ShiroiHikari (post: 1419455) wrote:What makes this even scarier, at least to me, is what could happen if these practices continue. Don't cows get mad cow disease from eating the brain tissue of other cows? Could something like this possibly happen with dogs and cats as well?
Mad Cow Disease affected the brain and spinal cord but could be found anywhere within the cow from tissue to blood. The disease itself was transmitted because cows were fed the MBM (meat and bone meal) from the infected cows, yes.
Something like Mad Cow could very well happen again. Like I said, God knows
what exactly could happen. I do remember reading somewhere that pets fed MBM made from euthanized animals were more resistant to the euthanasia when it was their time to go. This resulted in more euthanasia having to be used and if that animal that had high doses of euthanasia was made into feed it could put your pet to sleep or make it sick. Not sure how authentic this is but it could be a possibility. I'll have to do more research on this.
MomentOfInertia (post: 1419458) wrote:Before you complain about this think of what the alternatives are, these guys are using stuff that would otherwise probably end up in a landfill of as fertilizer.
Sorry, this statement doesn't make any sense to me. The animals are eating this stuff and animals do poop so it's going to end up in the ground either way. Doesn't matter if it was passed through an animal's digestive system or treated into fertilizer. At least if its made into fertilizer then it could help grow something that isn't potentially harming someone's pet.
EDIT: After doing a little more research, MBM isn't all bad. It's being used as a fossil-fuel replacement and the UK uses meat and bone meal for the generation of renewable electricity. It's even being used as an environmentally sustainable replacement for coal. Those are some much better alternatives to using MBM instead of feeding it to pets and again, potentially harming them.