But now it’s not just milk and the legally allowed amount of blood, pus, urine, dirt, fecal matter, cleaning agents, and the things the FDA found and did nothing about.
Now it’s an unambiguous statement that unknown quantities of unknown substances in your food will not trigger enforcement actions!
In Florida up to 30% of the volume of milk can be pus (there’s lots of puss coming out of these abused girl’s hits due to infections on wounds caused by the machines), so enjoy drinking your boiled pus drink
This tried to limit it to “400,000 [pus] cells per milliliter” but it looks like it didn’t pass.
Also found this fun guide (adapted from FDA guidelines) telling labs how to count the pus cells. Particularly alarming is that they tell the labs to err on the side of ignoring pus cells “If in Doubt, Do Not Count Questionable Cells!”
Time to get on the bandwagon of ultra-pasteurized milk or re-boil your milk at home
“Ultra pasteurized” are just words on a carton unless there’s someone verifying it.
I have terrible news for you. At least in my part of America, the only milk you can buy is ultra high pasteurized.
Of course, that’s what they’ve been doing until now. Let’s see what happens without the FDA on it.
But now it’s not just milk and the legally allowed amount of blood, pus, urine, dirt, fecal matter, cleaning agents, and the things the FDA found and did nothing about.
Now it’s an unambiguous statement that unknown quantities of unknown substances in your food will not trigger enforcement actions!
Dipshits like RFK jr want to experiment on everyone and make them “healthy again” by giving everyone raw milk.
I want regular pasteurized milk so I can make clotted cream. But I’d rather have ultra high pasteurized and not have to worry about shit like that.
In Florida up to 30% of the volume of milk can be pus (there’s lots of puss coming out of these abused girl’s hits due to infections on wounds caused by the machines), so enjoy drinking your boiled pus drink
Gonna need some sauce on that chief.
https://www.congress.gov/bill/111th-congress/senate-bill/3758
This tried to limit it to “400,000 [pus] cells per milliliter” but it looks like it didn’t pass.
Also found this fun guide (adapted from FDA guidelines) telling labs how to count the pus cells. Particularly alarming is that they tell the labs to err on the side of ignoring pus cells “If in Doubt, Do Not Count Questionable Cells!”
https://www.wifss.ucdavis.edu/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/RulesforIdentifyingCellCount.pdf