. One dairy at a time seems to > be the > approach. But they try and succeed at passing laws (or blocking laws) and > tweak the regulations plenty too! > > The contention, though, is that the government has been out to get the > Hartmanns for a decade. Why did it take them a decade to invent some > sort of E. coli outbreak in order to shut them down? I think it's a > more logical assumption that there was, unfortunately, some > contamination, and hopefully we'll find out exactly when, where, and > how soon. When I say there may be contamination it's not from a place > of judgment. Potential contamination is a reality with any food > product. Liking the farmer and his practices isn't anti-microbial. > > > > Do we have our head in the sand (or are just " idealogical " )for our first > reaction of the Hartman's aren't at fault in this? Or is yours and others in > the sand for not being suspicious of the government in this? > > What is the mechanism by which you're assuming this is the > government's fault? Did they invent the whole scenario and there > actually is no contamination? Did they sabotage the farm? Is there > some other scenario I'm not envisioning? > > - Tipper > > -- Kathy-jo c. ebay store: http://stores.ebay.com/Uptown-rags http://finance.groups.yahoo.com/group/MNBlueSkyGuideExchange/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 Just jumping in from a medical perspective. It's very possible that if there is an E.coli contamination that only 3 out of hundreds that got that day's milk would come down with severe E.coli poisoning. E.coli is a very prominent bacteria in our fecal matter of all animals, including humans. We have all most likely ingested some amount of E.coli in our lives, and when you milk a cow - sometimes you are going to get some fecal matter in there. However, we have awesome GOOD bacteria in our stomach that I'm sure many of you know about that will fight off the E.coli. So if there was some amount of E.Coli in the milk, and it wasn't a severe amount, then most of the people would have fought it off. Only a few would have come down with E.Coli poisoning if their systems couldn't fight it. Obviously, if you are drinking raw milk you have probably already educated yourself on the matter and know E.coli and other harmful bacteria are always going to be a risk with unpasteurized dairy products. It's part of the risk you take, and not really a way to get around it without pasteurizing. Now, how if it's sold away from the farm or at the farm could change the contamination rate so much that there needs to be a law, I can't fathom. However, it seems that it clearly is a law from what Tipper stated so if they broke it, there would be consequences. Hopefully not too severe, but consequences none the less. Just my 2c, a Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 > Do we have our head in the sand (or are just " idealogical " )for our first reaction of the Hartman's aren't at fault in this? Or is yours and others in the sand for not being suspicious of the government in this?> Are those the only two choices? The " you're either with us or you're against us " mentality of some on this group is disturbing. To participate in this discussion, it seems as though I have to be pegged as thinking that either: 1). Farmers are infallible, raw milk is a panacea and the government is evil. OR 2). Farmers are trying to sell contaminated products, raw milk is dangerous and the goverment will save us. Well, I guess I just don't think in black and white. And when I posted my comment earlier today it was because I was surprised that so many people on this board seemed to be doing just that. And it's really too bad. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 That's just it Lynn. If the contamination comes from a buffet, or Subway (where I got food poisoning) or some a non organic spinach farm, it is all an unfortunate accident. But not before at least one good organic farm or raw milk dairy farm is slandered in the process. And if it can not be done, it is brushed under the carpet by our lovely health department, who exists to protect Monsanto and pharmaceuticals, NOT the people. But yes, speaking of blind faith, let's mindlessly trust the FDA and the health department and persecute the hartmans without due process and proper investigation. Absolutely (mind boggling) logical. Carol Lynn Hackbarth wrote- My dh had a very serious case of food poisoning several years ago, due to several complications, it put him out of comission for almost 2 months. We had been out of state for a number of days and and he first started to feel sick just as we got back so we know it couldn't have been from any of our own personal sources of food. My dh went to the doc. No tests were done. The Dr " confirmed " food poisoning (probably from a restaurant buffet) and prescribed an antibiotic. Turns out that since no testing was done, the antibiotic didn't kill the bad bacteria, just destroyed his normal gut flora and he became horribly, horribly ill. Then the Dr finally did a test and found out exactly what the bad critter was in his system. We never heard from the dept of health or any agency of any sort even though the dr. reported it. I have no respect for, nor do I trust how the dept of health or ag will handle this ..ahem.. " outbreak " . Lynn Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 Please reread the posts, I and others have never said that raw milk contamination at MOM's or elswhere is impossible. I have said over and over that the chances are low, that it is improbable. I also don't know what you, Angie, and are trying to achieve -- your reading of the posts is skewed negative. We need to be supporting the Hartman's at this time. I think someone mentioned taking the approach: innocent until proven guilty. And if you don't want to drink the milk from Hartman's you don't have to -- please don't try to convince me not to. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 Are you joking woman???? You really do not think that the FDA has not wanted to shut down every raw dairy in the united states? Every month is it some other poor farmer in any particular state they target and almost ALWAYS the farm is cleared, but not before ruining their reputation and getting a public and irrational mob going, which you are apparently part of. Get on the band wagon with Monsanto and the corrupt FDA, but the idea that this has not been a goal of the FDA is ludicrous and has nothing to do with conspiracy but fact. If you do not support raw milk and if you do not support traditional foods, why are you here? Just to stir poop? I am not saying the contamination did not come from the Hartmans, but I will wait for facts and not hype and lies and half truths from a fictitious star tribune article. In the mean time, why should anyone persecute a pioneer in the health food movement because of accusations that have not been proven? You know, when I was in Australia, I met a farmer who traveled around the world the hartmans farms to learn first hand how to do it right? Yes, accidents happen, but this is a good farm and good people and we should not be persecuting them without due process. And if all the big companies can get away with their accidents, why should we not give the same benefit to the little farmer???? Carol Tipper wrote- On Thu, May 27, 2010 at 11:46 AM, Greg < wrote: > The state has been trying to shut down Hartmann Dairy for at least 10 years. > It's not a conspiracy, the state would like to ban raw milk sales, and the > Hartmann's are probably the most vocal and visible raw milk dairy farmers in > MN. If they wanted to shut them down, for real, it would take a lot less than 10 years, and a lot less than a few people becoming infected with E. coli. It's the very definition of a conspiracy theory to make a jump from this E. coli outbreak to " the government is trying to shut them down. " > Reread the strib article. There is no reference to any statement like 'we > tested the milk and found it contaminated'. > The article is about how Hartmann Dairy is 'linked' to an outbreak. What > does 'linked mean? It is not defined. " Linked " implies that they linked it to that particular dairy. They linked it by comparing the DNA of the E. coli in the individuals and the food they had in common, which was apparently raw milk from this dairy. No article needs to spell this out explicitly. > Until I see some hard evidence of an issue at the farm, my conclusion is > that this is just the latest chapter in the harassment saga. OK. I invite anyone who goes out and buys raw milk from them to report back about any symptoms they experience. Keep us in the loop. - Tipper Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 Ecoli bacteria is present in all human and animals fecal matter because it belongs there. It does not cause illness. Ecoli bacteria is responsible for the final stages of protein digestion and this protein is responsible for feeding and nourishing the nervous system. You can learn more about this through the work of Aajonus Vonderplanitz author of We Want To Live www.wewant2live.com God bless you. In , Sheri _____ From: trad-foods-MN [mailto:trad-foods-MN ] On Behalf Of eowynmn Sent: Thursday, May 27, 2010 6:29 PM To: trad-foods-MN Subject: Re: Mom's Dairy Just jumping in from a medical perspective. It's very possible that if there is an E.coli contamination that only 3 out of hundreds that got that day's milk would come down with severe E.coli poisoning. E.coli is a very prominent bacteria in our fecal matter of all animals, including humans. We have all most likely ingested some amount of E.coli in our lives, and when you milk a cow - sometimes you are going to get some fecal matter in there. However, we have awesome GOOD bacteria in our stomach that I'm sure many of you know about that will fight off the E.coli. So if there was some amount of E.Coli in the milk, and it wasn't a severe amount, then most of the people would have fought it off. Only a few would have come down with E.Coli poisoning if their systems couldn't fight it. Obviously, if you are drinking raw milk you have probably already educated yourself on the matter and know E.coli and other harmful bacteria are always going to be a risk with unpasteurized dairy products. It's part of the risk you take, and not really a way to get around it without pasteurizing. Now, how if it's sold away from the farm or at the farm could change the contamination rate so much that there needs to be a law, I can't fathom. However, it seems that it clearly is a law from what Tipper stated so if they broke it, there would be consequences. Hopefully not too severe, but consequences none the less. Just my 2c, a Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2010 Report Share Posted May 27, 2010 Speaking of the farm to consumer foundation, have they issued a statement this afternoon for at least their members? I am waiting for their official statement and would assume it be more valid than any garbage we read in the tribune. Carol Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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