|
May 29,
2002
DEER
DISEASE MADNESS
IMPLICATIONS FOR HUMANS
By
Nicholas Regush
The
plague is coming! The plague is coming! Mad Deer Disease, a
chronic wasting disease, similar to Mad Cow Disease, may affect
your brain.
Relax.
It very likely won’t. The only thing it will affect is your peace of
mind if you are going to be rattled by news headlines you are likely
to see and hear before very long.
In
fact, just mention Mad Deer Disease to almost anyone and I’ll
bet it will immediately conjure up images of cows heaving and weaving
from some form of neurological onslaught. That’s because Mad Cow
Disease still has many people on both sides of the Atlantic wondering
whether eating burger will result in a terrifying death and a brain
full of holes to show for it.
Mad
Deer Disease will also have people wondering whether an infectious
agent will somehow manage to enter the food supply.
You’ll
recall that most scientists believe that an infectious agent likely
moved from sheep to cows.
How?
The conventional wisdom says via the rendering of carcasses, to meat
and bone meal in feed. The beginning of the Mad Cow epidemic was noted
in 1986.
The
human form of the disease began to turn up in Britain in 1995. Why?
Because, according to the conventional wisdom, the infectious agent in
cows was transmitted to humans by contaminated cooked meat products,
had sufficient time to incubate and become destructive to the nervous
system.
The key
agent in the disease, again according to conventional wisdom, is a
prion. Neither a virus, nor a bacterium, it is said to be an
abnormally formed protein which can become infectious and capable of
damaging the brain.
Now you
may have noticed that I have already used the term "conventional
wisdom" three times. That should clue you in on how outrageous I
believe this theory of Mad Cow Disease is. In fact, I think
this theory is worthless, shameful, has led to fear-mongering the
likes of which we rarely see, and will ultimately prove to be a huge
embarrassment for science and its increasingly lemmings-like
behavioral patterns, more bluntly described as sucking up to the
leaders of the pack.
Whether
or not prions or mutated proteins actually exist, I’ll leave that to
future metaphysicians to debate. As for their infectious nature, there
is no appropriate scientific evidence that they infect anything. In
fact, no one has ever fished out something known as an infectious
prion. This is a theoretical concept. Nothing more! You can argue, if
you want, for the notion of an infectious prion until the sheep or
cows come home, but the available science is missing. All the huffing
and puffing and scientific arrogance shown in regard to this type of
criticism does not impress me one bit - because these princes and
princesses of Ignorance do not know the difference between scientific
evidence and speculation.
That’s
why looking for an environmental explanation for Mad Cow
Disease or any of the Mad-whatever-diseases (including deer, elk and
mink) makes sense, if only to protect ourselves against putting all
our eggs into one basket (which science has been doing).
I
particularly like the innovative spirit of the theory put forward by
David Brown of the University of Bath, who, on the basis of test
tube experiments, points to metals such as manganese and copper as
playing a triggering role in what is known as Mad Cow Disease.
Brown thankfully parts company with the idea of an "infectious prion."
He says the metal manganese can change a prion into its abnormal and
dangerous form. And that this is especially true when the supply of
copper to the cell is low.
Interesting. The prion part of this theory doesn’t sway me, but
at least Brown is considering the possibility that environmental
factors may be involved in Mad Cow Disease and its human form.
On a
related front, an English farmer, Mark Purdey, theorizes that an
organophosphate pesticide (Phosmet) was applied on the backs of cows
along their spinal column, to fight off the warble fly.
When
Mad Cow Disease erupted, Purdy found that it occurred on farms
where the pesticide was used and not on those which, like his, wasn’t.
In his
research in recent years, he has found that clusters of the disease,
similar illnesses and a specific human form of the disease have
occurred in geographic areas where the common factor in the
environment (soil, water, vegetation) is manganese, and, in some
cases, very large amounts of it, as well as low levels of copper.
Now
isn’t it intriguing that there are low levels of copper in the soils
in northeastern Colorado where Mad Deer Disease got started?
And in
one small study, by Michael McDonnell, a Nebraska Elk researcher, when
supplemental copper was fed to elk with the disease - let’s call it
Mad Elk Disease, another chronic wasting disease - it stopped.
Let’s
not get too excited about this, but let’s at least follow these sorts
of clues. Why simply assume on the basis of questionable data that
these types of diseases are transmissible?
Right
now, Mad Deer Disease and Mad Elk Disease have the
attention of government officials.
Deer
are being slaughtered from helicopters. The chronic wasting disease
has spread across 8 states and parts of Canada. It was actually first
detected back in 1967 in Colorado.
One
reason for the growing concern is that hunting is a $20 billion a year
business in the U.S., Canada and Mexico. So, obviously this disease
sooner or later was bound to be taken seriously.
Unfortunately government officials have been ditching themselves by
not keeping an open mind about how disease develops and how
environmental factors may play a role. |