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Originally Posted by jfman
Farming standards don't matter.
We've had enough of experts
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They're not relevant in the context of chlorinated chicken and EU rules. As I said, the important thing is the end result. Chlorinated washing improves the end result. Whatever way you look at it, EU foodstuffs would be safer if they used chlorinated washing. If the EU was that interested in food safety, then it would seem they should impose a regime of washing with liquid nitrogen.
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Marks & Spencer said a trial of five new policies, which included offering bonuses to farmers who kept campylobacter out of their flocks and blasting the surface of chickens with liquid nitrogen, had produced a "step-change improvement".
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