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Date: | Wed, 5 May 2004 00:18:05 -0700 |
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Are you saying that the pig has no filtration system in his digestive
tract -- I mean we only have one chamber too but our bodies are pretty
damn good at absorbing only nutrients. Contaminents are either killed
off by the acidic environment of the stomach or pass on through to the
other end. Remember our digestive tract is basically a hollow tube that
strictly speaking is not part of the body. The intestinal tract doesn't
just absorb anything -- it filters and only takes in those things that
it provides receptors or other such vehicles for. Our beneficial
bacteria are there waiting to do their bit too in killing off unfriendly
bacteria and the like. With today's farming practices I don't think
there's any real problem with pork. I have studied a great deal of
physiology and I can't for a minute figure out how the trash that a pig
eats could wind up on their ribs hours later. The pig wouldn't survive
long enough for us to kill and eat him. If there is something
completely different about pig physiology that I don't know, someone
please inform me.
Liz
[log in to unmask] wrote:
> Pigs will eat whatever they can find - including other sick or dead pigs
> from the same pen or their own young. They love decaying flesh. Since they
> only have a one compartment stomach arrangement, Elmer Josephson, a cancer
> survivor and author of 'God's Key to Health and Happiness', found that it
> was very simple in design and combined with a limited excretory organ
> system. A few hours after the pig has eaten 'trash' and possibly parasite
> infected stuff, we might be eating that same trash off the ribs of the pig.
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