I thought it a good moment to take a guess at just what is going on
inside Defra in respect of MRSA and pigs and what they are trying to
do.
It does not take a genius to realise that their claims about MRSA,
even given the best Defraspek, are inconsistent and evasive.
In one place they say they haven't tested the pigs because nobody has
asked them to; somewhere else that they have been asked to test by the
EU, but won't give us the results. (They have admitted refusing
results for other diseases in chickens.)
Not satisfied with that, the industry tells us that no MRSA has been
found in the first three months of this year, but the substantiation
does not seem to exist.
I think any normal human being, especially anyone that suspects that
Defra's vets are a bunch of devious dangerous crooks, would deduce
that the pigs do indeed have MRSA and probably just about everything
else as well.
The pigs have been very sick for ten years, what else would you
expect.
So what are they up to this time?
Delaying as long as possible the news that the pigs have MRSA and then
using the traditional tactic of blaming Europe and implying that since
"we have only just discovered it" we must have got it from them,
probably Holland, who have had MRSA in pigs for years.
It is not going to work.
The Dutch are not that daft. They can buy British ****k and be here and
back in a couple of hours. They will already have tested the ****k and
found the MRSA. They even have many subsidiaries here in England. They
probably know more than Defra do, who fake so many do***ents and tests
that they probably confuse even themselves.
Why haven't the Dutch made it public? They don't need to. They have
few problems in their hospitals and are a damn sight smarter that
Defra and its quangos.
There is also something else too.
The science will show the position in the sequence of spread - and if
as I expect, the strain shows that it evolved from a mutation in
British pigs during the 1999 epidemic of PMWS in East Anglia (just
possibly in N.Ireland a little earlier.) everyone will know.
The grand-daddy of them all will be identified. That is pretty serious
which is exactly why Britain's bent vets continue to hope something
will turn up to obscure the position.
It won't. They are finished and had better realise that being hung for
a sheep is no pleasanter from being hung for a lamb.Their very odd
behaviour shows that they do realise just how serious this is. The
fact that there are verly obviously trying to ****ft the blame to the
farmers confirms their recognition of just how dire their sitaution
really is
They are completely finished whatever they do and had better hope
that whatever they can drag up in mitigation for such behavior will
help.
--
Regards
Pat Gardiner
Release the results of testing British pigs for MRSA and C.Diff now!
www.go-self-sufficient.com


|