"Dave" <dpguerra@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
news:QuOdncewlrgORafVnZ2dnUVZ_oPinZ2d@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> AMUN wrote:
>> "Dave" <dpguerra@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
>> news:nMidnaAYKu-chqfVnZ2dnUVZ_vqdnZ2d@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>> AMUN wrote:
>>>> "kraut" <NewsGroupsPlease@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
>>>> news:of5334l9cdo4fbtr806gf1b9ugppmoigic@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>>>> On Sun, 18 May 2008 23:25:29 -0400, "AMUN"
>>>>> <spamblocker@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> As another reply already pointed out.
>>>>>> Hamburger can be full of bacteria, and not the same as a mouse.
>>>>>> Most hamburger is sold with a disclaimer label that it should
cooked
>>>>>> before
>>>>>> eating for that reason.
>>>>> Mine love raw bacon but the few times they have gotten it they have
>>>>> ended up getting worms and having to go to the vets for de-worming.
>>>>>
>>>>> The vet said "NO RAW ****K!!"
>>>>
>>>> YIKES!
>>>> Where do you buy your bacon if it gives the cat worms ?
>>>> Is that the same bacon YOU eat ?
>>>>
>>>> Bacterial contamination is one thing, but meat with actual parasites
is
>>>> only good for dumpster fill.
>>> i worked with a gentleman who came from an underdeveloped country. He
>>> said that to check the ****k for worms, they would pour coca-cola over
>>> the suspect meat. He said that it caused the worms to emerge from the
>>> meat.
>>>
>>> i think i'd puke if i saw that.
>>>
>>
>>
>> I KNOW I would.
>> Ever fed your cat(s) canned (wet) food in the summer, and accidentally
>> left a bit for a few days, then noticed it "squirming".
>> Yuck !
>>
>> But it's interesting, or more correctly, a twisted tribute to
capitalism,
>> that an area that doesn't have decent refrigeration for the meat would
>> still have coca-cola.<LOL>
>>
>>
>>
>>
> well, the problem isn't really refrigeration. The animal gets infected
> with the worms. Trichinella live in the muscle of the infected
animal....
> the part people eat.
A number of years ago now, the US surgeon general said, "All ****k now sold
in the US is safe to eat without being fully cooked".


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