*
Deceptively they
call the flesh of
murdered deer
venison,
sometimes creating
Mad Hunters' Disease
in those who eat
the meat of a
Bambi or Tennyson.
*
In 2018 at least 25 U.S. states, 2 Canadian provinces and Norway have reported cases of Mad Deer, Mad Elk,Mad Moose, Mad Bear, Mad Caribou, Mad Mule Deer, Mad Reindeer.
CBS, MSNBC, NPR, CSpan (through cable industry) all profiteer from meat industry ads. and have censored the news. The 200 million $ NPR has invested in burger chain stock has bought silence. The USDA, CDC, FDA have protected
hunter tourism industries and have criminally neglected the public health attempting to hide the disease with the term
Chronic Wasting Disease rather than spongiform encephalopathy, a disease of many species. The Japanese government
tests all American meat, because of the USDA's refusal to test. Ann Veneman, former USDA Secretary, mentored by the American Meat Institute's
Richard Lyng, began the censorship before becoming a head of UNICEF.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/brucelee/2018/01/23/zombie-deer-disease-is-spreading-what-you-should-do/
https://www.forbes.com/sites/brucelee/2018/01/23/zombie-deer-disease-is-spreading-what-you-should-do/
Mad Deer disease, cervine spongiform encephalopathy, is in Tennessee. Hunters who murder deer and eat the deer meat can contract spongiform encephaloatphy, Mad Hunters' Disease. Mad Deer, Mad Elk have a history in Colorado (where Colorado State University created Mad Elk at a research station, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Ohio etc.
https://www.newschannel5.com/tennessee-wildlife-officials-implement-plan-for-chronic-wasting-disease-in-deer
Mad Deer, Mad Moose, Mad Elk, Mad Bear etc are in AR CO IL IA KS MD MI MN MS MO Mt ND NM NY ND OH PA SD TN TX UT VA WV WI WY http://ohiodnr.gov/news/post/odnr-takes-new-action-to-monitor-chronic-wasting-disease-in-ohio-s-deer-herd
Alaskan government trying to keep hunters from bringing deer urine into the state with which to entrap innocent mammals... since the urine can spread cervine spongiform encephalopathy or Mad Deer.
http://www.adfg.alaska.gov/index.cfm?adfg=wildlifenews.view_article&articles_id=481
saiom shriver