The US Senate has passed a bill to help protect children from toxic chemical leaks.
The measure, which is expected to pass in the Senate on Thursday, aims to help reduce the spread of the so-called “mad cow disease” in the US.
Mad cow disease is a type of cancer caused by a fungus found in cows, and it has been linked to a wide range of other diseases.
The bill will require companies to keep track of their product’s source, and the companies that produce and sell products containing it must disclose how they’ve been made.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky, said that the measure would make it harder for “lazy” Americans to use the products they’re allowed to.
The bill passed on a voice vote, with all 50 senators supporting it.
Senator Bernie Sanders, an independent from Vermont, introduced the bill last year and said it would help families and businesses by making it harder to make and sell contaminated products.
“It would be a tremendous blow to the drug and medical industry,” Sanders told reporters after the vote.
“I think that people are going to be able to afford to purchase products that are made in a way that’s not hazardous to human health, and that’s exactly what this bill is designed to do.”
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-New York, also said the bill would help businesses.
“Mad cow disease was a big problem, and we want to be the party that makes sure it doesn’t happen again,” Schumer said.
President Donald Trump has called the spread and use of mad cow disease a “disaster” and a “cancer”.
He also suggested that the legislation was necessary because the US is a big market for the fungus, and because the government did not take sufficient measures to control the spread.
Mad cow virus (MV-5) Mad cow has been found in a variety of products including cheese, dairy products, meat and meat substitutes.
Last year, the US government estimated that 1.3 million people in the country had been infected with the disease.
The US Department of Agriculture says there have been more than 4,000 deaths from the disease since 1996.
Mad Cow virus can cause a variety: fever, headache, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and loss of appetite.
Symptoms can include vomiting, a sudden and severe cough, and weakness and weight loss.
People can get mad cow if they eat a variety or a combination of certain types of foods, including meat, poultry, eggs, nuts, and fish.
It can be transmitted through the skin, eyes, mouth, nose, or throat.