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The Price Is Too High For Imported Food

Phyllis Schlafly
May 15, 2007
The vast production of food in the United States is one of the greatest
achievements of American free enterprise society of a superior system
of patents that encourages the invention of fantastically efficient
farm machinery. In one of America's favorite patriotic songs, we wax
lyrical about our "amber waves of grain."
The Clinton administration conned American farmers into being the
principal lobbyists in 2000 for passage of Permanent Normal Trade
Relations for China, which gave Chinese goods unconditional access to
U.S. markets.
Former President Bill Clinton promised in his State of the Union
address that Permanent Normal Trade Relations for China would be a
win-win for American agriculture because "this agreement will open
China's market to us." The Department of Agriculture under Clinton
predicted that the average annual value of U.S. agricultural exports to
China would increase by $1.5 billion.
Globalization turned out to be a cheat. Department of Commerce figures
show that U.S. wheat exports to China are less today than before the
passage of Permanent Normal Trade Relations.
Cheap labor in Asia can produce some agricultural products less
expensively than they can be with all our expensive equipment, and
China's food exports to the United States have become a $2.1 billion
industry. The United States is now importing 13 percent of the food
Americans eat.
But Americans can't count the cost merely in dollars and in bushels.
China simply doesn't have health, sanitary or safety standards that
Americans expect for the U.S. food supply.
So the United States recently discovered that China has been
intentionally mixing an industrial chemical called melamine into pet
food and animal feed imported by U.S. companies and sold here under
more than 100 brand names. Melamine, which is both a contaminant and
byproduct of several pesticides, is used to make plastic kitchenware,
glues, countertops, fabrics, fertilizers and flame retardants.
Because melamine is high in nitrogen, the Chinese have been putting it
into wheat gluten and rice protein concentrate in order to trick
Americans into thinking they are buying feed with higher protein
content. Melamine has no nutritional value.
As this scandal unfolds, we also learn that the Chinese have been
putting cyanuric acid, a chemical related to melamine that is used in
chlorination during pool cleaning, into wheat gluten products sold to
the United States.
The Food and Drug Administration discovered this deception when pets
started dying. Melamine contamination is implicated in some 4,000 cat
and dog deaths, 60 million packages of pet food have been recalled, and
regulators have blocked all Chinese imports of wheat gluten and warned
importers to screen every kind of food and feed additive coming from
China.
Americans also learned that 6,000 hogs in eight states might have been
fed salvage products containing tainted rice gluten, and several
hundred of these hogs may have entered the human food supply. The U.S.
Department of Agriculture has put a hold on 20 million chickens raised
for human consumption that ate melamine-tainted feed.
After a lot of denials and haggling, China announced it is banning the
use of melamine and agreed to allow the United States to do some
inspection of food processing in China. But inspections in China cannot
produce U.S.-style safety because of the sprawling and fragmented
food-processing industry in a vast country where poisonings from
tainted products are common.
The FDA inspects only 1.3 percent of imported food, but even that small
amount reveals plenty that would cause Americans to lose their
appetite. Chinese foods detained by the FDA in March alone included
frozen catfish tainted with illegal veterinary drugs, fresh ginger
polluted with pesticides, melon seeds contaminated with a
cancer-causing toxin, and filthy dried dates.
Why didn't the FDA and Department of Agriculture protect us from
melamine contamination? They operate on what is called a "risk-based"
inspection philosophy, focusing on specific foods where there is the
biggest potential risk.
Apparently, melamine wasn't on the "risk" list because no one suspected
that the Chinese would deliberately adulterate their food exports with
this chemical. The 98.7 percent of Chinese food that we do not inspect
enters the U.S. as a matter of trust.
In another scandal, it has been discovered that the Chinese put
diethylene glycol, a prime ingredient used in antifreeze, into many
varieties of medicines including cough syrup, fever medication, and
injectable drugs. This poison was substituted for glycerin, a
sweet-tasting solvent commonly and safely used in drugs, but which is
more expensive than diethylene glycol.
Diethylene glycol has killed hundreds of people in Panama, Haiti and
other countries. It's next to impossible to track and verify the
Chinese manufacturers and numerous middlemen, as the poisoned medicines
traveled through various trading companies and countries, with the
labels repeatedly altered.
For years, globalists and free-traders have been ignoring and winking
at the adverse consequences of trade with China. Maybe China's
poisoning of our pets will be one offense too many to tolerate.
Date Posted:
05/15/2007