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March 4, 2008
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Show Me The Data

Show Me The Data

Last month, Obesity Society president-elect Dr. David B. Allison delivered a major blow to food cops nationwide when he presented expert testimony to a federal court in New York against mandatory menu labeling. The evidence was damning: Allison’s statement even provoked a response from New York City Health Commissioner Dr. Thomas Frieden, who acknowledged that “we don’t have 100 percent proof that it’s going to work.” (In truth, menu labeling advocates don’t have any proof.)

Not surprisingly, the usual cabal of nutrition nannies was less than happy. A patient the Queen of Hearts in calling for Alice’s head, nutritional heavyweights within The Obesity Society didn’t hesitate to review the facts before demanding Allison’s resignation.

Even Marion Nestle, one of the country’s most hysterical anti-food-industry fanatics, recognized the hypocrisy of this move by “a society that accepts one or two million a year from drug companies.”

On February 29, Allison formally resigned from the presidency of the organization. In an e-mail statement addressed to friends and colleagues, he reminded his peers of the basic tenets of scienceremaining skeptical and questioning the evidence. He explained that it was those principles that prompted him to lend a critical voice to the menu labeling debate:

Over the years, I have found that there are few things I enjoy more than exploring data, systematically evaluating evidence, poking around at conventional wisdom, and questioning popular hypotheses. I believe that such questioning is a good thing to do, but it does not always make one popular.

While I stand behind the scientific statements I made, my right to make them, and the manner in which I made them, I realize now that participating in this case while in the presidential sequence in TOS was a serious political error.

Though menu labeling may be popular, it’s not right. Americans must hold health activists accountable for their policies and echo the demands of Allison’s professor and mentor Harold Yuker: “Show me the data.”

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Headlines


Menu Labeling: A Matter Of Freedom
Posted On: Wednesday 7/2/2008

This Week In Food Fights
Posted On: Thursday 6/26/2008

CCF In The News
Posted On: Tuesday 6/24/2008

Obesity Hysteria Spreads
Posted On: Monday 6/23/2008

Federal Limits On Pants Sizes?
Posted On: Monday 6/16/2008

U.S. Life Expectancy Increases, Obesity Activists Show Desperation
Posted On: Thursday 6/12/2008

California Senator Admits Menu Labeling Walks A Fine Line
Posted On: Wednesday 6/11/2008

Do As We Say, Not As We Do
Posted On: Tuesday 6/10/2008

Breaking News: Calorie-Count Trial Lawyers Pick Second Target
Posted On: Friday 6/6/2008


ActivistCash.com

Kelly Brownell
Background
Kelly Brownell is a Yale psychologist on a decade-long crusade against what he calls America’s “toxic food environment.” He is best known for having first proposed the infamous “Twinkie tax.” read more here »

Marion Nestle
Background
Marion Nestle is one of the country’s most hysterical anti-food-industry fanatics. She writes: “Sellers of food products do not attract the same kind of attention as purveyors of drugs or tobacco. They should.” read more here »

Op-Eds

What's on the menu? Regulation
There are ways to ensure that consumers have access to a surplus of information without having it thrust in their faces on restaurant menus. read more here »

Preserve right to eat without guilt: Don't post calories of fast-food dishes
Americans should still have a right to guilt-free eating. read more here »


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