cstaylor wrote:I think the point that Coligny and some of us are making is that Aeon didn't know if it was dangerous or not when they sold it. That's the fear: that potentially dangerous food enters the market, and there are no real systems in place to prevent its sale.
I understand. But Aeon also doesn't know if food that is supposed to be refrigerated was left sitting in a warm room for several hours somewhere in the supply chain. There are no systems in place to prevent that either. (I'll refrain from making a list of 20 other things that can go wrong and are unmonitored).
Look, I think we know that the amount of food that is contaminated to levels where you are at risk from eating it once or a few times (especially if you wash it) is virtually nil. And probably limited to products grown almost right next to the nuclear reactor. Is that not correct?
What I think we have is a situation where the government has been very conservative, set safety levels incredibly low, and imposed bans on selling where there is virtually no risk anyway. Part of the reason is that they certainly know that the system does not work perfectly, some mistakes will be made in distribution, banned products might make it into the marketplace in tiny quantities, and some crazy people might try to eat 840 kg of lettuce in a week.
Then when glitches happen, we get in a panic anyway. This is despite the fact that, as Damn Name pointed out, in most countries this lettuce would not have been banned to begin with.
The government set these extremely conservative levels and ban apparently safe food because they know there is going to be slippage and want to make sure nobody gets sick, even when Aeon fucks up.
Compared with England's handling of hoof-and-mouth disease, where they destroy the lifestock...
FYI, I believe they do that mainly because of the concern of spread to other animals and the huge economic damage. It is very hard for humans to get sick from hoof-and-mouth disease. I know this because Wikipedia says so
