Resize Font Increase Font Size Decrease Font Size Reset Font Size

Home / Seafood / Headlines

May 13, 2008
printable version email to a friend join our e-mail list


Phony Health Experts Continue Seafood Smear Campaign

Phony Health Experts Continue Seafood Smear Campaign

In another example of activist opportunism this Mother’s Day, Oceana commemorated the occasion by spreading paranoia about mercury levels in fish. In a special press release on Friday, the group’s usual seafood alarmists took a backseat to “Oceana celebrity spokes-Mom” Amber Valetta, who offered a few “tips” on the species and quantity of fish we should be eating in order to stay healthy.  Aside from its usual errors in fact--about tuna and weekly fish consumption, for instance--Oceana’s Mother’s Day (scare) campaign brings up another point: Do we really want to get our dietary guidelines from a supermodel/actress?

In fairness to Valetta, it’s unlikely that she drew up the faulty fish advice on her own. An acting and modeling career, however successful, hardly qualifies someone to pontificate on the specific type and amount of fish we can or cannot eat. In all likelihood, though, the spokes-Mom’s ghostwriters aren’t any more qualified to give out that advice than Amber Valetta herself.

Take resident fish fear-monger Jacquie Savitz, for example. Savitz is listed as the first “expert” for media contact about Oceana’s latest seafood scare report (duly titled “Hold the Mercury”), which recommends that the FDA post warning signs at fish counters and add fresh tuna to its “Do not eat” list. But what makes Savitz an authority on the “risks” of eating seafood? The answer, as we’re pointing out in a new section of MercuryFacts.org, is “Nothing.”

Savitz has a B.A. in “Marine Science and Biology” from the University of Miami and a M.S. in “Environmental Science” from the University of Maryland -- neither of which is sufficient for her to sound any public health alarms or recommend what families should put on their Lenten menus. She criticizes grocery chains that have decided against scaring their customers away from the seafood counter, despite a lack of professional competency in any scientific discipline that might help her understand the unintended consequences of her demands.

Given the number of activists who are muddling the public health debate about mercury in seafood, it’s hardly surprising that there’s so much confusion about the benefits of eating fish. Michael Bender (Mercury Policy Project), Caroline Smith De Waal (Center for Science in the Public Interest), Caryn Mandelbaum (GotMercury.org), and Beth Trask (Environmental Defense) have also been offering dietary advice despite a total lack of relevant credentials. For more about these (Un)Registered Dietitians, click here.

email us comments



printable version email to a friend join our e-mail list
Headlines


Keeping Our Menus Safe From Shamu
Posted On: Monday 1/5/2009

Ringing Out 2008: A Look Back
Posted On: Wednesday 12/31/2008

CCF In The News: New Year’s Edition
Posted On: Tuesday 12/30/2008

A Fish Story You'll Only Find On Broadway
Posted On: Tuesday 12/23/2008

List Of Holiday “Health Myths” Comes Up Short. Here’s A Better One.
Posted On: Thursday 12/18/2008

Public Health Triumphs Over Fishy Activism
Posted On: Friday 12/12/2008

It's a Real Tuna Meltdown
Posted On: Tuesday 11/25/2008

Organic Activist Complaints Smell Fishy
Posted On: Thursday 11/20/2008

Pregnant Women Shouldn’t Swallow Mercury Scares
Posted On: Wednesday 11/12/2008


ActivistCash.com

SeaWeb
Background | Quotes | Financials
What can you say about a group of alarmist publicity-seekers whose greatest passion is “saving” fish species that aren’t even endangered? Sadly, SeaWeb is just one in a long line of recent entrants into the food-scare industry. read more here »

Sea Shepherd Conservation Society
Background | Quotes | Financials
Though self-named a “Conservation Society,” Sea Shepherd is a violent organization. “We’re not a protest organization, we’re a policing organization,” Paul Watson has said of his organization, however its purpose is to ram and sink ships making it more of a pirate crew. read more here »

Op-Eds

Fishy Omega-3 risks
If the FDA's report becomes official policy, the conventional wisdom urging women of childbearing age to eat less fish will be turned completely upside-down. read more here »

Poor Children Suffer From Tuna Fears
Seafood warnings are hurting, not helping, America’s most vulnerable kids. Sad? Yes. Shameful? Absolutely. read more here »


About Us | Contact Us | Please Help Us | Site Map
Ad Campaigns | Press Center | Daily News Archive | Email Subscription | Op-Eds | Cartoons | Games | Link To Us
Copyright © 1997-2009 Center for Consumer Freedom. Tel: 202-463-7112.