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Our Junk Food Nation
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But behind the scenes it's hardball as usual, with the junk food giants pushing the Bush Administration to defend their interests. The recent conflict over what America eats, and the way the government promotes food, is a disturbing example of how in Bush's America corporate interests trump public health, public opinion and plain old common sense.
The latest salvo in the war on added sugar and fat came July 14- 15, when the Federal Trade Commission held hearings on childhood obesity and food marketing. Despite the fanfare, industry had no cause for concern; FTC chair Deborah Majoras had declared beforehand that the commission will do absolutely nothing to stop the rising flood of junk food advertising to children.
In June the Department of Agriculture denied a request from our group Commercial Alert to enforce existing rules forbidding mealtime sales in school cafeterias of "foods of minimal nutritional value" -- i.e., junk foods and soda pop. The department admitted that it didn't know whether schools are complying with the rules, but, frankly, it doesn't give a damn. "At this time, we do not intend to undertake the activities or measures recommended in your petition," wrote Stanley Garnett, head of the USDA's Child Nutrition Division.
Conflict about junk food has intensified since late 2001, when a Surgeon General's report called obesity an "epidemic." Since that time, the White House has repeatedly weighed in on the side of Big Food. It worked hard to weaken the World Health Organization's global anti-obesity strategy and went so far as to question the scientific basis for "the linking of fruit and vegetable consumption to decreased risk of obesity and diabetes." Former Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson -- then our nation's top public-health officer -- even told members of the Grocery Manufacturers Association to "'go on the offensive' against critics blaming the food industry for obesity," according to a November 12, 2002, GMA news release.
Last year, during the reauthorization of the children's nutrition programs, Republican Senator Peter Fitzgerald of Illinois attempted to insulate the government's nutrition guidelines from the intense industry pressure that has warped the process to date. He proposed a modest amendment to move the guidelines from the USDA to the comparatively more independent Institute of Medicine. The food industry, alarmed about the switch, secured a number of meetings at the White House to get it to exert pressure on Fitzgerald. One irony of this fight was that the key industry lobbying came from the American Dietetic Association, described by one Congressional staffer as a "front for the food groups." Fitzgerald held firm but didn't succeed in enacting his amendment before he left Congress last year.
By that time the industry's lobbying effort had borne fruit, or perhaps more accurately, unhealthy alternatives to fruit. The new federal guidelines no longer contain a recommendation for sugar intake, although they do tell people to eat foods with few added sugars. The redesigned icon for the guidelines, created by a company that does extensive work for the junk food industry, shows no food, only a person climbing stairs.
Growing industry influence is also apparent at the President's Council on Physical Fitness. What companies has the government invited to be partners with the council's Challenge program? Coca-Cola, Burger King, General Mills, Pepsico and other blue chip members of the "obesity lobby."
In January the council's chair, former NFL star Lynn Swann, took money to appear at a public relations event for the National Automatic Merchandising Association, a vending machine trade group activists have been battling on in-school sales of junk food.
Not a lot of subtlety is required to understand what's driving Administration policy. It's large infusions of cash. In 2004 "Rangers," who bundled at least $200,000 each to the Bush/Cheney campaign, included Barclay Resler, vice president for government and public affairs at Coca-Cola; Robert Leebern Jr., president of federal affairs at Troutman Sanders PAG, lobbyist for Coca-Cola; Richard Hohlt of Hohlt & Co., lobbyist for Altria, which owns about 85 percent of Kraft foods; and José "Pepe" Fanjul, president, vice chairman and COO of Florida Crystals Corp., one of the nation's major sugar producers.
Hundred-thousand-dollar men include Kirk Blalock and Marc Lampkin, both Coke lobbyists, and Joe Weller, chairman and CEO, Nestle USA. Altria also gave $250,000 to Bush's inauguration this year, and Coke and Pepsi gave $100,000 each. These gifts are in addition to substantial sums given during the 2000 campaign.
For their money, the industry has been able to buy into a strategy on obesity and food marketing that mirrors the approach taken by Big Tobacco. That's hardly a surprise, given that some of the same companies and personnel are involved: Junk food giants Kraft and Nabisco are both majority-owned by tobacco producer Philip Morris, now renamed Altria. Similarity number one is the denial that the problem (obesity) is caused by the product (junk food). Instead, lack of exercise is fingered as the culprit, which is why McDonald's, Pepsi, Coke and others have been handing out pedometers, funding fitness centers and prodding kids to move around.
When the childhood obesity issue first burst on the scene, HHS and the Centers for Disease Control funded a bizarre ad campaign called Verb, whose ostensible purpose was to get kids moving. This strategy has been evident in the halls of Congress as well. During child nutrition reauthorization hearings, the man some have called the Senator from Coca-Cola, Georgia's Zell Miller, parroted industry talking points when he claimed that children are "obese not because of what they eat at lunchrooms in schools but because, frankly, they sit around on their duffs watching Eminem on MTV and playing video games." And that, of course, is the fault not of food marketers but of parents. Miller's office shut down a Senate Agriculture Committee staff discussion of a ban on soda pop in high schools by refreshing their memories that Coke is based in Georgia.
A related ploy is to deny the nutritional status of individual food groups, claiming that there are no "good" or "bad" foods, and that all that matters is balance. So, for example, when the Administration attacked the WHO's global anti-obesity initiative, it criticized what it called the "unsubstantiated focus on 'good' and 'bad' foods." Of course, if fruits and vegetables aren't healthy, then Coke and chips aren't unhealthy. While such a strategy is so preposterous as to be laughable, it is already having real effects.
Less than a month after Cadbury Schweppes, the candy and soda company, gave a multimillion-dollar grant to the American Diabetes Association, the association's chief medical and scientific officer claimed that sugar has nothing to do with diabetes, or with weight. Industry has also bankrolled front groups like the Center for Consumer Freedom, an increasingly influential Washington outfit that demonizes public-health advocates as the "food police" and promotes the industry point of view.
Meanwhile, public opinion is solidly behind more restrictions on junk food marketing aimed at children, especially in schools. A February Wall Street Journal poll found that 83 percent of American adults believe "public schools need to do a better job of limiting children's access to unhealthy foods like snack foods, sugary soft drinks and fast food." Two bills recently introduced in Congress, Massachusetts Senator Ted Kennedy's Prevention of Childhood Obesity Act and Iowa Senator Tom Harkin's Healthy Lifestyles and Prevention (HeLP) America Act, both place significant restrictions on the ability of junk food producers to market in schools.
Interestingly, this is a crossover issue between red and blue states. Concern about obesity and excessive junk food marketing to kids is shared by people across the political spectrum, and some conservatives, such as Texas Agriculture Commissioner Susan Combs and the Eagle Forum's Phyllis Schlafly, as well as California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, have argued for restricting junk food marketing to children. This may be one of the reasons New York Senator Hillary Clinton has once again become vocal on the topic of marketing to children, although Senator Clinton has called not for government intervention but merely for industry self-regulation, requesting that the companies "be more responsible about the effect they are having" -- exactly the policy the industry wants.
A vigorous government response would clearly garner the sympathy of the majority of Americans. The growing chasm between what the public wants and the Administration's protection of the profits of Big Food is a powerful example of the decline of democracy in this country. Let them eat chips!
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Posted by: Samantha Vimes on Aug 18, 2005 5:37 AM
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And yes, I stole cookies from the cookie jar at home and I spent a fair part of my allowance on junk food. Yet, I always knew fruits, whole grains, and vegetables come first.
I can't say some people *aren't* addicted to bad food, because I don't have their bodies, and it might be as stupid as people saying cocaine isn't addictive because they didn't have trouble giving it up. But I can say that I see a lot of people who's problems don't seemt oc ome from the brands of food they eat, but using it as an emotional crutch instead of facing their inner "demons" of low self-esteem, emotional dependence, passive-aggressive behavoir and other problems.
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Posted by: Sandra on Aug 18, 2005 5:55 AM
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Posted by: thealou on Aug 18, 2005 7:20 AM
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Posted by: jbeeso on Aug 18, 2005 7:53 AM
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This is absolutely true. The author should have stopped right there.
Fifty years ago, little kids ate bacon, ham, eggs, toast, gravy, and biscuits. (that was just breakfast) They then did small chores, and spent the rest of the day pushing little radioflyer wagons around the yard or around the town, building mud forts, and building that elusive better rabbit trap.
Fast forward to now: nintendo, and pushing buttons on controllers indoors has overtaken pushing wagons outdoors. It has overtaken after-school activities.
The boob-tube has overtaken the YMCA. Little video game consoles have overtaken little league.
You don't want your 8-year old kids buying sweet stuff at lunch? Make them quit their jobs--oh, wait?...Where ARE they getting that money from, Mom and Dad? Mom, Dad? Likewise, are these kids taking the family car and hitting the drive-through by themselves, Mom and Dad? Mom, Dad?
Placing the responsibility of raising this nation's children is not the answer. The GUBBAMINT can't even balance its own checkbook. Why would you want to turn over the nutrition of your children to the bureauracy?
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» GUBBAMINT
Posted by: Olympiada
» I take that back
Posted by: Olympiada
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Posted by: cobrajet on Aug 18, 2005 8:19 AM
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But it still boils down to good parenting. What children eat daily is what they are taught at home. If good eating habits are not practived at home, then it will not be done at school, especially when the junk food is easily avaible, and there are no parents around to disuade the kids from eating it. If the schools would sell carrot sticks and apples, they would not sell, would they ? SHame on the school admins for pandering to the kids weakness, sugar !! It is not the schools fault, but they sure are contributing to the bad choices. Lets make them accountable for their choices ! IF the masses speak up, the school will have to listen. Speak up people, dont just sit there whining about it, take action !
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Posted by: villinmomma on Aug 18, 2005 8:58 AM
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If good parenting is really what the solution is, then we need some help, some support with THAT.
Okay, don't regulate marketing to children (this is for you 'gubbamint' poster), but give me paid leave so that I can be home with my children to teach them how to feed themselves.
Help me afford to buy good food (oh yes, there are such things as 'good' and 'bad' foods). Junk food is cheap and easy compared to quality raw materials (fresh veggies, organic meat, milk, fruit).
So, for MY money, OUR money, do something for US!
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Posted by: monkeywrench on Aug 18, 2005 9:16 AM
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Hmmm. . .there seems to be a pattern here. . .a common thread. The real "junk food," the destroyer of good health for our brains and bodies, is advertising. We're so inundated with seductive but stupid and misleading messages in modern life, we can't decide whether to scratch our watches or wind our butts. What's a mind to do when a third of television, plus billboards everywhere, junk mail exploding out of mailboxes, falling out of every envelope and clogging up the internet, are all screaming at us at the same time? Constant distraction (in a way, being "drunk" on Pop Culture) is a great method for getting people to do things that are not good for them.
It's time to jump out of the hamster cage, folks (although at least there you can get a little exercise), and reject ALL of it. The corporations that throw this crap at us want us fat, stupid, and passive. They want us addicted to sugar, and MSG, and fat-food, just like the cigarette industry wanted everyone to be addicted to their product. It's the P.T. Barnum School of Business: "There's a sucker born every minute."
It's time for a little (mental) exercise: for a month, let's buy only what we need, not what we want. Eat what we make for ourselves, not what's prepackaged, precooked, pre-anything. It might be instructive to see if we feel any better – or if the corporations picking our pockets and packing our bodies feel any worse.
Now, back to our program. . .
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» You mean like adding addictive nicotine to cigarettes?
Posted by: Sojourner
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Posted by: xyz2002 on Aug 18, 2005 9:52 AM
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» RE: It is not as hard to control your weight.
Posted by: utatke
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Posted by: LoisC on Aug 18, 2005 10:13 AM
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When I was a kid our food didn't contain the chemicals that are added to many of the foods today, which not only cause people to over eat and gain weight, but that are also causing many of health problems or new diseases we are facing today.
I would call this genocide! I myself stopped eating processed food (with a few exceptions - organic only). They are putting stuff in foods to make people sick so they can sell more drugs!
Why is soy added to almost all processed foods? Why are artificial sweeteners added and disguised in many foods? It's just like genetically engineered food .. if it's supposed to be good for us then why do they hide it from us.
How can parents teach their children how to eat well, if they don't know of the dangers in the foods now being pushed on us. It's not like anything that was available years ago, people are just not educated about what's happened to our food supply.
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» RE: Missing the bigger picture
Posted by: jbeeso
» RE: Missing the bigger picture
Posted by: Olympiada
» "poison for profit"
Posted by: Olympiada
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Posted by: michele0726 on Aug 18, 2005 10:58 AM
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There are no easy answers or solutions. Take it from someone who has lost 114 pounds over a 4 year span. It takes an overall plan, which included not being angry with myself.
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Posted by: noelahg on Aug 18, 2005 11:25 AM
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Posted by: pzzp on Aug 18, 2005 11:31 AM
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Posted by: LMuney on Aug 18, 2005 11:47 AM
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I'm known for years that our "government" is run on AGENDA-lobbyists. The RDA is based on food councils and lobbyists (hmmm: wonder why there are TWELVE (12) servings of grains in the food pyramid? It's the grain industry, stupid) and the rest of government is no different.
Sure: parents should be teaching their children good lessons about food and behavior choices... that is, if parents are following healthy examples themselves. Raise your hand if your parent (or your adult best friend) is fit and trim. Riase your hand if your friends (or you) have healthy-life behaviors... or if you think it's "too hard" or "too restrictive" to do so.
Start the change-chain on your own:
-If you aren't making good choices on your own, start.
- Stop going to fast food - and tell your friends and children why.
- Read labels, and teach it to your children.
- Explain to children ad-nauseum about the way 'advertising' works.
- Realize that some of depression comes from bad food, badly digested, and playing havoc with your brain cells so that you can't make good decisions or rational thoughts.
- Start exercising and get away from the damn computer :)
- IGNORE "LOSE WEIGHT FAST" SCHEMES. YOU CAN'T LOSE WEIGHT FAST AND BE HEALTHY.
Be aware. Be aware of EVERYTHING you do. Let nothing go to "rote". That includes eating, lifestyle, and buying-habits.
If you have to defy government and be "unAmerican" by not buying processed food on grocery shelves, DO IT. That's just a label anyway: most people want to criticize and berate you for making decisions on your own.
This Bush-led government LOVES to point "moralistic" fingers with nasty names, as if shaming us into their ways of behavior. Well, according to their scripture, only GOD can judge. They can't call us "unAmerican" by choosing healthy foods and not frequenting fast-food stores (and processed food shelves) "to support the American economy".
Do what's healthy... emotionally, physically, morally, family, spiritually.
I'm including my website not for advertising but to back up my claim as a wellness coach. (Please use it for good and not for evil).
Lauren Muney
www.physicalmind.com
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Posted by: jmoore on Aug 18, 2005 12:09 PM
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Does anyone else besides me see the link between the
White House questioning the scientific basis for the
nutritional and lifestyle value of fruits and vegetables, and
remaining officiallly mum on (and thereby tacitly endorsing)
teaching ID/creationism in schools? Do they want us to be both stupid AND unhealthy?
Guess if we ate more fruits and vegetables the farm
subsidy industry would collapse...and the doctors
would have less to do...and the junk food chains would
go bankrupt...in fact, our entire American way of life
goes to hell in a handbasket if we eat apples and
broccoli. It isn't a far leap for us to imagine a
future where the propaganda will go something like
this: "Are you eating a PEACH?! Why do you hate
freedom?"
The more appropriate question should be, "Are you eating CHEEZ WHIZ? Why do you hate science?"
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» RE: At least they're consistent...
Posted by: LMuney
» The horrible ingredients are on the LABEL
Posted by: WhatNow?
» RE: The horrible ingredients are on the LABEL
Posted by: Olympiada
» Common sense is not as common as you think
Posted by: Olympiada
» the link
Posted by: Olympiada
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Posted by: radicalmum on Aug 18, 2005 2:08 PM
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They watch some network TV but they know the foods they see advertised are bad foods, those with no nutritional value. They are not "good little consumers" not knowing that children and the environment are exploited to make the products advertised so aggressively. They are only 7,5 and 2 but they already "get it" so it's not that difficult to teach in a child-friendly manor. Watching "Supersize Me" made them boo everytime they see those yellow arches. By the way, we live on a very limited income and manage to feed 5 people a totally natural, home cooked organic diet and I don't spend all day cooking. So cost is NO good excuse, it's all about priorities. There is no great priority than the health and education of our children.
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» RE: Soma anyone?
Posted by: Basenjis
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Posted by: ssantee on Aug 18, 2005 2:24 PM
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In conclusion, this report was spawned of ignorance. The authors clearly do not understand the ideas of freedom nor personal responsibility. Take a civics class already!
Future flash 2010:
The National Office of Under 12 Protection and Education released its latest report on shoe tying education today; the number of children who can tie their own shoes is down 4.23% from last year. Concerned parents are attacking the shoe marketing industry over the "glitz and glam" velcro shoe ad campaign of 2009, saying that this ad campiagn led to their childrens inability to tie their own shoes.
"After we shut down Oreo I thought this nightmare was over" said Mille, a Concerned Parent. "You just can't send your kids to the mall with your credit card and expect everything to be okay while you stay at home watching tv and eating the oreos that you have to be 21 to purchase, anymore. I won't be happy until we live in a society where the kids can run free and I can have some private time", elaborated Mille.
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» RE: IT's not MY fault!
Posted by: Olympiada
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Posted by: jimbo48 on Aug 18, 2005 3:11 PM
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Posted by: Betsy L. Angert on Aug 19, 2005 12:06 AM
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I thank you for bringing this information to the attention of a public that has few choices.
Stores stock sugar, salt, and trans-fatty acids. Restaurants offer the same. Farmers produce what they can cheaply and America consumes, junk.
Bodies grow fat. People fall ill and they know not why. Could it be what they eat and what business and government promotes.
I wrote two treatises that touch on this topic, though more needs to be written. I offer these for your review. Please feel free to comment on my writings. I welcome a broader discussion.
FARMING IS FALLING, EFFECTING OUR FOOD AND FAMILIES ©
FAST FOOD IS NOT FAST ©
Betsy L. Angert Be-Think
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Posted by: Olympiada on Aug 30, 2005 1:01 PM
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All right folks check this link: Center for Science in the Public Interest for starters.
Now I will admit I have an unfair advantage. My mother is a dietetician and both my parents are runner and I have been an athelete and dancer my self.
This article pisses me off, and I usually do not say that.
What the f**k. Where are the f**king ethics in this country? Where?
I am a mother now, and I am mad, and I am a teacher. This article makes me want to join up with the WHO.
And now I know who this Tommy guy is who has been flaming my posts. He is a satirical guy making fun of Tommy Thomson...
You wanna get mad? Get mad at the food lobbyists. Immoral!
Ah this country...God Bless America.
hahahahahahhahahah
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