Gulf still loaded with chemicals, but FDA says seafood safe

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Gulf still loaded with chemicals, but FDA says seafood safe

Postby Orfeas » Thu Nov 18, 2010 3:30 pm

http://healthfreedoms.org/2010/11/17/gu ... fe-to-eat/


damn, arent they going to leave something for us humans to eat?



Gulf still loaded with chemicals, but FDA says seafood safe to eat.

The FDA wants us to believe that seafood from the Gulf of Mexico is safe to eat less then six months after the area experienced the greatest environmental disaster in U.S history. The Food and Drug Administration continually shows disregard to the health of individuals for the sake of business and this is just another low. More then 200,000,000 gallons of crude oil and 2,000,000 gallons, possibly more, of dispersants have contaminated the waters your suggested dinner lives in.

According to the Center for Biological Diversity:

More dispersant has been used on the BP spill than in any other oil spill in U.S. history. Moreover, for the first time ever, the EPA has approved using dispersants not only at the surface but deep underwater at the source of the spill. Approximately 1.84 million gallons of dispersant have been applied, with more than 1 million gallons on the surface and 771,000 gallons pumped deep into the water column to dilute the oil.


These facts are hard to chew on when your talking about eating something that lives in these waters. The methods the FDA used to determine the safety of the seafood is just as unsettling. The first announcement that the seafood is safe was based on a “smell” test to determine the presence of oil. With the public unconvinced, the FDA went back and tested tissue samplings of the various seafood and determined that although there was a presence of chemical residue, it was nothing to be concerned about. Again the testing was called into question, this time by fishery experts citing the fact that the FDA only tested for the presence of one chemical component of the dispersant while ignoring the other toxic chemicals and chemical compounds of the dispersant and oil.

While the FDA is giving the go ahead to eat this seafood, the only appetite I am brewing is one for answers. Thousands of people are already suffering from direct exposure to these chemicals and instead of containing the health threat, they are downplaying the danger. Why is an agency that is reportedly in place to protect our health promoting the consumption of toxin tainted food?

Not even six months after the first reports about the massive BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico made headlines, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) joined together with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to announce that virtually all Gulf seafood is now safe to eat. Independent tests, however, continue to show that Gulf waters are still highly contaminated, and that many sea creatures are still dying from exposure to both oil and toxic oil dispersant chemicals.

Federal agencies tested for only one chemical component while ignoring all others

The FDA and NOAA recently made the shocking announcement because of results from federal tests that allegedly found “no detectable residue” of toxic chemicals in the majority of seafood tested. But fishery experts are questioning the legitimacy of the testing methods used, citing the fact that the tests only looked for one chemical component of the Corexit dispersant — dioctyl sodium sulfosuccinate (DOSS) — while ignoring the presence of numerous other toxic chemicals and chemical combinations like polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), propanols, and 2-butoxyethanol, that are also highly toxic.

Reuters recently covered a report published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters that highlighted the widespread damage caused by PAHs and other dispersant chemicals, and how these chemicals are still harming and killing fish today. Back in May, researchers observed chemical contamination at thousands of feet below sea level — and as far as eight miles from the spill site — and since that time, they say it has most likely spread even further.

“From the time that these observations were made (back in May), there was an extensive release of additional oil and dispersants at the site,” the researchers wrote in their paper. “Therefore, the effects on the deep sea ecosystem may be considerably more severe than supported by the observations reported here.”

According to Bob Naman, a chemist cited in a recent Al Jazeera piece on the dangers of oil dispersants, chemical components of oil dispersants tend to mix with other chemicals to form entirely new chemicals. These new chemicals often escape into the air and come down as rain, harming people, animals, and the environment. And they can also combine in water to create new toxic compounds that contaminate sea life.

Add to that the fact that people living along the Gulf shore are still getting sick from chemical exposure, and it is safe to assume that the creatures living in Gulf waters are also highly contaminated as well..

But neither the FDA nor the NOAA seem all that concerned about any outside information or independent testing that contradicts their own. According to Dr. John Stein from the NOAA, “absolutely none of the samples (taken as part of the federal tests) pose a threat to human health.” And Margaret A. Hamburg, commissioner of the FDA, said in a statement that “there is no question Gulf seafood coming to market is safe from oil or dispersant residue.” So apparently the public is expected to just take the agencies’ word for it without question.

‘Smell’ test initially used to verify safety of Gulf seafood

Interestingly, the initial testing method the agencies used to assess the safety of Gulf seafood was, get this, a smell test. Stein explained to Reuters that the first round of “sensory testing” involved “trained experts sniff[ing] seafood for evidence of chemical contamination.” So by getting a good whiff of some shrimp and oysters, experts can allegedly determine in full certainty whether or not the creatures are safe for human consumption.

But when the public failed to buy into this “testing” method, the agencies resorted to their “back-up” plan of actually testing the seafood for contaminants. And while the agencies obtained the results that reinforced their findings, such testing methods, as previously mentioned, were flawed to begin with.

Eat Gulf seafood at your own risk

Numerous investigations by mainstream media outlets remain skeptical of the recent announcement. And because there is still debate among credible experts over whether Gulf seafood is safe, it is probably best to join the skepticism and simply avoid eating it for now.
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Postby Ace Rimmer » Thu Nov 18, 2010 3:49 pm

We are lied to constantly about just about everything important! I sure as heck won't be eating any seafood from that part of the world.
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Postby Nanfran » Thu Nov 18, 2010 8:27 pm

So that's why my clam chowder tasted funny...
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Postby Moon » Fri Nov 19, 2010 5:32 pm

I guess the president of BP can apologize to us, and some of our Congressmen can apologize back to them.

And the Big Oil conglomerates can return now to deep sea drilling as it is all safe.

Big Oil and Wall Street run everything. Don't let anyone fool you about this one.
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Re: Gulf still loaded with chemicals, but FDA says seafood s

Postby Orfeas » Tue Mar 29, 2011 12:01 am

http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/3 ... z1HsjsqUUn


Obama administration restricts findings on Gulf’s dead dolphins

The Obama administration has issued a gag order on data over the recent spike of dead dolphins, including many stillborn infants, washing up on Mississippi and Alabama shorelines, and scientists say the restriction undermines the scientific process.
An abnormal dolphin mortality this year along the Gulf coast has become part of a federal criminal investigation over last year’s BP oil spill disaster and as a result, has led the US government to clamp down on biologists’ findings, with orders to keep the results confidential.
The dolphin die-off, labeled an “unusual mortality event (UME),” resulted in wildlife biologists being contracted by the National Marine Fisheries Service to record the recent spike in dolphin deaths by collecting tissue samples and specimens for the agency, but late last month were privately ordered to keep their results under wraps.
Reuters has obtained a copy of the agency letter that states, in part: “Because of the seriousness of the legal case, no data or findings may be released, presented or discussed outside the UME investigative team without prior approval.”
One biologist involved with tracking dolphin mortalities for over 20 years and speaking on the condition of anonymity, told Reuters that: “It throws accountability right out the window. We are confused and ... we are angry because they claim they want teamwork, but at the same time they are leaving the marine experts out of the loop completely.”
Some scientists said they have received a personal rebuke from government officials about “speaking out of turn” to the media over attempts at determining the dolphins’ deaths.
Additionally, these scientists say the collected specimens and samples are being turned over to the government for evaluation under a deal that omits independent scientists from the final results of lab tests.
Almost 200 dead bottlenose dolphin bodies have been found since mid-January through this week along shorelines of Gulf coast states, including Florida, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana, Reuters notes. About half of the carcasses are newborns or stillborn infants.
That number is around 14 times the average numbers recorded during the same time frame between 2002 and 2007 and has coincidentally occurred during the first calving season since the BP Deepwater Horizon debacle last year in the Gulf.
Although many of the dolphin specimens recently collected show no outward signs of oil contamination, lab analysis is crucial in helping to determine their deaths.
Some experts believe the recent surge of deaths is the result of dolphins inhaling or ingesting oil during the oil spill, the results of which are just now beginning to show their toll, including a possible upsurge in dolphin miscarriages.
The recent spike in dolphin deaths has compounded the dolphin mortality problem, as scientists were already busy attempting to determine the deaths of nearly 90 dead dolphins, mostly adults, that washed up along the US Gulf coast during the weeks and months after the BP disaster.
Some are questioning the Marine Fisheries Service, part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), and its delay in providing dolphin samples to laboratories.
“It is surprising that it has been almost a full year since the spill, and they still haven't selected labs for this kind of work,” said Ruth Carmichael, of the independent Dauphin Island Sea Lab, located in Alabama, according to Reuters. “I can only hope that this process is a good thing. I just don’t know. This is an unfortunate situation,” she added.
Officials with the NOAA state the confidentiality measures are an integral part of the current investigation over the BP oil spill.
“We are treating the evidence, which are the dolphin samples, like a murder case,” said Dr. Erin Fougeres, a Fisheries Service marine biologist, Reuters notes. “The chain of custody is being closely watched. Every dolphin sample is considered evidence in the BP case now,” she added.
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Re: Gulf still loaded with chemicals, but FDA says seafood s

Postby Ace Rimmer » Tue Mar 29, 2011 3:37 am

Are we surprised ? no! Not surprised about the Dolphin deaths, this is going to impact the Gulf for a long long time and the government wants it hushed up! Really!?
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Re: Gulf still loaded with chemicals, but FDA says seafood s

Postby Moon » Tue Mar 29, 2011 5:01 pm

It is ironic that BP is one of the first ones to get permission to resume deep sea drilling. We have witnessed a worst case scenario already happen twice: Japan with its nuclear reactors and a 9.0 earthquake and the previous oil spill from the Gulf. The new methods they think will work if a disaster happens actually will not work at all according to many studies already out there.

The Democrats are terrified of Big Oil and would need to grow spines to stop this madness. The Republicans are at least honest and use the mantra drill baby drill, no matter what the costs.

BTW, BP, GE and many other huge corporations paid $0 in taxes for 2010. They actually got a huge refund in the name of subsidies which Congress voted to keep going even though they cry we have no money.
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Re: Gulf still loaded with chemicals, but FDA says seafood s

Postby Theory » Thu Mar 31, 2011 6:46 pm

All I gotta say is I am soooooo glad I don't like seafood, but I do feel sorry for the people that depend on the gulf for income. I don't think the governments will ever be satisfied until there is absolutely nothing left alive on this planet. Is there any travel agents on here, because I would like a free one way ticket to some other planet please, like ahhh..sometime soon!:)
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Re: Gulf still loaded with chemicals, but FDA says seafood s

Postby Ace Rimmer » Fri Apr 01, 2011 3:49 am

Theory wrote:All I gotta say is I am soooooo glad I don't like seafood, but I do feel sorry for the people that depend on the gulf for income. I don't think the governments will ever be satisfied until there is absolutely nothing left alive on this planet. Is there any travel agents on here, because I would like a free one way ticket to some other planet please, like ahhh..sometime soon!:)
Yea and seafood from Japan is not on the list anymore either. Seriously it seems like we are trying as hard as we can to totally trash this planet! So far so good!
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Re: Gulf still loaded with chemicals, but FDA says seafood s

Postby Moon » Fri Apr 01, 2011 4:55 pm

I would still eat the cat fish down south. I love that stuff and since they are bottom feeders anyway, what is a little crude oil to consume?
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Re: Gulf still loaded with chemicals, but FDA says seafood s

Postby ilacewords » Mon Apr 04, 2011 11:59 am

Metaluna wrote:
Theory wrote:All I gotta say is I am soooooo glad I don't like seafood, but I do feel sorry for the people that depend on the gulf for income. I don't think the governments will ever be satisfied until there is absolutely nothing left alive on this planet. Is there any travel agents on here, because I would like a free one way ticket to some other planet please, like ahhh..sometime soon!:)
Yea and seafood from Japan is not on the list anymore either. Seriously it seems like we are trying as hard as we can to totally trash this planet! So far so good!


Exactly, I've been avoiding the Gulf seaford since the BP disaster. Making up with northern Pacific/Alaskan fish, but now....farm raised catfish for me it's looking like :lol:
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