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Seafood Raised on Animal Feces Approved for Consumers

If you are a seafood lover and wish that you could eat more fish raised on pig feces, your dreams are coming true. Due to fierce competition in the Chinese tilapia industry, farmers are increasingly switching to feces instead of commercial feed. From the article: "At Chen Qiang’s tilapia farm in Yangjiang city in China’s Guangdong province, which borders Hong Kong, Chen feeds fish partly with feces from hundreds of pigs and geese. That practice is dangerous for American consumers, says Michael Doyle, director of the University of Georgia’s Center for Food Safety. 'The manure the Chinese use to feed fish is frequently contaminated with microbes like salmonella,' says Doyle, who has studied foodborne diseases in China."

22 of 386 comments (clear)

  1. Chinese regulators are like Honey Badger by GodfatherofSoul · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They don't give a fuck. Why do you think all their shit (accidental pun) is so cheap? Whatever it takes to squeeze a nickel even if it means killing some workers or customers.

    --
    I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
    1. Re:Chinese regulators are like Honey Badger by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Don't worry - the free market will work all of this out!

  2. Re:God bless the free market! by guruevi · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Where are we consumers informed of this? Does your local Wal-Mart store have badges on the bags of frozen tilapia that says which ones were raised on shit and which ones weren't?

    The free market dictates that consumers shouldn't hear about this because that would impede the demand for the product and thus drive the prices and profit ranges down.

    --
    Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
  3. Not actually approved by Jimmy_B · · Score: 5, Insightful

    From the article:

    "Ngoc Sinh has been certified as safe by Geneva-based food auditor SGS SA, says Nguyen Trung Thanh, the company’s general director."
    "SGS spokeswoman Jennifer Buckley says her company has no record of auditing Ngoc Sinh."

    In other words, the article claims that Ngoc Sinh Seafoods Trading & Processing Export Enterprise is using repulsive and unsafe practices, and lying about having been inspected. Bloomberg is accusing them of a crime. The Slashdot headline, on the other hand, converted this into "Approved for Consumers" - accusing a different group, the regulators, which appear to be innocent.

  4. Re:God bless the free market! by Vaphell · · Score: 4, Insightful

    consumers are as much to blame. They vote with their wallets and they choose price before everything else repeatedly. It's not like the shitty quality of average junk from china was not known for decades, yet it still has no problem finding the buyers.

  5. Re:Mad Fish Disease? by pieterh · · Score: 5, Informative

    Well, there is in fact a real threat here. A common parasite in fresh water fish in tropical countries is the liver fluke, a worm that lives part of its cycle in the human gut and is responsible, in cases, for cholangiocarcinoma, cancer of the bile duct. The worm attaches near the bile duct and produces chemicals that create cancer so it can eat the by-products. Nice little beast. It's a slow developing cancer that kills suddenly because it has no symptoms until it reaches a late stage. It's one of the commoner reasons for death among 50-year old males in countries where it's endemic.

    One assumes there's more resistance in populations that have been exposed to this parasite for thousands of years. Women suffer much less from bile duct cancer than men, so there's variation in individual vulnerability. But as Chinese fish is exported, and ends up in places like cheap sushi bars in Birmingham, the parasite ends up in thousands, perhaps millions of people who have little resistance.

    Attack of the Killer Sushi.

    I should know, I got bile duct cancer a year or two ago and since there were no antecedents in my family, this seemed the most likely cause.

    If we started feeding fish on pig feces, it's a slippery slope (sorry!) to feeding them human feces.

    Good news is a yearly de-worming should be sufficient to prevent bile-duct cancer, if anyone cared about this.

  6. Re:That's what a lot of fish and shellfish eat... by skine · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Obviously the headline is misleading, this is Slashdot.

    The basic point of TFA is that many of the practices of Vietnamese fishermen have the potential to spread disease to Americans. Also, while the FDA inspects only 2.7% of imported food, 1380 loads of seafood from Vietnam have been rejected for "filth and salmonella" in the last five years.

  7. get the drums ready by Hognoxious · · Score: 5, Funny

    I went into a restaurant where they serve this. When I red the menu I shouted "bullshit!"

    The waiter said "Would madam like a large portion or a small one?"

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  8. Re:God bless the free market! by blippo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes, but the price is almost the only information consumers can base there decision on. That, and the packaging design.

    The only way to get more information is to legislate. The food industry would be happy if they could sell processed shit wrapped in
    a nice box, without bothering with involving fish at all.

  9. Everyone eats shit by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Our oxygen is plant shit, the co2 is other peoples shit, your vegetables grow on shit, your meat eats shits, you cook it on farts, you walk on shit and some of us consider clothes made from shit to be the height of luxury.

    It is a shitty world and it worse for those who believe in homeopathy.Water has memory? Oh good, so does it remember having been pissed out billions of times over the lifetime of the earth? And if water has memory, why doesn't it remember the time it was beer!

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  10. Re:God bless the free market! by sjames · · Score: 4, Interesting

    When there's no other comprehensible information available, it's only natural they choose based on price first. The packages don't say fish raised on goose shit, now do they? In some cases, large producers have lobbied (with some success) to either prevent labeling food that avoids a controversial practice or they lobby for a definition that could apply to nearly anything sold as food including ground glass so they can slap the meaningless bullet point on their packages too.

    Even brand name is now worthless information, much of it is just the cheap stuff re-badged and sold for more these days.

  11. Typical American attitude... by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That practice is dangerous for American consumers

    but the rest of you can go fuck yourselves ;)

    --
    systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
  12. Re:God bless the free market! by LordLucless · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The free market requires that consumers must here about this, because the free market relies on an informed consumer. The free market is designed to drive the prices and profits down; that is the entire point of a free market - that multiple vendors compete for the patronage of consumers in a fair manner, by offering the best products for the most attractive price.

    If you're not getting that, then you're not in a free market.

    --
    Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
  13. Don't eat shit from China by JakFrost · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A few years ago on a whim I bought some generic branded local supermarket Stop & Shop seafood and came up with an upper body skin rash for a month. Later looked at the label and the stuff was made in China. Later found that there was a bunch of seafood enriched with some kind of a protein additive causing such bad allergic reactions to people that show up as an upper body skin rash just like I had. I had and still have no seafood allergies at the time and ate and still eat tons of seafood at restaurants weekly and sushi of all kinds, never have any bad results.

    Last few weeks I tried to expand my home diet to include more seafood and looked at my new super market chain called Kroger and found that all of their generic fish was imported from China, including freezers full of tilapia and other fish. I could not find any non-generic seafood in this store that wasn't from China. Decided not to buy any this time around after I learned my lesson the last time. I had to travel to their competitor HEB to find some non-Chinese seafood and luckily found some Alaskan salmon at a hefty price.

    I wish America would get it's shit together and wake the fuck up and stop importing food from China because of the horrible abuses of the environment that that country is perpetrating in the name of capitalism and profit and complete disregard for environmental and human safety as long as their shit infested products sell.

    China will cut its own dick off in the name of profit and sell it to anyone willing to buy a small fried spring roll.

  14. Re:God bless the free market! by Raumkraut · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Do you know why food products provide accurate lists of ingredients on the packaging in the first place?
    That's right; legislation.

  15. Re:God bless the free market! by Raumkraut · · Score: 5, Funny

    No, no, no, you've got it all wrong!

    The free market is about freedom for corporations; to sell whatever crap they want, however they want. If corporations cannot maximise profit by colluding to artificially maintain high prices and low wages, then the market is clearly not free!

  16. Re:God bless the free market! by blane.bramble · · Score: 5, Funny

    I shall launch my new brand:

    Fish-It

    Then they can't claim they weren't warned!

  17. Re:God bless the free market! by somersault · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So we should all hire private investigators any time we want to try a new brand of food, or every other week to make sure that food companies are still making "the good stuff" in an ethical way?

    People already do have the choice to buy dirt cheap stuff if they want. Just because the ingredients are on the packet doesn't mean that a lot of people won't chose based on price. I know that's what I did when I was a student. Now that I don't really need to care about the cost of food, I just base my choices on things like protein content and sugar content.

    --
    which is totally what she said
  18. Don't violate the laws of nature. by hoboroadie · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You can eat raw steer manure and live. (Well, at my farm you could, I would hesitate about CAFO waste.) Bird shit is chock-full of dangerous pathogens, you don't want the chicken coop anywhere near where the other critters live. Fresh air, sunlight, and happy composting organisms are used to convert nasty poop back into wholesome dirt that will grow safe edible food. Always wash your hands after you touch a bird. Wetlands- nasty, stinky swamps, are where water gets cleansed of pathogens and purified so that normal fish can live in it. Tilapia can live in warm, nasty water, but it would make them unsafe to eat.

    --
    They feared that it could be used to suppress protest or support unpopular rule.
  19. Tilapias are natural crap eaters... by madhatter256 · · Score: 4, Informative

    I remember a Dirty Jobs episode where Mike Rowe was at a fish farm that recycled their water.

    They used tilapia/carp to eat the poop.

    Here's a clip of the show on youtube.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qGoR4dbE1os

    Regardless, stay away from fish harvested by Chinese. They are either grown in poorly maintained farms, or fished from endangered parts of the ocean where fisheries are nearly depleted.

    --
    Previewing comments are for sissies!
  20. Re:God bless the free market! by cusco · · Score: 4, Informative

    voluntarily informed ingredients

    Because an international mega-corp would never lie to consumers, right? If you're under 40 you have probably never heard of the 'truth in packaging' laws, or the reasons why they exist. Things were bad enough that even the frelling Chamber of Commerce joined with consumers groups to lobby for the legislation.

    If you're over 40 and still believe this libertardian garbage then your blinders are on so tight you're probably beyond hope. Not sure why you think that everyone can afford to contract with a lab to analyze their corn flakes to see if they're made with mercury or contain measurable amounts of pesticides. You must belong to a distinctly higher income class than the rest of us.

    --
    "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin