As reported earlier  this year, the Almond Board of California (ABC) has decided that all  almonds grown in that state must be pasteurized, irradiated or otherwise  killed, even when they're labeled "raw." This is necessary, the ABC  tells us, for "safety reasons." But who's safety? Certainly not the  safety of the consumer, since dead or cooked nuts are far less  nutritious than living, raw nuts. It turns out the focus is on the safety of  the industry, and killing all the almonds before allowing them to be sold  to consumers is a way to insulate the almond industry from lawsuits  stemming from rare salmonella outbreaks that afflict a tiny number of  consumers with compromised immune systems.
So rather than take  the risk that a few raw almonds might occasionally be contaminated and  harm a few individuals, the industry believes that it's better to harm  everyone equally by making sure all almonds are pasteurized or irradiated, rendering them  nutritionally deficient. Or, to put it another way, the industry will  knowingly put out a nutritionally inferior product to the masses in  exchange for a little legal immunity of its own.
Of course, the  Almond Board of California knows virtually nothing about nutrition and so does not even  acknowledge any difference between raw almonds and dead almonds. It  makes me wonder if the board is, itself, occupied by expired persons  that the few remaining living members simply haven't bothered to remove.  They seem incapable of distinguishing between living organisms and dead  ones, after all. And yet the differences are tremendous: Cooked almonds  have most of their natural phytonutrients destroyed by excess heat (or  radiation). Protein content is diminished, fats are molecularly altered  and sugars are broken down into less healthy forms. All this seems to be  of no concern to the ABC, which remains convinced that cooked, dead  almonds are virtually identical to raw almonds in taste, texture and  nutrition.
Many almond growers,  not surprisingly, are hopping mad at the ABC for this "pasteurization  tyranny" that will now require almond growers to kill a perfectly good  product before they can sell it to consumers. It's almost like being in  the flower business and, after growing beautiful orchids for your  customers, some stupid state agency comes along and says you have to  cook all the flowers before you can sell them because somebody once  stuck their nose in a pot of orchids and sniffed up a creepy crawler.  Cooked orchids, alas, are not nearly as beautiful as living orchids.
But the ABC will  hear none of it. They're determined to kill their almonds, even if it  means compromising the integrity of the entire industry due to the  planned false labeling that would classify dead almonds as "raw."  Starting in September, when consumers pick up a bag of "raw almonds" at  a health food store, they have  no way of knowing if those almonds are actually raw, or if they're just  pretend raw because the ABC voted to have them pasteurized (cooked) and  then labeled as raw. Virtually all almonds sold in North America are grown in  California, by the way. This ruling therefore impacts the whole  industry.
The ABC does not  even seem committed to honest labeling. If the almonds are to be  pasteurized, shouldn't they be labeled, "Pasteurized"? It seems  stubbornly dishonest to cook all the almonds while labeling them "raw."  It's an insult to the consumer, too, but it's also par for the course  when it comes to food safety: The FDA, after all, insists that  both irradiated foodsand GMO foods should not be labeled as such  because the labels might "confuse consumers." That's right: Too much  information is dangerous to consumers! Knowledge might cause them to  make the wrong purchasing decision!
As a consumer, I've  never felt so insulted in my entire life. Except, perhaps, for the one  time a radio show host accidentally called me a doctor.
Singling out almonds
Certainly, there  have been a handful of deaths due to salmonella poisoning from raw  almonds. To put this in perspective, so what? Over 16,000 people  died last year from drunk driving, and I don't see the feds banning  cars. Over 100,000 Americans died from pharmaceuticals, and yet those  remain heavily advertised everywhere. Countless millions of children  have died over the years from cancers stemming from chemical food additives like sodium nitrite, hydrogenated  oils and petrochemical food coloring, yet you don't see anybody jumping  up and down to save those kids. But when five people croak from eating  raw almonds, they treat it like it's a national emergency. Maybe  terrorists are now using salmonella as a biological weapon...
But let's get real  here: Eating food comes with some risk. You can die from salmonella poisoning in  alfalfa sprouts, too, if you have a really weak immune system, or you  could keel over from eating raw sushi at the local Japanese diner. You  might croak after drinking a gallon of raw milk that went really, really bad, or you could  buy the farm after eating a salad contaminated by salmonella from the  knife you used to slice that contaminated chicken (70% of store-bought  raw chicken meat is contaminated with salmonella, did you know?). These  are inherent risks in life. Food sometimes kills you, and even when it  doesn't, you sometimes get diarrhea so bad that you wish it had.
The defense against  food poisoning is to have a healthy immune system and a really healthy  population of friendly flora in your gut. These two things can protect you  against almost any common food-borne organisms. And yet so many  Americans are diseased, immunosuppressed and intestinally imbalanced  (due to rampant use of antibiotics) that the authorities have decided  the only way to deliver safe food is to sterilize it first. Sure,  sterilization sounds like a great idea if applied to certain  politicians, but it's probably not such a smart move for our food supply. (It works for  the news, however. Just about every piece of news on the war in Iraq is  sterilized before being broadcast to Americans...)
But why single out  almonds in the first place? Spinach has been contaminated with e.coli,  and so have numerous other fresh foods (onions, parsley, lettuce, etc.).  Will our ever-so-vigilant government now come along and kill all those  foods, too? Shall we have a dinner of wilted lettuce, dead almond slices  and pasteurized salad dressing made with rape seed oil, MSG and  high-fructose corn syrup? That's the food the government will put its  stamp of approval on, it seems: Dead, deficient and dirt cheap.
Here's where all  this is going...
The bigger picture: Dead foods lead  to dead people
I have heard a  theory that says the governments of the world, concerned with the  population carrying capacity of planet Earth, have unleashed a plan to  greatly reduce the population by destroying the nutritional value of  foods and supplements. Once malnutrition becomes rampant, the theory  goes, the population will collapse through disease and infertility,  and the remaining few will find themselves in a happy, low-population  world where they can actually afford to buy a condo.
I'm not sure I  totally believe this plan, but some of what's happening with CODEX  Alimentarius sure seems suspicious (as in, why would they make  therapeutic doses of vitamins illegal, anyway?). On the other hand, if  world leaders really wanted to kill everyone, they could just force the  population to watch endless reruns of televised speeches from President  Bush, and that would drive countless voters to kill themselves far more  quickly.
But suppose the  theories have an element of truth? Mandating the killing of fresh foods  would certainly be an effective way to accelerate the diseasification  and death of the population. It's also a great cover story: "We're  killing all your food to HELP you! Because we care!"
I suspect, however,  that the real explanation here is nothing more complicated than mass  incompetence by the ABC, USDA, FDA and just about every government agency  with 3 or 4 letters. Real knowledge about the nutritional value of living foods remains disturbingly  rare. Conventional medicine still hasn't even accepted the idea that the  human body has any real nutritional needs whatsoever (except, perhaps,  for basic synthetic vitamins to prevent rickets and pellagra). Medical  doctors still aren't taught nutrition in med school, and the whole raw foods movement is only  starting to gain mainstream momentum. Sure, in twenty years, most people  will understand there's a huge difference between living foods and dead  foods, but right now, most health authorities and consumers are  stuck in the world of immutable macronutrients that have no "living"  properties whatsoever.
Whether you believe  that the plan to destroy the nutritional value of the food supply is due to widespread  incompetence or some evil plot to reduce the human population by  nutritionally starving the masses, one thing remains inarguably true:  Each year, more and more of your food is getting irradiated,  pasteurized, homogenized, milled, processed, steam treated, dipped,  bleached or otherwise altered. The result is that mainstream food is  less nutritious with each passing year, and that doesn't even consider  the mass mineral depletion of the soils that further contributes to the  nutritional deficiency of foods.
It all comes back to  the same fundamentals: If you want to be a healthy person, you'll need to  source real food grown by real people who live real close by. Buy local. Support  Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) organizations (www.LocalHarvest.org). Visit local farmer  co-ops, and grow what you can in your own garden. Buy organic, and  research the companies you're buying from. Know what you're putting in  your mouth before chewing and swallowing.
After all, there are  health authorities who are working hard right now to make sure that  every bite you take has been sterilized for your own protection. Living matter may  soon no longer allowed to be consumed by the public. Gee, isn't it nice  to know the authorities are looking out for our welfare yet again? I  think we should all send kind letters to the Almond Board of California,  thanking them for making our food purchasing decisions so simple that  even complete idiots can now eat themselves into a state of sustained  malnourishment without giving it a second thought.
It is a fascinating  sign of the times when the authorities in charge of the food supply seem  dead set on making foods as nutritionally worthless as possible.
Online resources for taking action
Organic Pastures
www.OrganicPastures.com
160 acres of almonds, they can sell you raw almonds directly (and they're also into raw milk).
Good folks. Highly recommended. May be one of the few remaining sources of truly raw almonds in California.
Living Nutswww.OrganicPastures.com
160 acres of almonds, they can sell you raw almonds directly (and they're also into raw milk).
Good folks. Highly recommended. May be one of the few remaining sources of truly raw almonds in California.
www.LivingNutz.com
They have great information about raw almonds, plus an online petition. Sign their petition!These folks are big into raw foods and also highly recommended.
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