The states of Minnesota and Wisconsin banned the use or sale of bovine
somatotropin (bST), a bioengineered pituitary hormone that stimulates
lactation in cows, increasing milk production by as much as 25
percent. The ban was engineered by an odd coalition that included
environmentalists such as Jeremy Rifkin's Foundation for Economic
Trends, which opposes biotechnology, and groups representing small,
relatively inefficient farms vulnerable to price decreases.
In 1985 the FDA determined that milk and meat from cows treated with
bST was safe for human consumption, and indeed virtually
indistinguishable from that of untreated cows, a conclusion echoed in
studies published in the Journal of the American Medical
Association.
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