350 likes | 1.78k Views
In Paris there is a daily clandestine trade in horse-flesh, both for the restaurants, who serve it as fillet of venison; and for the poor, who in that case pay for it more than its real market-value as meat. HOUSEHOLD WORDS. A WEEKLY JOURNAL CONDUCTED BY CHARLES DICKENS
E N D
In Paris there is a daily clandestine trade in horse-flesh, both for the restaurants, who serve it as fillet of venison; and for the poor, who in that case pay for it more than its real market-value as meat.
HOUSEHOLD WORDS. A WEEKLY JOURNAL CONDUCTED BY CHARLES DICKENS SATURDAY, APRIL 19, 1856 PRICE 2d HORSE-EATING VOL XIII 317
And what prevents it? Prejudice, and nothing else! The same prejudice which makes the English refuse to taste frogs and escargots, though both are esteemed and expensive dishes on the continent.
A possible result of the clandestine sale is, that glandered horses may be brought to market…. but by a public and open sale, under the same authorised inspection as is exercised at the abattoirs, all danger of the kind is avoided.
Glanders Burkholderia mallei Last UK case 1938,untreated mortality 95% But Trichinella Horse meat, Europe, 3350 cases & 14 outbreaks in last 30 years Commission Regulation EC 2075/2005
£47.5m ‘black fish’ scam Pelagic skippers, most from Symbister Shetland Catch, Lerwick Wendy house - the ‘private pelagic pipe’ Forensic accountants
Serene LK 297 Built Norway, 2009 2751 tons 71.3m CuttySark Built Dumbarton, 1869 963 tons 65m
China Melamine The ‘iron tailed horse’ again Scotland Whiting transformed into Haddock Beef transformed into Lamb
Andrew Wynter, 1855 ‘To such a pitch of refinement has the art of falsification of alimentary substances reached, that the very articles used to adulterate are adulterated, and while one tradesman is picking the pockets of his customers a still more cunning rogue is, unknown to himself, deep in his own!’
Cup of Coffee In the coffee Chickory In the Chickory Roast acorns, roast dog biscuits, baked horse liver powder. In the milk 25% product of the ‘iron tailed cow’.
Pennington Group Central Recommendations HACCP should be adopted by all food businesses to ensure food safety (implemented January 2006) Pending implementation, selective licensing of butchers should be introduced (Prerequisites: separation of raw and cooked meats, training of staff, HACCP). Implemented October 2000 (Scotland), November 2000 (England), December 2000 (Wales)
Groundhog Day is a 1993 comedy film directed by Harold Ramis, starring Bill Murray and Andie MacDowell. In the film, Murray plays Phil Connors, an egocentric Pittsburgh TV weatherman who, during a hated assignment covering the annual Groundhog Day event (February 2) in Punxsutawney, finds himself repeating the same day over and over again. After indulging in all manner of hedonistic pursuits, he begins to re-examine his life & priorities.
HACCP = Safety Case ‘A structured and documented body of evidence that provides a convincing and valid argument that a system is adequately safe for a given application in a given environment’ What could go wrong? How bad could it be? What has been done about it? What if it happens?
Nimrod Safety Case process fatally undermined by the assumption that it was ‘safe anyway’ because it had flown successfully for 30 years.
Nimrod Financial pressures and cuts drove a cascade of multifarious organisational changes, which led to a dilution of the airworthiness regime and culture in the MOD and distraction from safety and airworthiness issues as the top priority.
Latent Conditions • Shortfalls in training • Inadequate equipment • Bad practices
Reports on Crowd Safety & Controlat Football Grounds Shortt 1924 Disorder at 1923 Cup Final Moelwyn Hughes 1946 Bolton. Overcrowding. 33 Deaths Chester 1966 Harrington 1968 Lang 1969 Wheatley 1977 Ibrox. 66 Deaths McElhone 1977 Popplewell 1986 Bradford. Fire. 56 Deaths Taylor 1989 Hillsborough. 95 Crushed to Death
‘Unless we announce disasters, no one will listen’. Neversaid by Sir John Houghton in his 1994 book ‘Global Warming’.
‘It is time to close the books on infectious disease’. Never said in the 1960s by the US Surgeon General, William Stewart.
‘Elementary, my dear Watson’. Never said by Sherlock Holmes.