
Commercial
Pet Foods
Healthy
Choice Or Deadly Mistake?
Every
year the pet food industry makes millions of dollars selling
their products that claim they are a "Complete and
Balanced Diet," but commercial pet foods are unfit
for animal consumption.
The American Veterinary Medical Association confirms that
pets on a routine basis are rendered after they die in shelters
or are disposed of by animal control and health officials,
frequently find their way into pet foods.
Each year in the United States, 286 rendering plants dispose
of 12.5 million tons of road kill, dead pets, animal fat,
and meat wastes. Large vats that are used to grind and filter
animal tissue prior to deep frying, holds a mixture of body
parts ranging from dead and euthanized dogs and cats with
their flea collars still attached, deer, raccoons, and snakes
to plastic wrap the animals were sent in.
The mixture is then fed in a machine called an expander
and steam or water is added. The mixture is subjected to
steam, pressure, and heat until temperatures reach 305ºF.
After that the mixture is put through dies that determine
the final size of the food. Then it is cooked at high temperatures
and high pressure. Finally the Food is allowed to dry for
30-45 minutes.
The final product contains pharmaceuticals that lead from
antibiotics from livestock, euthanize (a drug that stops
the heart), and heavy metals that accumulate from a variety
of sources: pet I.D. tags, surgical pins, needles and collars.
Unsold meats, chicken, and fish that arrive in plastic wrap
and Styrofoam even end up in the mixture.
Transmittable spongiform encephalopathy (TSE) more commonly
known as "Mad Cow Disease" can be found in commercial
pet foods. The risk of exposure to TSE is three times more
likely than eating hamburgers. BHA and BHT, known to cause
liver and kidney dysfunction can be found in dry dog foods.
Propylene glycol is found in many semi-moist pet
foods, is a first cousin to anti-freeze, and destroys red
blood cells. Lead also frequently shows up in pet foods,
even the ones made from livestock. A diet of commercial
pet foods contributes to cancer, skin problems, allergies,
hypertension, kidney and liver failure, heart disease and
dental problems. If your cat or dog suffers from any of
this, take them of the commercial food for a few weeks and
try a natural raw holistic diet.
Additional
information about commercial pet foods