If you eat any kind of fast food and also claim to live a “drug-free” lifestyle, you are fooling yourself.
This from survivethenews.com.
New research shows that fast food, including “healthier” kinds like Chipotle and In-N-Out, may contain trace amounts of pharmaceutical drugs, including animal antibiotics and contraceptives.
NOTE: Back in September, Moms Across America (MAA) submitted food samples from 10 of the most popular American food chains to the Health Research Institute (HRI) for testing.
HRI is an Iowa-based nonprofit laboratory that tests food for nutritional value, bio-functionality, contaminants, and toxins, while MAA exists to bring awareness to food that contains genetically modified organisms (GMOs), pesticides, and other toxic ingredients.
Volunteers collected food samples from McDonald’s, Subway, Chick-fil-A, Burger King, Taco Bell, Chipotle, Dunkin’, Wendy’s, Domino’s, and In-N-Out. In total, they collected 42 samples from various locations of these popular brands.
With the exception of Chipotle and Subway, all of the food samples tested positive for veterinary drugs, though all contaminants were below 2 micrograms per kilogram (mcg/kg), which is below what the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) considers a safe threshold.
The three animal antibiotics discovered in the food samples include monensin, narasin, and nicarbazin. They were all found in very low concentrations.
– Less than 0.5 mcg/kg of monensin was detected in food samples from Taco Bell, Dunkin’, Wendy’s, Domino’s, Burger King, and McDonald’s—the ‘acceptable’ daily intake of monensin is said to be 12.5 mcg/kg of body weight per day.
– Less than 2 mcg/kg of narasin was detected in a Wendy’s cheeseburger, as well as trace amounts detected in samples from Dunkin’, Domino’s, and a Starbucks sandwich.
– Less than 0.5 mcg/kg of nicarbazin was detected in a Chick-fil-A chicken sandwich – the acceptable daily intake of nicarbazin is 200 mcg/kg of body weight per day.
As to what each of these drugs does to the human body:
– [M]onensin can cause anorexia, diarrhea, weakness, and motor problems—overdoses have slowly poisoned and even killed cattle.
– [M]onensin can cause rhabdomyolysis, a condition marked by breakdown of muscle tissue that can damage the heart and kidneys.
– Narasin is an antibiotic and antiparasitic drug that keeps chickens from developing parasitic infections. It is also added to cattle feed to increase dry matter intake.
– Side effects of narasin in animals include anorexia, diarrhea, and degeneration of heart and skeletal muscles.
The Epoch Times reported:
Both narasin and monensin are ionophores, meaning they can disturb the balance of ions in cells and are often used in animals to control bacterial and parasitic infections.
Many farmers refuse to use narasin in their poultry—but Chick-fil-A apparently has no problem with it—because it is highly toxic to embryos and decreases egg laying and hatching.
Then we have nicarbazin:
[A]n antiparasitic drug used to fatten chickens and turkeys, as well as to control the population of geese and pigeons.
Zen Honeycutt, MAA’s executive director, commented about the study’s findings:
The impact of millions of Americans, especially children and young adults, consuming a known animal contraceptive daily is concerning.
With infertility problems on the rise, the reproductive health of this generation is front and center for us, in light of these results.
In further statements to The Epoch Times, Honeycutt noted:
[T]here have been very few studies about the effects of these and other drugs in humans.
These are veterinary drugs and hormones, so the only studies that I have found and that you will find will be for animals.
[They’re] not authorized for humans, and yet they’re being allowed [into the food supply].
Final thoughts: For Chick-fil-A, good thing the mass propaganda media won’t allow this study to see the light of day. Chick-fil-A’s long lines would diminish.
Me? I’m sticking with Subway for fast food.