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Related: About this forumHow the USDA’s new ‘chicken rule’ could change what you eat, and how it’s inspected
mucifer
(23,374 posts)Of course who knows how they are inspecting the vegetables. It's probably the same.
Enthusiast
(50,983 posts)drynberg
(1,648 posts)Massive deaths? Photos of hundreds getting care in hospitals? This ain't funny...it's horrible.
KurtNYC
(14,549 posts)Salmonella is commonly found in chicken, other poultry and on dry dog food (kibble) but none of these will be recalled unless the levels are above a certain limit. So the system knows it is there but safe handling and thorough cooking is the preferred way to deal with the presence.
As a consumer, you should treat every piece of raw chicken as though it has salmonella present on it -- wash hand, cutting boards, and knives after contact with meat (and before using them on other foods, especially foods that will be eaten raw like salad).
A chicken farmer makes less than 16 cents per bird which is one reason that chickens are commonly raised in warehouses with as many as 200,000 birds each. The environment is very factory-like as shown here:
dotymed
(5,610 posts)is one of the few meats that we proles can still afford.