Caring viewers,
this week’s edition of
Healthy Living
features an interview
with renowned
Indo-Canadian scientist,
author and activist
Dr. Shiv Chopra, who
has worked for decades
to promote food safety,
public health
and human rights
around the world.
Dr. Chopra and
his colleagues challenged
a series of efforts
to approve
harmful chemicals
intended for use in the
meat and dairy industries.
For example,
in the 1990s he testified
at Canadian Senate
hearings and
won court cases against
the use of Bovine Growth
Hormone (BGH) and
other harmful drugs.
Through his efforts BGH
was banned in Canada
in 1999 and subsequently
in the European Union.
Dr. Chopra has also
opposed the use of
antibiotics in intensive
animal agriculture, and
revealed the true causes
of bovine spongiform
encephalopathy (BSE) or
“mad cow disease.”
A native of India,
Dr. Chopra has lived
in Canada since 1960 and
is the author of numerous
publications on science,
society and religion,
including
his international
bestselling book
“Corrupt to the Core”
on public food safety.
His academic
background includes
a bachelor’s degree
in veterinary medicine
from Punjab Veterinary
College in India and
a Ph.D. in microbiology
from McGill University
in Montreal.
Dr. Chopra has also
received numerous
academic honors,
including a World Health
Organization Fellowship.
Now let’s learn about
how Dr. Chopra’s interest
in effecting change
evolved.
I was born in India,
I grew up there,
I studied there.
I became a veterinarian
in India.
Then I took
a postgraduate diploma
in vaccine production.
I worked there for two,
three years, and then
I came to Canada
to do a Masters and PhD
in microbiology.
It was on
industrial farming of pigs.
I worked another year
as a post-doctoral fellow.
After that I was director
of biological research
at Miles Laboratories.
And that’s where
I started to become
quite disillusioned with
the profession that
I had joined.
Dr. Chopra’s
disillusionment with
traditional ways of
doing science grew
while he worked in
the pharmaceutical field
and after he became
a government official.
Originally, it was thought
going into science
was going to do good
to society, you’ll have
a respectable profession.
And that’s how I got into
science, but once I joined
the pharmaceutical
company,
I saw the pressures,
that they were not really
doing research, and
I was head of research.
So I felt this way
I’ll always be a student,
I will never be productive,
I mean that was my job
to be productive,
being head of research.
So I gave up there and
a job came along to
work at Health Canada.
While working for
Canada’s national
health service, he began
to realize that many
commonly used vaccines
were actually harmful
to human health.
During your employment
at Health Canada,
you were asked to study
the toxicity of
different molecules used
in the meat and dairy
industry.
Can you give us
a few examples of
the ones you studied
and what they are?
Actually there is a period
of 20 years before that,
at Health Canada.
Originally I started
as a vaccine expert.
A number of vaccines
like mumps and rubella
I was opposed to,
but there was nothing
I could do at that time,
because I didn’t have
any proof that
they would do harm or
they would be ineffective.
Now I’ve been proven
to be right.
And it was still
in that area I became
a fellow of the World
Health Organization,
traveling, which took me
all over the world.
I studied the regulatory
system of vaccines.
And only after
coming back from there,
some years later
I moved over to
my original profession,
the veterinary side.
Dr. Chopra’s
veterinary background
then came into play
as he began to see
the links between the
chemicals administered
to industrially farmed
animals and
human diseases.
That’s when
I got to be working on
the human safety of drugs
or products which are
given to food-producing
animals, in the Bureau of
Veterinary Drugs,
that’s where
those drugs came, and
they had to be looked at
from the point of view
of human safety.
In other words, if a drug
is given to the animals,
then we have to
make sure that
nothing goes wrong.
First of all, are there
any residues left
of the product given to
food-producing animals,
could it be in their milk,
could it be in their meat,
could it be in the eggs.
Alternatively
there were other issues;
if you are giving products
which residue may not
be a problem,
is there another way that
may harm not just
individual,
but public health,
like through
antibiotics resistance.
And then later
other products will
come up which
were not even drugs.
It became fashionable
in Europe and Canada
to feed slaughterhouse
waste back to
producing animals,
to chickens and pigs
and cows and
back to each other
and that caused
a serious problem.
It was also from
that same period,
the idea of genetic
modification of seeds
and animals to stimulate
extra food production,
other drugs
like hormones were
given to animals
for similar purposes.
And whatever issues
there are, they have to be
studied by the companies
wanting to sell
those products.
And if there were any
problems, the companies
will be told that
we’re not satisfied,
because the law says that
the company that sells
any product in Canada
that directly or indirectly
gets into the human food
chain, or directly into
the human body through
water, environment,
whichever, has to be
proven to be safe under
the Food and Drugs Act.
However, despite
the apparent safety
provided by this legislation,
hormones and
other harmful substances
that directly affect
human health were
approved for use in the
meat and dairy industries.
Then as time went
they start to take
sex hormones,
both male and female,
make a concoction of them
synthetic and natural,
and they started to
inject them into cows.
Actually not just inject,
they used to implant them
behind the ears,
large pellets and
they would remain
for the rest of the life
of the cattle.
And that’s the beef that
people eat to this day,
so that hormone remains
behind there
and when the animal
is slaughtered, the ear
is cut off and that ear
is then boiled to
make gelatin and that
gelatin with concentrated
hormones sitting there
now goes into
making capsules.
It goes into gel,
into yogurt, into
ice cream, candy, and
this children are eating
on a regular basis.
What hormones do is
they cause cancer and
endocrine disruption.
So puberty is affected and
you cannot determine
the lowest level or
the maximum level
of something
that causes cancer.
One molecule attached to
a cell can induce cancer
so you cannot determine
the maximum
residue limit.
The second product that
we’re looking at
in a very big way
is antibiotics.
Antibiotics you can
determine the residue
but the concern there is
only allergic reaction
in patients who may be
allergic, that is not
a very big concern.
But there’s
a bigger concern when
you give antibiotics
to every animal for life.
Those antibiotics,
once it’s passed through
the intestinal tract of
the animal, which is full
of trillions of bacteria
of various kinds, and as
the antibiotic will kill off
the good bacteria
it may leave some
pathogenic bacteria.
Seventy-five percent of
the antibiotic use
is in farm animals.
Dr. Chopra sees
a number of other threats
to public health
that are a result of
a dysfunctional
industrialized
global food system.
Pesticides are
one of them.
And they are now
beginning to ban
many pesticides.
Sweden has just banned
80 pesticides, 80.
There are hundreds
of pesticides.
And usually
the Scandinavian countries
take the lead on this
and so
they’re doing very well.
When you slaughter
an animal only half
the animal is meat;
the rest is discarded.
Now what do you do
with this?
Because there’re such
huge slaughterhouses
they don’t want to
waste anything.
They take the fat and
so on, they process that
and that goes into soap
or cream and then
all kind of things.
But the rest of the protein
they boil it up, they dry it,
and then they feed it back
to the animals.
And that sets up
what’s called bovine
spongiform disease or
mad cow disease, which
then is transmitted to
people and called CJD
(Creutzfeldt-Jakob
Disease) and kills people.
That was another item
and we have pesticides,
we have hormones,
we have antibiotics,
we have slaughterhouse
waste and of course
the genetically modified
organisms, GMOs.
There was a huge uproar
in Spain, 15,000 people
demonstrating because
Spain is allowing
the use of GMOs.
So there is now this issue
within the countries,
in India the GMOs have
become a huge issue.
Dr. Chopra believes that
informing the younger
generation that
growing organic foods,
free of pesticides and
other unnatural substances,
is essential to
creating a healthy future
for our planet.
Agriculture must be
introduced in every school
as a compulsory subject
with all children growing
food in the schoolyards,
in their villages, and
PTAs (Parent Teacher
Associations)
should be involved.
If everybody wants to go
green, the municipalities
are collecting
green garbage.
Well, they can make
compost, they can
deliver it to schools,
one or two football fields
can be converted
to gardens.
And parents and children
and grandchildren and
everybody should be
working together.
You have
a happier society.
You have
a healthier society.
We’d be spending much
less on treating disease
because the disease
will not occur.
I gave up eating meat
for various reasons.
First of all, it’s healthier
to be vegetarian.
Secondly, it’s healthier
for the environment.
It’s good for the climate.
Much of the
climate change is due to
industrial agriculture.
All that can be taken care
of if you only grow food
in our schoolyard and
community gardens.
Dr. Shiv Chopra,
we thank you for your
enlightening comments
on food safety
and human health.
May you have continued
success in informing the
public and governments
around the world
about the vital need to
end industrial agriculture
and the benefits
of community grown
organic crops.
For more details
on Dr. Chopra,
please visit
www.ShivChopra.com
His book
“Corrupt to the Core”
is available at
www.KosPublishing.com
DVDs by Dr. Chopra
are available at
www.MediaReel.net/Chopra
Gracious viewers,
thank you
for your presence today
on our program.
Coming up next is
Science and Spirituality,
after Noteworthy News.
May humanity quickly
adopt the healthy,
organic vegan lifestyle.