Furcifer
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- Joined
- Apr 30, 2007
- Messages
- 13,797
Do you really want to?
I do.

ETA: why didn't you just come and say he was lying? I thought I actually goofed.
Last edited:
Do you really want to?

Where did I say that? I believe I made the distinction several times between protein (or lean), fat and fillers. If I did it was a mistake.
ETA: You're a liar, I never said that at all post #51:
"It seems to me if they are using the term "meat" to mean both protein and fat it would be misleading."
Why are you lying? Troll.
I do.
ETA: why didn't you just come and say he was lying? I thought I actually goofed.![]()
It appears the only leg this lawsuit could stand on would be if the ground beef Taco Bell buys from it's supplier has oats inside as a filler. And that wouldn't be TB's problem, that would be the meatpacker's problem.
Given the ingredients listed, the plaintiff has a lot of work ahead of them to prove their case.
PETA applauds Taco Bell’s ‘almost-veg’ meat recipe
(...)
The media pounced, customers balked, and the company took to newspapers and Youtube in an effort to denounce the claims and repair its battled image.
Out of all this mess, however, Taco Bell can now count on support from a most unlikely ally: PETA.
The animal rights org went online to congratulate the company’s decision to use less meat in its products; saying that since their so-called “beef tacos” are already most vegan — why not go all the way? “One hundred percent cruelty-free” has a nice ring to it, don’t you think?,” quipped PETA blogger Michelle Sherrow.

I think so.
Not to mention that, if this was as clear cut as 3body's interpretation implies, then TB would have to be absolute idiots to come out and advertise "88% beef"..pretty much an admission of guilt under 3body's application of the regulations.
While I've seen corporations do some bone-headed things. I can't see any corporation with lawyers on staff making a mistake this idiotic. It'd be like someone claiming "I couldn't have killed that person, because I was across town killing this person (giving directions to the body and video of himself murdering the victim)". Seriously, you don't get to me the number one mexican fast food restaurant and rake in millions of dollars by being that stupid.
The USDA has defined what is or isn't "Ground Beef".
You are not that stupid.Why would cooking it change what it is?If you cook a chicken it doesn't magically become a "turkey". A chicken is a chicken, cooked or walking around the barn. Ground beef is no more than 30% fat and no extenders, cooked or raw, seasoned or not.
The USDA has defined what is or isn't "Ground Beef".
Try using a little critical thinking. If I cook an egg, what is called? If I cook a t-bone steak what is it called? If I cook an apple what is it called?
It's pretty simple, if you cook filling, you get filling. If you cook ground beef, you get ground beef.
Just to add to that, you can't even go into Taco Bell and buy 2lb (or any amount) of their "seasoned ground beef". You buy a taco, which is obviously going to be less than 40% ground beef. Or you buy a combo meal that contains a taco, a burrito, a dessert, and a drink. That's going to be *way* less than 40% beef.Why are you insisting on using the standard for raw meat as the standard for cooked meat? The USDA separates their standards into Raw and Cooked, but you are insisting that the standard for raw is the same as the standard for cooked.
I seriously doubt that anyone going to TB would expect to get 2lb of raw ground beef if they asked for it.
You've yet to show any indication that this applies to cooked food, beyond your insistence that it does (even though the FDA regulation you quote is specific in that this appies to package labelling and raw products).
Why are you insisting on using the standard for raw meat as the standard for cooked meat? The USDA separates their standards into Raw and Cooked, but you are insisting that the standard for raw is the same as the standard for cooked.
ftfyNice shifting the burden of proof. But I'll play.
"(r) where the addition of a filler to a meat product is permitted in Column III of an item of this Schedule, the addition of an ingredient that is not a meat product and does not constitute a filler because it is visually distinguishable from the meat product is also permitted where the name used to describe the resulting product is descriptive of the resulting product."
There's no filler allowed in "Ground Meat".
"2. For the purposes of this Schedule,
(a) unless otherwise specified, any meat product ingredient set out in Column II of an item of this Schedule may be fresh, preserved or cooked;"
Since the meat:"Fresh boneless skinless meat* is listed in colum IIthere's no reason toThat would preclude cooked meat.
And finally:
"In general, mandatory information or claims that are acceptable on a food label may also be used to advertise that food. Unacceptable label information is generally also not acceptable in advertising. Therefore, manufacturers and advertisers should ensure that their labels comply with federal statutes before developing advertisements for the foods."
So it should be labeled and advertised for what it is, which is "filling" (or meat by-product) and not ground meat or in this case "ground beef".
You are not that stupid.
Go look up the "Quarter Pounder".
ftfy
Fresh!= cooked.
Under any known circumstances...
But this makes my point. By your reasoning, I could not add purple dye and call it "purple ground beef" because the regulations for ground beef do not permit the addition of dyes. No, "purple ground beef" is *NOT* "ground beef". The whole reason somebody would call something "purple ground beef" is to indicate that it does not meet reasonable consumer expectations for "ground beef".You must realize how flawed this logic is right? If I add purple dye and call is "purple ground beef" it's still "ground beef". Where you put the quotes is irrelevant.
Right, that's why the regulations for cars don't say that "cars" must have seat belts, they say that cars must have seat belts. They have completely different purposes -- one is a safety standard, the other is an advertising standard.No. You're screwing up your qualifiers. Think logically, if the regulation says "cars" must have seat belts you can't say it's a "red car" and not be subject to the law.
You are confusing being seasoned with having seasonings added. Dry aging beef, for example, seasons it. But no seasonings have been added to it. Taco Bell is saying their product is "seasoned ground beef", not "ground beef to which seasonings have been added". You would have a point if they claimed the latter. (Since oats are not a seasoning.)No, the regulation specifically says whether it has seasoning or not is irrelevant to the definition.