Sad This Can Happen in America: Seniors Reduced to Eating Dog Food To Survive
The small community of just over 700 people, located outside Dover, came to the rescue to help their senior citizens. The local director of the senior center took the story to WBOC-TV and just a short time later Walmart Community Foundation donated $25,000 for food. As a result, the senior center is now able to provide bags of food for their low-income seniors.
About 40 percent of people who come to the center are low income, many living on just $400-$500 a month. They can come to the center when it is open for a meal, but when the center is closed they may have nothing to eat. The generosity of donors like Walmart and volunteers to distribute the food has now changed all that. It's a heartwarming story of people coming together to help each other.
As Renee Hoffman, Executive Director of the Frederica Senior Center describes their attitude about their senior citizens, "They took care of us. Now it's time we take care of them."
http://blog.lowincome.org/2014/01/low-inco...


Pet Food Ingredients
Animal Protein
Dogs and cats are carnivores, and do best on a meat-based diet. The protein used in pet food comes from a variety of sources. When cattle, swine, chickens, lambs, or other animals are slaughtered, lean muscle tissue is trimmed away from the carcass for human consumption, along with the few organs that people like to eat, such as tongues and tripe.
However, about 50% of every food animal does not get used in human foods. Whatever remains of the carcass — heads, feet, bones, blood, intestines, lungs, spleens, livers, ligaments, fat trimmings, unborn babies, and other parts not generally consumed by humans — is used in pet food, animal feed, fertilizer, industrial lubricants, soap, rubber, and other products. These “other parts” are known as “by-products.” By-products are used in feed for poultry and livestock as well as in pet food.
Read mire: http://www.bornfreeusa.org/facts.php?p=359...