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1 year ago
As U.S Gov lies many venison eaters will die from CWD/Mad Deer Disease (Prions)
We should learn from mad cow in Britain. That was absolutely botched in the early 1990s by the public-health community. I believe we have a really ...
Matthew5Verse7 • 1,769 views
MadDeerDisease
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2 years ago
MAD DEER DISEASE - PLEASE READ AND LEARN
MadDeerDisease
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150 billion pounds of edible food wasted annualy in America.
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Brain disease a slow goodbye - Utah hunter age 30 first victim of mad deer
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CJD Brain Killer Documentary
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Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD)
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Deadly CWD found in W Va deer herd - Prions deadlier then AIDS
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Hunters been giving possibly diseased venison to the pantries.
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Venison sausage and mad deer disease /CWD - What going to happen to the people at the pantries?
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2 years ago
Deadly CWD found in W Va deer herd - Prions deadlier then AIDS
Human incubation is 20 to 40 years, but no one survives more than two years after Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) goes active. Unlike AIDS, CJD can...
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2 years ago
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2 years ago
Brain disease a slow goodbye - Utah hunter age 30 first victim of mad deer
"Terminally ill Utah hunter, age 30, could be the first victim of U.S. 'mad
deer' disease," read the headline of a press release issued last week f...
1,818 views
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3 years ago
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3 years ago
Hunters been giving possibly diseased venison to the pantries.
Prion diseases are so awful and the proteins so unpredictable that scientists take extraordinary precautions against infection when studying them i...
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About Creutzfeldt-Jakob
Creutzfeldt-Jakob is a rare, fatal illness often described as "fast Alzheimer's" that occurs for no known reason in the population. It almost always occurs in the elderly.The first rash of cases in younger people was found in Britain and turned out to be a new variant of CJD, which was traced back to consumption of mad-cow beef. Variant CJD is similar to the "classic" illness, but often strikes younger people and tends to progress much more rapidly.
http://dir.salon.com/story/mwt/feature/2002/10/21/maddeer/in
MAD DEER - A SLOW GOODBYE
http://www.purefood.org/Meat/utahcjd.cfm
Why are hunters given diseased meat to the pantries?
http://blogs.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=blog.view&frie
Creutzfeldt-Jakob is a rare, fatal illness often described as "fast Alzheimer's" that occurs for no known reason in the population. It almost always occurs in the elderly.The first rash of cases in younger people was found in Britain and turned ou...
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MadDeerDiseaseLatest Activity
Mar 12, 2011Date Joined
Jan 26, 2009About this user
At least seven people age 66 or younger -- all hunters or venison eaters -- are known to have died of Creutzfeldt-Jakob in the U.S. in the last nine years. The total number will never be known because there's no federal requirement that all cases be reported. Preliminary studies suggest, and some neurologists suspect, that CJD is more common than generally believed -- it's simply misdiagnosed as Alzheimer's. That raises the obvious question: How many people would die of chronic wasting disease before a doctor called it?In a highly publicized case, three Wisconsin hunters who attended wild-game feasts died of neurological diseases. Two had Creutzfeldt-Jakob, one turned out to have another rare neurological ailment, Pick's disease. Tests are ongoing.
Another victim from Oklahoma died with a freezer full of venison. A 50-year-old Montana elk hunter died last summer; his brain tissue is now being analyzed at one of the world's foremost prion labs, at the University of California in San Francisco. Test results are pending.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention did autopsies on three other deaths of people under the age of 31 -- from Utah, Oklahoma and Maine -- who died of CJD between 1997 and 2000. Two were hunters; a third was the daughter of a hunter.
Deer can be infected for several years before showing symptoms, so it is impossible for hunters to recognize infected animals. Symptoms include loss of weight, unusual behavior, excessive salivation and increased drinking and urination.
Hunting is to blame for this diseases and you can see the wildlife agencies are more worried about how much money they would rake in from wildlife killers then the people. Its not really the 'hunters' that would be effected because they do not the carcass it the pantries, that is why "sportsman for hungry" is a huge "success" for the wildlife killing business and why they continue to lie about seriousness of this disease. Without "hunters for hungry" where would they dump the bodies?'Hunters' wont eat it! If there is no place to the dump deer carcass 'hunters' wont be buying license to kill. Its against the law to dump in the forest or rivers. You see why "hunters for hungry" exist.?