Guidelines from the Food and Drug Administration provide an interim reference level (IRL) for lead of 2.2 micrograms. The amount of lead found in these nuggets could be as much as five times higher than this IRL for children.

A recall was not requested because the products are no longer available for purchase. However, FSIS is concerned that some product may still be in consumers’ freezers.

You ate them already. Sorry.
—Walmart

  • Darkard@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    Gotta get the lead back in American children now to create the Republican voters of tomorrow

  • BeMoreCareful@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    This is deregulation. We inspect our own facilities and of something is found, we optimize for the stockholders.

    Lots of kids died eating penny candy and adulterated milk, maybe occasionally adding a hand or arm to the sausage.

    This time there’s lots of ag gag laws in place so we may not even get another Upton Sinclair.

    Hell all the deregulation is probably why Gen x has butts filled with cancer.

  • finallymadeanaccount@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    I don’t know if I’m more surprised the nuggets have lead in them, or that the FDA realised it was a bad thing, and actually warned people about them!

      • dan1101@lemmy.world
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        7 days ago

        Lead can be used to cheaply increase the weight of.a product. It is also used for whitening surfaces that benefit from that. Chinese manufacturers have been caught doing both many times, I would start with tracing the origin of this chicken.

      • Madzielle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        6 days ago

        from the pipes, and metal manufacturing equipment.

        lunchables recently were exposed to high lead levels, and many spices may contain lead.

      • teyrnon@sh.itjust.works
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        7 days ago

        Lead is in the soil, along with other heavy metals, pfas, and all sorts of shit, thousands of things. Including huge amounts of whatchacall it, flouride. I know you guys all trust that one, but it’s an industrial byproduct of aluminum smelting and is in the soil in high levels in places like where california raisens are grown. Also it’s a different molecule of flouride that the naturally occurring one. Sweet dreams.

    • teyrnon@sh.itjust.works
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      7 days ago

      Aldi is the best. They are a life saver, idk why they don’t expand into more areas, they’ve a great business model. And while idk how they treat their suppliers of food, they actually treat their employees better than any other grocer chain in the US. That I am familiar with.

  • Etterra@discuss.online
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    6 days ago

    I love the extra 6 words they had to include because they’re made out of assorted Grade D meats.

  • NottaLottaOcelot@lemmy.ca
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    6 days ago

    Chipped up chicken is the perfect place to hide fillers and contaminants. Can anyone really be surprised that Walmart would add in crap to displace meat volume and save a buck?

    If you can’t identify the cut of meat that it came from, you should expect that other shit is in it.

    • michaelmrose@lemmy.world
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      Industrial food production allows roughly 1-2% of workers to grow food for the other 98%. It is basically the foundation of modern civilization. It allows almost all persons, the majority of regions, even nations to be net importers of food either temporarily due to mischance or permanently due to specialization.

      Taking this away would collapse modern civilization as effectively as if you literally nuked everyone with the death toll being similar. Worse people don’t react well to starving to death so the rest would probably mostly kill each other other ways.

      The medieval society that emerged would produce little art or science but lots of potatoes and grains to support the much smaller total population.

      • ATS1312@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        6 days ago

        We’re not talking about “return to monke” type bullshit here. There are other ways.

        From Permaculture Food Forests to aquaponic warehouse farms, we can do better than… Whatever this lead-riddled hell is.

      • Vegafjord demcon@lemmy.ml
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        Industrial food production is dependent on fossil fuel and is destroying the soil. It is also encouraging large scale production which is bad because

        · it monopolizes food production which enables might and outcompete small scale farming.

        · is homogenizing food, making it more vulnerable to mass crop failure, and decreasing the diversity of food.

        · require massive infrastructures to distribute the food.

        But we cant transition over night. We have to grow forth this reality by mindfully construct lettens that normalize this state of being.

        • michaelmrose@lemmy.world
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          6 days ago

          You misunderstand we can’t transition AT ALL from industrialized food without killing most people and destroying civilization because it depends on 98% of people able to do something other than food. We can’t grow enough food for everyone and we can’t use 50-80% of our labor producing food anymore.

          We could dramatically decrease usage of meat or eliminate it, ship things less so we eat mostly what is available nearby most of the time, waste less, and make methods healthier and greener. We cannot do what you want.

      • Vegafjord demcon@lemmy.ml
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        6 days ago

        We dont need cars. Cars is actually part of the unwellness. Cars require overproduction and death regardless of whether we use fossil or electrical fuel. If we just look at the local cost of cars: · they are taking away space from our communities tyat could be used to gather, helping wildlife and grow food · they normalize long distance travelling, and therefore weakening local communities · they are making our societies unsafe in the sense that we cant let children play outside · they are at odds with samlife in the sense that they are endangering wildlife.

        The great thing about humans is that we are very adaptable. We arent naturally dependent on cars. We dream, and we do. So if we dream of a carfree society, we can in fact do it.

      • teyrnon@sh.itjust.works
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        7 days ago

        We don’t, and won’t, have that though. Capitalism is fine with proper guidance and oversight too. But we don’t have that.

        So unless we do it ourselves. we are poisoned.

        • michaelmrose@lemmy.world
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          6 days ago

          You can actually buy healthy food. Chicken wads shaped like dinosaurs were probably never the best option.

          • teyrnon@sh.itjust.works
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            You absolutely cannot buy healthy food if you are 95% of the population. I do not know what world do you think you are living in but it is not that one, it is this one and everything is poisoned. Everything. Sweet dreams.

            However I do agree that chicken loaf is not the best option.

  • mechoman444@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    To be fair, I don’t think the producers of that particular chicken nugget intentionally poisoned it with lead.

    Although I honestly don’t know what would be worse at this point. The actual intent to do this or the unbelievable negligence that caused it in the first place.

    • wheezy@lemmy.ml
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      No one can convince me that the combination of lead in gasoline AND the car depend infrastructure of the US is not at least a factor in the world we have today. I really think it’s contributed to the boomer brain and to an extent the Gen X brain to a large degree.

      This isn’t to say it’s not the only cause. The main factor still being capitalism rewarding psycho behavior combined with it has definitely brought us to a really really bad place.

      • Insekticus@aussie.zone
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        7 days ago

        Preach it, brother. Americans (and the collective west) got shafted hard with the raw end of the sick when it came to capitalism and its propensity to ignore health and safety, all in the name of profits for the Epstein class.

    • BeMoreCareful@lemmy.world
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      Food safety has never been one of our strong points.

      Hell, people probably ate healthier in the past.

          • ZombieChicken@reddthat.com
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            6 days ago

            Neither. They will drop “preventable” deaths from the stat to keep the number high. It’s the same thing they’ve been doing with the unemployment figures.

            • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              Ah, that makes sense!

              Yeah, I am… much more familiar with how they fuck with the econ stats… would you believe I am a, not unemployed, but ‘out of the labor force’ econometrician?

              I’ve been trying to point out the BS going on with econ stats for almost two decades now, and … well I am now one of the statistics.

    • protist@retrofed.comOP
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      It’s really one of the most America things I’ve ever read. I’m fortunate to live in a city in the US, so have no issue avoiding Walmart like the plague, but most of rural America probably bought these nuggets and dropped their kids’ IQs even further

      • Patrikvo@lemmy.zip
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        I’m fortunate to live in a city in the US

        You forgot the “un” in “unfortunate”. Guess you ate the nuggets allready.

        • Madzielle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          6 days ago

          ahhh, here are your meat shaped patties of ground flesh, with a side of corn syrup, just as you ordered. Now gobble up your glyphosate, like a good little patriot