| Q. What’s the difference between the ingredients used in human foods and
those used in pet foods?
A. Pet foods are the traditional dumping grounds of the leftovers of human food
manufacturing. Ingredients destined for human food products have to pass minimum
standards of quality and safety imposed by the USDA. (U.S. Dept. of Agriculture). Any
indigestible wastes, condemned parts, or other by-products deemed unfit for human
consumption are then used for pet food, where the quality and safety of ingredients are
unregulated. In the big business of multinational food companies, nothing is wasted. This
applies to grocery store brands and mass marketed specialty brands such as Science Diet
(Colgate Palmolive) Iams (Proctor and Gamble), Nature’s Recipe (Heinz), and Ralston
Purina. A few conscientious pet food companies that are not owned by large
conglomerates go to great lengths to make pet foods containing only human quality
ingredients. More about them later.
Q. What kind of meats are used in pet foods?
A. There are two sources of supply for “pet-grade” meats and poultry. One source is
federally inspected USDA meat packing plants, where the carcasses that fail inspection
due to damage, disease, or cancerous tumors are separated for shipping to the pet food
factory. The other source is rendering plants, where 4D animals (dead, dying, diseased,
or disabled) are rendered into a dry crumbly meal and used for livestock feed, fertilizer,
and pet food ingredients. Rendering plants also process road kill and euthanized pets
from shelters and veterinary clinics.
Q. What about grains in pet foods?
A. Name brand pet foods utilize the waste products in the grain category, too. After the
more valuable starches and oils have been extracted, often by chemical processes, the
hulls and remnants are turned into ingredients such as ground corn, corn gluten meal,
brewer’s rice, ground wheat, and various flours. These ingredients have almost no
nutritional value, and are merely fillers. Sometimes whole grains are used that have been
deemed unfit for humans because of mold, too many pesticides, or improper storage.
Q. How about fats and oils used in pet foods?
A. Fats are an expensive and nutritionally important part of a pet’s diet. Many
manufacturers use “blended fats” from multiple sources, including recycled restaurant
grease (often rancid) that are stabilized with powerful chemical preservatives. Both the
toxins formed in previously cooked fats and the preservatives used to stabilize them have
been linked to cancer.
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