At what point does the risk become "unacceptable" and what do you think dictates that? Do you think political or economic motivations dictate when, all the sudden, some risk becomes "unacceptable?"
I don't think an equivocation on a ban on something that is a known risky food that arguably kills 15 people per year is going to erode confidence in our regulatory system
I don't see how the FDA's decision to decline to regulate "facilitates" a personal choice to eat oysters
I think it's unfortunate that they caved to political pressure. Once they had determined an unacceptable risk they should have told industry and congressmen to go f***k themselves.
auxen1 wrote:I don't see how the FDA's decision to decline to regulate "facilitates" a personal choice to eat oysters
regulatory agencies are told what to regulate....they don't get to "decide to decline to regulate"
riddlemay wrote:auxen1 wrote:I don't see how the FDA's decision to decline to regulate "facilitates" a personal choice to eat oysters
regulatory agencies are told what to regulate....they don't get to "decide to decline to regulate"
I think, also, that people tend to assume that if something is allowed, it must be safe. It's not an unreasonable assumption; to paraphrase it, one might say, "We've got an FDA. If eating this food could kill me, there's no way this place would legally be allowed to serve it to me. It's on the menu. Ipso facto, it must be safe. I'm going to go ahead and eat these."
Kman wrote:Yup - that's why I have no intention of kicking my 5-pack a day habit of unfiltered Camel's . . . of course I have a shot and a beer with each smoke. It's allowed, so it must be safe. Thank you Gum'mit for making my life safe!
nr706 wrote:Kman wrote:Yup - that's why I have no intention of kicking my 5-pack a day habit of unfiltered Camel's . . . of course I have a shot and a beer with each smoke. It's allowed, so it must be safe. Thank you Gum'mit for making my life safe!
I think it's pretty safe to say that if the FDA had jurisdiction over everything the BATF regulates, it'd all be banned.
leek wrote:Today's Illness-related Oyster news
http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/12/06/oy ... index.html
"The U.S. government warned consumers Sunday to avoid oysters from San Antonio Bay in Texas after investigators found the oysters caused a highly contagious virus.
Consumers who bought San Antonio Bay-harvested oysters on or after November 16 should throw them away, the Food and Drug Administration announced. The agency also advised restaurant managers and grocers not to serve or sell the Texas oysters.
About a dozen cases of norovirus-related illnesses in North Carolina and South Carolina were "definitely linked" to oysters recently harvested from the San Antonio Bay, FDA spokeswoman Rita Chappelle told CNN."
leek wrote:Today's Illness-related Oyster news
http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/12/06/oy ... index.html
"The U.S. government warned consumers Sunday to avoid oysters from San Antonio Bay in Texas after investigators found the oysters caused a highly contagious virus.
Consumers who bought San Antonio Bay-harvested oysters on or after November 16 should throw them away, the Food and Drug Administration announced.
Kman wrote:Crap! The guy at the store assured me those oysters had a shelf life of at LEAST a month!
Mike G wrote:Not at all. They put out information. People can act on it as they see fit.
Mike G wrote:I'm sure you would agree that there is some threshhold beyond which 300-year-old industries should not be put to death by the stroke of a bureaucrat's pen, just because that bureaucrat has suddenly decided that a risk which has been known and acknowledged [i[long enough to have entered the common store of folklore[/i] falls under his ever-widening purview... demands ACTION NOW!... and, not coincidentally, would benefit one particular side of the industry with whom he is chummy.
Darren72 wrote:If someone jumps off the top of the Willis Tower, they will die. The population of Chicago is just under 3 million. It would not be correct to conclude the risk of dying from jumping off the top of the Willis Tower is 1 in 3 million.