blatant propaganda article:
Pet food is junk food - poisoning your pets with multinational offerings.
by Dr Tom Lonsdale, Veterinarian (link below).

Aids like illnesses caused by pet food?
Poisons injure health or destroy life. Some are quick acting strychnine
and cyanide others act slowly alcohol and tobacco although addiction
speeds up the process. Sometimes packet labels warn about the contents.
Smoking kills say the labels, but only now after years of anti-tobacco
lobbying.
Alcohol containers sometimes carry labels recommending limited intake
of the poison, but generally carry no warnings. Some poisons are banned
and some are sanctioned and some aren't even recognised as poisons.
Take artificial pet foods for instance widely available in supermarkets,
petrol stations and corner stores (do they still exist?) they injure
the health of a majority of the world's pets, but few folks know or
are allowed to know.

As a veterinary practitioner confronted by the procession of bedraggled
diet-affected pets attending my clinic I was, at first, too busy dealing
with the problems to notice their origin. Besides, I was handicapped
by a university education and constant bombardment by pet food ads.
But eventually I woke up to my naiveté, my complicity, in promoting
artificial modern diets to the pets under my care. Pet owners accepted
my apologies for past misleading advice and together we set about helping
their artificial-diet-addicted pets.
By the early nineties a group of Australian vets, The Raw Meaty Bone
Lobby, started to chip away at the artificial pet food dogma encasing
the veterinary profession. The Australian Veterinary Association (AVA),
itself in receipt of pet food company funds, led the counter attack.
Within the professional journals the AVA banned discussion of diet and
diet induced dental disease and issued media statements against the
dissident members.
Hostilities escalated and spilt over into the UK veterinary profession
with the US pet food regulator, the FDA (Food and Drug Administration),
involved in exchanges too. Along the way the Western Plains Zoo, WWF,
ABC Science Show, a professor at the NHMRC and numerous university lecturers
and university departments were shown to be involved with, or actively
promoting the interests of, the artificial pet food industry. High Court
Judge, Justice Michael Kirby, Patron of the RSPCA, justified that organisation's
involvement with Colgate-Palmolive, makers of Science Diet, on the basis
that the RSPCA needed the money.
Besides the toothpaste maker the other major players are American
transnationals, Mars Inc. and Procter and Gamble and the Swiss giant
Nestlé. Money talks and the watchdogs stay silent, whether they be protecting
against cruelty to animals, truth in labelling or the welfare of children
in our schools. A book was needed to tell it the way it is and attempt
to get some sort of debate going.

Starting in October 1996 I sat in my garret scribbling away at Happy
Zone, for that was the working title. I hoped that by working in
the Zone I could make people happy by revealing sombre truths and showing
how things could be better. Natural pet food is cheaper, pets live healthier
longer lives, vet bills reduce and the environment gets a better deal.
Except for the artificial pet food companies and their veterinary allies
it s a win, win, win situation.
Richard Potter the defamation lawyer, two barristers and four other
lawyers commented on the text and Happy Zone metamorphosed into
Raw Meaty Bones: promote health. By August 2001 the book was
ready to be launched, but instead more layers were added to the multi-layered
scandal. The Australian newspaper had exclusive rights to a story about
the book scheduled for Saturday 18 August but the story and the colour
photographs finished in the can. Michael Stutchbury, the editor of The
Australian, failed to return calls or answer correspondence regarding
the newspaper's back flip.
On Sunday 19 August the Sydney newspaper The Sun Herald scheduled
to publish an 800 word exposé based on revelations contained in Raw
Meaty Bones, but that finished in the can too. Worse still, an advertorial
headline in the paper's science pages told readers: NEW FOOD HELPS PETS
LIVE LONGER. (The Mars company Uncle Ben's of Australia have since released
a new line of pet foods which they claim: Add life to the life of your
pet. )
Messrs Laws, Jones and Carlton (Australian mass-media journalists)
were sent copies of Raw Meaty Bones, as were 50 other journalists.
Almost all appear to have ignored the information and their employers
still broadcast pet food ads. Bert Newton, on his Good Morning Australia
program, went to air with a sanitised version of the story the book
Raw Meaty Bones didn't get a mention; neither was it acknowledged
that the diet-affected Labrador dog in Bert's story was filmed at the
author's veterinary clinic in 1994! Regarding the multi-layered pet
food scandal, viewers were spared the details, but Bert did encourage
us to feed our pets raw meaty bones.
Is truth too hard to bear; is the full story too difficult for Australia's
journalists? Will a slow poison affect us all? Time may tell, but at
least we have a benchmark.
By Dr Tom Lonsdale PO Box 6096 Windsor Delivery Centre NSW 2756 Australia.
Tel: +61 02 4574 0537 Fax: 02 4574 0538
Email: [email protected]
Additional information go to: www.rawmeatybones.com