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Blame Canada!
Haha, apparently the cow that has been causing a stir with mad cow disease in the US has been traced to have been born in Canada.
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| Taken from CNN.com Officials tracking whereabouts of 81 other animals in herd Tuesday, December 30, 2003 Posted: 6:50 AM EST (1150 GMT) A number of nations have banned U.S. beef imports since the case was announced last week. WASHINGTON (CNN) -- A cow slaughtered in Washington state may have contracted mad cow disease months before the United States and Canada banned the use of brain and spinal cord tissue in cattle feed, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said Monday. The cow's owner checked his records and determined the cow was born in April 1997, two years earlier than U.S. officials originally believed, said Ron DeHaven, the department's chief veterinarian. In August 1997, the United States and Canada banned the use of brains and spinal cords, the tissues that carry the disease, in animal feed. But authorities have acknowledged that not all cattle owners follow the rules. "It is a likely explanation as to how this animal would have become infected," DeHaven told reporters. Mad cow disease, known to scientists as bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or BSE, is a brain-wasting disease that is usually transmitted to cows via contaminated feed and has an incubation period in animals of four to six years. DeHaven added, "This is the primary, if not the only, means which BSE is spread from animal to animal." In 1996, variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease was detected in humans and linked to the disease in animals. Eating contaminated meat and cattle products is presumed to be the cause. The U.S. Department of Agriculture awaits DNA samples from the cow to confirm the animal originated in Canada, DeHaven said earlier Monday. Locating the cow's birth herd will allow them to track down the herd's other cows to see if they might have eaten the same contaminated feed, DeHaven told CNN. "The birth herd is the likely location where the animal became infected," DeHaven said. "We'll want to know what feed that animal had been fed, and even more importantly what other animals were on the farm at that same time that might have consumed the same feed and where are they now?" DeHaven said investigators hope to use the stricken cow's DNA samples to confirm their preliminary determination that the animal entered the United States from the Canadian province of Alberta in 2001 with a herd of 81 cows. Testing also will trace the history of those other cows. Earlier officials said 73 cows from the herd were being traced. Investigators have matched the cow's ear tag to a Canadian herd, but the Canadian Food Inspection Agency said it was unclear that the cow was the same one that became sick, or even that the infected animal had come from Canada. DeHaven denied there was any disagreement between U.S. and Canadian officials on the matter. See the full story at: http://www.cnn.com/2003/US/12/29/mad.cow/index.html |
Apparently the cow with mad cow disease in Canada was traced back to the US too, so now I guess we're even. 
i thought they knew the cow was from canada from the beginning?
fuckin americans!
No proof anyway.....funny how the Americans blame everything on someone else.
bloody americans, it's always got to be somebody else who's responsible for their problems 
take that.
how was it our fault for SARS or the Blackout? Blame China and Ohio for that shit.
And the cow was imported into the States 2 years ago, how is Canada responsible for it at the end of 2003? America blames Canada for **everything**
| quote: |
| Originally sung by South Park residents Blame Canada!! Blame Canada!! |
Man, who gives a saddams ass, Canadian beef owns you and you know it.
Re: Blame Canada!
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| Originally posted by TeKnoHe@d2025 You guys didn't have a very lucky year with SARs, the big blackout and now this. Yet another instance of "Blame Canada". |
I'm not saying SARs was blamed on Canada...but I do recall the health advisors in the US warning American citizens not to goto Toronto for fear of contracting SARs. All while the mayor of Toronto said the city was safe. Also when the blackout first occured American officials immediatly pointed the finger at Canada.
Many of you are misunderstanding the point of this thread.
It's not that complex people...
still dont diss our country...we may not be psychopathetically patriotic like u guys but we can stir some shit and enjoy doing it
still dont diss our country...we may not be psychopathetically patriotic like u guys but we can stir some shit and enjoy doing it
I wasn't being that defensive in my first post; but yeah, it's true.
The whole SARS thing was complete bullshit though...during that time I was still going to school (in downtown toronto) and saw like 2-3 people wearing masks during the whole time. SARS was in 2 hospitals, not in the city.
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Vivid Boy still dont diss our country...we may not be psychopathetically patriotic like u guys but we can stir some shit and enjoy doing it |
It's not even a real country, anyway!
Blame America. I dare yah *pushes Canada* whaddya gonna do whaddya gonna do? Anyways. dont be bitches.
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| Originally posted by Orbax Blame America. I dare yah *pushes Canada* whaddya gonna do whaddya gonna do? Anyways. dont be bitches. |

What the media didn't tell you, was that those Ohio power station operators were drunk off Molson and maple syrup pancakes. Thus, it really was Canada's fault. :P
If they got drunk off Molson...then it's their own fault
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| Originally posted by infinity HiGH If they got drunk off Molson...then it's their own fault |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by torontotrance No proof anyway.....funny how the Americans blame everything on someone else. |

| quote: |
Tests Confirm Mad Cow Came From Canada Jan 6, 4:18 PM (ET) By MARK SHERMAN (AP) Alfredo Silveira guides cows at farm in Entre Rios province, 180 km ( 110 miles) northwest of... Full Image WASHINGTON (AP) - Genetic testing confirms that the cow diagnosed with the first U.S. case of mad cow disease was born in Canada, agriculture officials said Tuesday. The test results will allow investigators to intensify their search for the source of infection, most likely from contaminated feed, in Alberta, where the Holstein was born in 1997. Agriculture Secretary Ann Veneman announced the mad cow diagnosis on Dec. 23, the first time the disease has been found in the United States since its discovery in Great Britain in the mid-1980s. The DNA tests on the cow, on one of its offspring and on the semen from the cow's sire, as well as records that show the cow came from a dairy farm in Alberta, make "us confident in the accuracy of this traceback," said Dr. Ron DeHaven, the Agriculture Department's chief veterinarian. Brian Evans, a Canadian agriculture official, said independent testing from a Canadian lab agreed. Canadian officials had announced last May that a cow in Alberta had been diagnosed with the disease. While no links have been found between the two cases, investigators now will focus on looking for common sources of feed, Evans said. He added, "We have not got sufficient evidence to make any feed link between the two farms." |
Mad cow disease is blown way out of proportion. I feel so sorry for the people of Alberta... their industry has taken such a huge hit over ONE cow. And the cow was inspected, and deemed substandard, so it was removed from the herd, and not made into food for humans. It was later when the carcass was tested by the UK when it was deemed the cow suffered from BSE.
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| Originally posted by UWM I agree 100%. If it was Labatt's I might be able to forgive it - but Molson? Gah. |
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