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| Sort by: | Date | Title |
| 3/21/09 | Eat in moderation USA Today: The way some reporters are exaggerating the latest National Cancer Institute (NCI) study on meat and mortality, you'd think a sirloin apocalypse is just around the corner. |
| 1/5/09 | Trimming waistlines Washington Times: The goal of trimming waistlines will not succeed with a heavy-handed approach intended to make people feel ashamed of their personal decisions. |
| 12/15/08 | Humane Society Changing Lakeland Ledger: HSUS president Wayne Pacelle's insistence that his group is "not telling people to become vegetarians" doesn't jibe with reality. |
| 11/30/08 | YOUR VIEWS Press-Enterprise: Concerns over mercury levels in largemouth bass from Big Bear Lake appear to be a giant overreaction. |
| 11/20/08 | ACRYLAMIDE: Takes huge amount to cause health risk The Daily Herald: Scaring people about acrylamide will have the paradoxical effect of making people less healthy by turning them away from olives, almonds, asparagus, spinach, beets and prune juice -- all acrylamide-rich foods. |
| 11/9/08 | Cancer Project actually has ties to PETA Tucson Citizen: I'd like to correct some misconceptions about an animal rights group that posed as a legitimate medical-advice charity. |
| 10/31/08 | Meat-diabetes link questioned Houston Chronicle: There's a good reason Caroline Trapp argues that eating meat is responsible for climbing diabetes rates in every corner of the world. |
| 10/19/08 | Beware of groups with their own agendas Kalamazoo Gazette: During an important time like Breast Cancer Awareness month, it's unfortunately easy to mistake propaganda for health advice. |
| 10/13/08 | Humane Society of United States is radical animal-rights group The Capital Times: HSUS is a "humane society" in name only, pursuing the same fringe goals as People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. |
| 9/19/08 | Eat meat, get smart Pittsburgh Tribune-Review: I'm not sure which was more offensive and misleading: a recent anti-meat TV ad from an animal rights group posing as a mainstream cancer-prevention charity or the opinion essay from Susan Levin that defended it. |
| 8/28/08 | Fit vs. Fat Virginian-Pilot: Pushing fast-food bans and snack taxes, health officials seem obsessed with our weight and, consequently, our diets, too. But these food-focused policies miss their main objective health. |
| 8/25/08 | The real villain behind our bigger behinds Sun Herald: If inactivity is "the real villain" behind obesity, it's easy to pinpoint the best solution: exercise. |
| 8/13/08 | Obesity study is heavy on oversimplification Washington Examiner: If the recent dire predictions of future obesity rates are right, 100 percent of us will become overweight or obese in a matter of decades. |
| 8/12/08 | 'Humane' charities contribute to violence Las Vegas Review-Journal: People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals has spent more than $150,000 defending arsonists and other violent animal-rights criminals. |
| 8/8/08 | Grilled cheese not to blame Dallas Morning News: It’s not what we eat, but how much we move that determines our health. |
| 8/2/08 | Move For Health Chicago Tribune: Unfortunately this fast-food ban isn't an isolated proposal. |
| 8/2/08 | Humane Society of U.S. has a radical agenda Tucson Citizen: HSUS is a "humane society" in name only, pursuing the same fringe goals as People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. |
| 7/30/08 | A balanced approach to food choices Modesto Bee: I thought Simon Chaitowitz's cynical use of Tony Snow's tragic death to promote vegetarianism was unusually offensive. |
| 7/28/08 | ‘Chicken Little’ syndrome restricts bird flu discussion Washington Examiner: Dr. Michael Greger has very unconventional views about the billion-to-one chance that bird flu will become a serious human health threat. And there’s a very good reason for his panic-inducing position. |
| 7/26/08 | Chubby kids need to move more Kansas City Star: The latest research on exercise among American youth confirms what many of us already suspected: Most kids just aren't moving enough. |
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