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More proof that the “anti-obesity” movement is a fake movement funded by the food industry. And notice the connection to Kellogg. Read my blog to find the truth about CSPI’s “attack” on Kellogg – a corporate funder of NANA steering committee member American Dietetic Association.

Big Momma Michelle Obama: Food profiteer-turned-food cop
Michelle Malkin
May 12, 2010

Let me summarize first lady Michelle Obama’s anti-obesity agenda: Shed as I say, not as I gain. While she crusades for organic foods and puts government pressure on corporations to stop marketing fast food and junk food to children, Mrs. Obama herself profited from the very same processed food industry she now demonizes.

In June 2005, a few months after her husband was elected to the U.S. Senate, Mrs. Obama hustled a seat on the corporate Board of Directors of TreeHouse Foods, Inc. Despite zero experience, the food-processing company put her on its audit and nominating and corporate governance committees. For her on-the-job training and the privilege of putting her name and face on their literature, the company forked over $45,000 in 2005 and $51,200 in 2006 to Mrs. Obama — as well as 7,500 TreeHouse stock options worth more than $72,000 for each year.

The chairman of the TreeHouse Foods board, Sam K. Reed, was a top executive at Kellogg’s and Keebler Foods, home of that great menace to children, the Keebler Elf. Before that, he headed up Mother’s Cake and Cookie Company. The conglomerate sells cheese saucesCremora non-dairy creamerinstant soup, puddings and powdered soft drink mixes. Hardly the stuff of Mrs. Obama’s new vision of nutritional paradise. TreeHouse is also a leading supplier of pickles used in the burgers of evil fast food chain McDonald’s — exactly the kind of corporate restaurants Mrs. Obama is now targeting in her war on urban “food deserts.”

The corporation-bashing Mrs. Obama would have continued raking in her TreeHouse cash if it hadn’t been for her husband’s pesky pledge to pander to Big Labor and swear off Wal-Mart. The retail giant, you see, happened to be TreeHouse’s biggest customer. And Wal-Mart is to Big Labor as sunshine is to Dracula.

FULL ARTICLE

http://www.huffingtonpost.com//michael-f-jacobson/a-date-certain-for-food-s_b_786510.html

And the asshole even has the gall to DEFEND Monsanto and smear any Monsanto ties to the food “safety” bill as “conspiracy theory”. In addition, Jacobson uses the term “radical blogs” to smear purveyors of such. In other words, Michael F. Jacobson is now openly calling anti-Monsanto activists and “obesity truthers” as dangerous extremists. I posted a comment on the article where I questioned the integrity of both Jacobson and CSPI for their ties to Monsanto and how CSPI’s NANA coalition is controlled by Monsanto front groups. In addition, I exposed in the comment that Monsanto created the obesity/diabetes epidemics with corn subsidies, HFCS, aspartame, MSG, and GMOs. The last time I commented on one of Jacobson’s propaganda pieces, the comment was approved. This time, I was not so lucky for my comment was not approved. “Obesity truth” is a topic which must be censored by the true perpetrators of the obesity epidemic. They cannot allow the sheeple to know that they helped create the crisis so they can present the “solution” which does not solve the crisis; if anything, the “solution” makes the crisis worse.

Notice how Goebbelson plays the “conspiracy theory” card to dismiss anybody who says Monsanto wrote the bill as “conspiracy theorists”. And also notice how he mentions the internet. Remember, Cass Sunstein wants to censor the internet by banning “conspiracy theorizing”. This is a perfect example of how government shills and intellectual cowards use the term “conspiracy theory” to diffuse criticism of powerful organizations (such as the CFR, Bilderberg, and Monsanto). Here is the spokes-scum smearing anti-Monsanto activists – and probably “obesity truthers”, as evident by my blog tracking software which has caught the Department of Homeland Security spying on some “obesity truth” articles – as “conspiracy theorists” and extremists

Surely it is time to look beyond the more radical blogging about dire consequences of various food safety bills, and recognize how the Senate’s S. 510 has addressed legitimate concerns that federal regulations may overburden small, local producers and processors. Importantly, this bill is NOT about protecting or promoting businesses large or small. It is about protecting us consumers from preventable illnesses caused by unsafe practices by producers. (BULLSHIT! The fucking bill was written by the fucking food industry, Goebbelson! YOUR Monsanto overlords created the crisis! THIS IS YOUR REICHSTAG FIRE! REICHSTAG, GOEBBELSON! REICHSTAG! REICHSTAG!)

The bill would place responsibility for producing safe food directly on the businesses that make and sell food, and it would allow them to design the plans for achieving that purpose. Even so, the scope of the regulations is limited in the latest version of this bill to specifically ensure that small, local food production is able to thrive — while still making safety a priority. It does this by exempting a processor or farm that is a very small business or has less than $500,000 in sales made primarily made directly to consumers or through local retailers. That does not mean they get a pass on food safety. Current federal food safety laws and State laws will continue to apply to these small businesses. It is time to put aside conspiracy theories that have bubbled around the Internet and often have no connection to provisions of S. 510. (Notice how Goebbelson plays the “conspiracy theory” card to dismiss anybody who says Monsanto wrote the bill as “conspiracy theorists”. And also notice how he mentions the internet. Remember, Cass Sunstein wants to censor the internet by banning “conspiracy theorizing”.

My comment which was rejected:

Oh so “obesity truth” is now radical blogging? Am I a dangerous extremist for exposing how your NANA coalition has several Monsanto front groups as steering committee members and that the food “safety” czar is a former Monsanto lawyer? Am I a dangerous extremist for exposing the food industry links to CSPI? YOUR Monsanto overlords created the obesity/diabetes epidemics with corn subsidies, HFCS, aspartame, and MSG. I’m an “obesity troofer” and I wear that label proudly. Oh, and having a LAWYER who isn’t even a scientist shilling for GMO foods as Gregory Jaffe does? I’m beginning to think that you have as much credibility as your fellow Monsanto shill Rick Berman……ZERO.

On August 3, I plugged Alex Jones’ “Food The Ultimate Secret Exposed” video on one of MeMe Roth’s videos in two comments. Needless to say, the food industry apologist did not approve my comments. By censoring my comments, MeMe Roth proves beyond a shadow of a doubt that she is an apologist for the aspartame/MSG industry.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZdGYitGIIps

The comments are as follows:

Comment #1:

@z777z Watch the video “Food The Ultimate Secret Exposed”. It’s the food companies causing obesity, not parents. Short of going all-organic and eating raw foods, how can one escape the soft-kill toxins that the food industry puts in the food by design? How can one escape the aspartame and MSG and HFCS when it’s in everything? Picture two planes labeled Aspartame and MSG crashing into the twin towers on 9/11. THAT is obesity. Obesity is a result of the food companies false-flag poisoning our food

Comment #2:

Oh and MeMe, if you censor my comment about aspartame and MSG, then you prove to everybody that you are an apologist for the aspartame/MSG industry. But I already know that you are because you belong to CSPI’s NANA coalition which is partly-steered by the American Diatetic Association….which is funded by McDonald’s and Coca-Cola. A nutritional advocacy coalition which has a steering committee member funded by McDonald’s and Coca-Cola…how Orwellian.

Obesity Rating for Every American Must Be Included in Stimulus-Mandated Electronic Health Records, Says HHS
Thursday, July 15, 2010
By Matt Cover, Staff Writer
http://cnsnews.com/news/article/69436

Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius speaks to reporters at HHS headquarters in Washington on July 1, 2010. (CNSNews.com/Penny Starr)
(CNSNews.com) – New federal regulations issued this week stipulate that the electronic health records–that all Americans are supposed to have by 2014 under the terms of the stimulus law that President Barack Obama signed last year–must record not only the traditional measures of height and weight, but also the Body Mass Index: a measure of obesity.

The obesity-rating regulation states that every American’s electronic health record must: “Calculate body mass index. Automatically calculate and display body mass index (BMI) based on a patient’s height and weight.”

The law also requires that these electronic health records be available–with appropriate security measures–on a national exchange.

The new regulations are one of the first steps towards the government’s goal of universal adoption of electronic health records (EHRs) by 2014, as outlined in the 2009 economic stimulus law.  Specifically, the regulations issued on Tuesday by Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius and Dr. David Blumenthal, the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology, define the “meaningful use” of electronic records. Under the stimulus law, health care providers–including doctors and hospitals–must establish “meaningful use” of EHRs by 2014 in order to qualify for federal subsidies. After that, they will be subjected to penalties in the form of diminished Medicare and Medicaid payments for not establishing “meaningful use” of EHRs.

Section 3001 of the stimulus law says: “The National Coordinator shall, in consultation with other appropriate Federal agencies (including the National Institute of Standards and Technology), update the Federal Health IT Strategic Plan (developed as of June 3, 2008) to include specific objectives, milestones, and metrics with respect to the following: (i) The electronic exchange and use of health information and the enterprise integration of such information.‘‘(ii) The utilization of an electronic health record for each person in the United States by 2014.”

Under this mandate in the stimulus law, Secretary Sebelius issued a regulation–developed by Dr. Blumenthal–that requires that all EHRs keep track of a person’s Body Mass Index (BMI) score. Body Mass Index is a ratio between a person’s weight and height, and is used to determine whether or not someone is overweight or obese. It is the preferred method of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) for measuring obesity.

Michelle Obama has made dealing with the problem of childhood obesity the main theme of her term as First Lady.

According to the CDC,  “BMI provides a reliable indicator of body fatness for most people and is used to screen for weight categories that may lead to health problems.”

A person’s BMI score is used as a tool to screen for obesity or excessive body fat that could lead to other health problems. While it does not actually measure body fat directly, according to CDC, the BMI scores generally correlate with a person’s body fat percentage.

The new regulations also stipulate that the new electronic records be capable of sending public health data to state and federal health agencies such as HHS and CDC. The CDC, which calls American society “obesogenic” – meaning that American society itself promotes obesity – collects BMI scores from state health agencies every year to monitor obesity nationwide.

“Electronically record, retrieve, and transmit syndrome based public health surveillance information to public health agencies,” the regulations read.

With the spread of electronic health records, the CDC apparently will be able to collect such data more efficiently and with greater accuracy because the electronic record keeping systems can send the data automatically, eliminating the need for government – both state and federal – to keep, send, and process physical records.

—————————————————————————

The Surgeon-General was in fact a Burger King advisor! The Obama administration and the fake anti-obesity activists are food industry apologists covering up the roles that aspartame and MSG have played in the manufactured obesity epidemic! Regina Benjamin was a Burger King shill, and the anti-obesity activists belong to fake nutritional advocacy coalitions headed up by food industry front and Monsanto fronts! When will the libsheep wake up and realize that people such as MeMe Roth and organization such as CSPI are actually food industry apologists helping to cover up the TRUE causes of obesity?! WAKE UP! WAKE UP! WAKE UP! WAKE UP!

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2009/aug/13/health-nominee-an-adviser-to-burger-king/

http://www.chicagonow.com/blogs/dennis-byrne-barbershop/2009/08/obamas-surgeon-general-nominee-advises-burger-king.html

http://entertainment.wagerweb.com/politics/regina-benjamin-also-works-for-burger-king-14441.html

http://www.wkrg.com/alabama/article/dr.-regina-benjamin-paid-by-burger-king/259468/Aug-13-2009_5-15-pm/

Related:

Define irony: When an anti-obesity crusader is a member of a nutritional advocacy coalition headed by food industry front groups

Food Nazis Using Obesity Reichstag to Bring on New Holocaust

MeMe Roth, the ultimate apologist for the food industry and whitewasher of the obesity epidemic

Comment: So I guess Eric Schlosser is fine and dandy with Monsanto having complete control over farming. Eric Schlosser is yet another corporate shill posing as a phony nutritional advocate.

http://www.rushlimbaugh.com/home/daily/site_070910/content/01125109.guest.html

Excerpt:

RUSH: I want to shout out big time today to McDonald’s.  McDonald’s, I love you.  I remember back in the days of the global warming craze when the wackos were suggesting don’t eat McDonald’s, don’t eat beef because it leads to cow methane causing global warming.  Remember I sent one of the Snerdleys over to McDonald’s in Times Square and picked up 240 Quarter Pounders with cheese and Big Macs and brought ‘em back to the studio and had the whole transaction take place on the phone, on the air, just to stand up and support McDonald’s.  And listen to this.  You know, the Center for Science in the Public Interest, this wacko bunch of leftist kooks, statists, nannies, these are the people that banned coconut oil from your popcorn in movie theaters, have gotten rid of MSG, the flavoring in Chinese food, they wanted to ban Chinese food.  These people want to get in your life and tell you what to eat.  If you look at these people you wonder if they’re barely alive, they’re skeletal, they’re miserable, they are unhappy, and they want to spread that misery to everybody else by having you eat basically nothing but tofu and cardboard, run around eating miniature rocks and berries as you traverse the deserts of the world.

Rush, I don’t think CSPI got rid of MSG. In fact, not even public pressure from TRUE, HONEST medical researchers has gotten rid of MSG. MSG is still in all the processed foods and the fast food…including Subway. You actually think CSPI got rid of MSG? If so, then why has CSPI shown itself to be an apologist organization for MSG? Rush is still trying to keep people in the phony left-right paradigm. He is counting on conservative dupes to fall for his “beware of the evil leftists” propaganda. Obesity is not about “left vs right”. The obesity epidemic transcends all phony sides of the fake left-right paradigm. “Liberal” foundation-funded organizations are just as much to blame for the obesity epidemic as industry-funded “conservative” organizations. CSPI and the Center for Consumer Freedom are two wings of the same Rockefeller bird.

View the whole debate here, and check the replies made by Prison Planet Forum member Paul-w who tries his best – and ultimately fails – at dismissing the obesity promotion of aspartame and MSG as “conspiracy theory” while pushing the Center for Consumer Freedom’s co-opted version of “choice” and “personal responsibility. It’s clear that Paul-w is either a shill for the cancer, drug, and food industries or a Cass Sunstein troll hired to attempt to debunk established facts as “conspiracy theory”.

Comment: If this doesn’t convince you that Michael F. Jacobson is a shill for the bankster-controlled Federal Reserve and its IRS collection agency, then nothing will. After all, CSPI’s headquarters are located in a Washington, D.C. bank building.



The Universal North Building (foreground; Universal South Building is in the background) located at 1875 Connecticut AvenueN.W., in the Adams Morgan neighborhood of Washington, D.C. The modernisthigh-rise was built in 1962 to the designs of architect Edwin Weihe. Tenants include the American Cancer Society, Center for Law and Education, Center for Science in the Public InterestEnvironmental Defense Fund, Food Research and Action Center, Mautner ProjectNational Association of Student Personnel AdministratorsNational Bank of Pakistan, National Partnership for Women & Families, Physicians for Social ResponsibilityPopulation Reference Bureau, Progressive Victory, Rendon GroupResults for Development InstituteSociety for International Development, and Womens Foreign Policy Group.

A Soda Tax Is a Good Policy to Reduce Obesity in the United States
Michael F. Jacobson, Ph.D., Executive Director, Center for Science in the Public Interest
Posted: April 12, 2010 11:46 AM

Several weeks ago, New York Gov. David Paterson proposed an excise tax on soft drinks to help bridge that state’s $7.4 billion budget shortfall. Paterson’s soda tax proposal was one of a long list of revenue-generating and budget-cutting ideas proposed, but predictably was one of the items that got the most attention.

Within hours, Washington-based lobbyists for the industry went to work painting the idea as a scary, radical new thing: Susan Neely, head of the American Beverage Association, called the new tax a “money grab, pure and simple,” coming at a time when “New Yorkers continue to struggle through a tough economy with double-digit unemployment rates.”

Though Paterson’s proposed penny-per-ounce tax would be the highest tax yet on soda pop, the taxes themselves are nothing new. In fact, the state of New York has had a sales tax on soft drinks since 1965, which has poured (ahem) billions into state coffers since. And 32 other states (and Chicago) already have some kind of sales or excise tax on soda.

Georgians certainly don’t seem outraged by the four percent tax they pay on soda sold in vending machines. But what should outrage Georgians, New Yorkers and all American taxpayers is the financial harm caused by our out-of-control soft drink consumption. There’s no line for it on our tax returns, but on April 15 and out of every paycheck, we’re subsidizing the treatment of obesity, diabetes and other expensive health problems made worse by soft drink consumption.

Unlike milk or juice, sugar-sweetened beverages provide nothing but empty calories. I call soft drinks “liquid candy,” since they provide plenty of calories without necessary nutrients. Besides promoting obesity and disease, soft drinks displace from the diet real foods with valuable health-promoting nutrients. In fact, in the 1970s, teens drank about twice as much milk as soda. By the 1990s, teens drank almost twice as much soda as milk.

When I was a kid, soda was considered an occasional treat and served in small bottles. Now it’s practically the default drink, particularly for young people, and often served by the quart. Our 2005 analysis of government data found that teenage boys who drank soft drinks consumed an average of three 12-ounce cans per day and girls an average of two 12-ounce cans. One in 10 boys who drank soft drinks consumed 5 1/2
 12-ounce cans a day, or about 800 calories’ worth. It’s not the only reason, but the increase in soda consumption since the 1970s certainly helps explain why obesity rates have tripled in children and teens.

The father of free-market economics, Adam Smith, wrote in 1776 that “Sugar, rum, and tobacco are commodities which are nowhere necessaries of life, which [have] become objects of almost universal consumption, and which are therefore extremely proper subjects of taxation.” Were he alive now, he’d likely propose taxes on soda that would make Paterson’s tax look like chump change.

While soda lobbyists shed crocodile tears about the effects on poor consumers of a penny-per-ounce tax, the soda industry is gouging Americans for what is, after all, mostly water and high-fructose corn syrup. In recent newspaper ads, Coke praised itself for offering a new, 90-calorie, 7.5-ounce can. I could buy it at my local supermarket for $3.99 for an eight-pack, or about $8.50 a gallon. But I could buy 12-ounce cans of Coke for as little as $2.45 a gallon. That difference in prices amounts to a “convenience tax” that is as much as 3 1/2 times greater than the tax New York is weighing.

If Coke and supermarkets can ratchet up their profits like that by several cents an ounce, why shouldn’t legislators take a penny to help undo the damage that liquid candy causes?

This first appeared in the Atlanta Journal Constitution on April 5, 2010.

A Soda Tax Is a Good Policy to Reduce Obesity in the United States
Michael F. Jacobson, Ph.D., Executive Director, Center for Science in the Public Interest
Posted: April 12, 2010 11:46 AM

Several weeks ago, New York Gov. David Paterson proposed an excise tax on soft drinks to help bridge that state’s $7.4 billion budget shortfall. Paterson’s soda tax proposal was one of a long list of revenue-generating and budget-cutting ideas proposed, but predictably was one of the items that got the most attention.

Within hours, Washington-based lobbyists for the industry went to work painting the idea as a scary, radical new thing: Susan Neely, head of the American Beverage Association, called the new tax a “money grab, pure and simple,” coming at a time when “New Yorkers continue to struggle through a tough economy with double-digit unemployment rates.”

Though Paterson’s proposed penny-per-ounce tax would be the highest tax yet on soda pop, the taxes themselves are nothing new. In fact, the state of New York has had a sales tax on soft drinks since 1965, which has poured (ahem) billions into state coffers since. And 32 other states (and Chicago) already have some kind of sales or excise tax on soda.

Georgians certainly don’t seem outraged by the four percent tax they pay on soda sold in vending machines. But what should outrage Georgians, New Yorkers and all American taxpayers is the financial harm caused by our out-of-control soft drink consumption. There’s no line for it on our tax returns, but on April 15 and out of every paycheck, we’re subsidizing the treatment of obesity, diabetes and other expensive health problems made worse by soft drink consumption.

Unlike milk or juice, sugar-sweetened beverages provide nothing but empty calories. I call soft drinks “liquid candy,” since they provide plenty of calories without necessary nutrients. Besides promoting obesity and disease, soft drinks displace from the diet real foods with valuable health-promoting nutrients. In fact, in the 1970s, teens drank about twice as much milk as soda. By the 1990s, teens drank almost twice as much soda as milk.

When I was a kid, soda was considered an occasional treat and served in small bottles. Now it’s practically the default drink, particularly for young people, and often served by the quart. Our 2005 analysis of government data found that teenage boys who drank soft drinks consumed an average of three 12-ounce cans per day and girls an average of two 12-ounce cans. One in 10 boys who drank soft drinks consumed 5 1/2
 12-ounce cans a day, or about 800 calories’ worth. It’s not the only reason, but the increase in soda consumption since the 1970s certainly helps explain why obesity rates have tripled in children and teens.

The father of free-market economics, Adam Smith, wrote in 1776 that “Sugar, rum, and tobacco are commodities which are nowhere necessaries of life, which [have] become objects of almost universal consumption, and which are therefore extremely proper subjects of taxation.” Were he alive now, he’d likely propose taxes on soda that would make Paterson’s tax look like chump change.

While soda lobbyists shed crocodile tears about the effects on poor consumers of a penny-per-ounce tax, the soda industry is gouging Americans for what is, after all, mostly water and high-fructose corn syrup. In recent newspaper ads, Coke praised itself for offering a new, 90-calorie, 7.5-ounce can. I could buy it at my local supermarket for $3.99 for an eight-pack, or about $8.50 a gallon. But I could buy 12-ounce cans of Coke for as little as $2.45 a gallon. That difference in prices amounts to a “convenience tax” that is as much as 3 1/2 times greater than the tax New York is weighing.

If Coke and supermarkets can ratchet up their profits like that by several cents an ounce, why shouldn’t legislators take a penny to help undo the damage that liquid candy causes?

This first appeared in the Atlanta Journal Constitution on April 5, 2010.

I have been aware of the obesity epidemic for many years now. At first, I used to be a firm believer in the notion of “personal responsibility” until I found out that “personal responsibility” was actually code for “we can do whatever the hell we want against the consumers; we are above the law because we fund the politicians”. Since around 2007, I discovered the ugly truth about the obesity epidemic that the corporate media will never discuss, and the ugly truth is this: The American obesity epidemic is a manufactured crisis perpetrated by the food industry, the Rockefeller family, and the various front groups funded by the Rockefellers. The American obesity epidemic is the Rockefellers’ Reichstag Fire. Fat people are the new Jews, and the Rockefellers are the 21st century Nazis.

In my hard-hitting expose Food Nazis Using Obesity Reichstag to Bring on New Holocaust, I exposed the Rockefeller links to the obesity epidemic. In the article, I exposed the following facts:

  • The Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI) not only advocated the use of trans fats in their Nutrition Action newsletter (which is their main source of funding aside from donations from “charitable” organizations such as the Rockefeller Foundation), but they also supported a flawed study which basically said “aspartame is good for you.”
  • The Center for Consumer Freedom (CCF) is a front for the Monsanto Corporation which receives funding from the Rockefeller Foundation. While CSPI and CCF seem to be at odds on many issues, they are strong allies when it comes to genetically-modified foods.
  • Many of the food companies which fund CCF are corporate members of the Council on Foreign Relations. In addition, the two major soft drink companies – PepsiCo and Coca-Cola – are headed up by members of the Bilderberg Group. (PepsiCo’s Indira Nooyi and Coca-Cola’s George A. David are Bilderberg members.

As criminal as CSPI is for being part of the cabal who created the obesity epidemic, at least they have the balls to criticize food companies which engage in deceptive advertising, as was the case with Seven-Up which advertised its flagship product as “all-natural” until a lawsuit threat by CSPI made the Seven-Up Company stop doing so.

One person you will NEVER hear attack the food industry is Meredith “MeMe” Roth.

MeMe Roth claims she is an anti-obesity crusader. MeMe Roth claims she wants to put an end to the obesity epidemic. Yet she never attacks the food industry for putting toxic crap in the food supply. And you will NEVER hear her attack the Rockefeller links to the obesity epidemic. Why? Because she is bought and paid for by the Rockefellers, as evident by her “friends and favorites” on her flagship website National Action Against Obesity. Among her “friends and favorites” are known Rockefeller front groups such as CSPI and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). What you may not know is that the CDC was once known as the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Investigations which engaged in Naziesque experimentations such as the Tuskegee Syphilis Study where 200 young black males were deliberately infected with syphilis and were refused treatment. Needless to say, they died from syphilis. So how do you like the fact that MeMe Roth is “friends” with an organization which murdered black people?

When MeMe Roth goes on television to talk about the obesity epidemic, she never blames the food industry. NEVER! Who does she blame? She blames parents. She blames fat people. She blames authority figures. Instead of putting the blame on the guilty where it truly belongs, she blames innocent people who were made fat by the food industry. MeMe Roth is nothing but the Michael Moore of the obesity epidemic. In Fahrenheit 9/11, Michael Moore said 9/11 was cauised by George W. Bush being some “idiot elf” and playing too much golf. Yet when Alex Jones asked Moore why he didn’t talk about hardcore 9/11 issues such as “NORAD standing down on 9/11″, Moore said “that would be un-American.” Michael Moore gave George W. Bush aid and comfort by whitewashing 9/11. Likewise, MeMe Roth gives aid and comfort to the food industry and the Rockefellers by whitewashing the obesity epidemic.

Until the people wake up to the reality of Obesity Truth, corporate shills such as MeMe Roth will continue to give aid and comfort to the obesity perpetrators while leading obese people down the road to tyranny, enslavement, and genocide.

MeMe Roth, you ARE a corporate shill. You DO give aid and comfort to the food industry. If you were a TRUE anti-obesity crusader, then why would you support making fat people pay more for airline tickets and being banned from restaurants? You whitewashed the obesity epidemic while leading people to their doom. Shame on you.

Comment: The establishment is so scared of stevia that they are using their fake-stevia blackops to dupe ignorant sheeple into believing that the fake stevia products – Truvia, PureVia, Sun Crystals, and Stevia in the Raw – are stevia products when it’s known that these products are actually sugar products with just a dash of chemically-extracted Reb-A (a stevia glycoside). It makes me wonder how much money Susan Alexander and the Knoxville News Sentinel received from the sugar industry and the fake-stevia companies to shill for the sugar industry. The sugar industry couldn’t pay for better propaganda.

———————–

It was a sweet assignment: Compare the artificial sweeteners that are hitting grocery store shelves these days faster than you can say America’s obese.It’s hard to keep up with the options:

* Ideal, made with Xylitol, has zero calories and measures cup for cup like sugar.

* Stevia Extract In the Raw comes from the stevia plant, has zero calories and measures cup for cup like sugar.

* Sun Crystals, a blend of sugar and stevia, has 20 calories per teaspoon. Use half the Sun Crystals that you would sugar.

* I decided Splenda, though not a new kid on the block, was worth including just for comparison’s sake. It has zero calories, is made of sucralose and maltodextrin (an ingredient that was also listed for Stevia and Ideal.) It suggests measuring cup for cup.

With the help of food writer Mary Constantine, I located a corn muffin recipe that made only four muffins, and then I made the recipe five times. Once, I made it with sugar (which, for comparison’s sake, has 15 calories per teaspoon). Then I subbed out the sugar for each of the sweeteners listed above.

Janet Seiber, registered dietician at UT Medical Center, didn’t know of any major health concerns with any of the products we tested. Stevia, she says, is not yet FDA approved, but it is widely used as a sweetener in other countries. Xylitol, she said, may have gastrointestinal side effects for some people.

I brought the muffins to the News Sentinel and set five of my co-workers to the tasting task. They didn’t know which sweetener was used in which muffin, and they didn’t sugarcoat their reactions, which are below – and on video at knoxnews.com.

Susan Alexander may be reached at alexanders@knoxnews.com or 865-342-6431. She is the News Sentinel features editor.

Stevia

* Flavor: “Initial flavor good, but detected odd aftertaste.” “OK; a little mealy, dry. Not a good aftertaste.” “Bland, slightly sweet.” “Bland.” “Good.”

* Sweetness (on a scale of 1-10): “6,” “3,” “6 (noted aftertaste),” “7,” “not sweet at all.”

* Texture: Unanimously dry.

* Appearance: Unanimously good.

Sun Crystals

* Flavor: “Good, would serve to guests.” “Basic.” “Far better than muffin 1 (muffin 1 used Stevia), little aftertaste.” “Mild.” “Corny.”

* Sweetness (on a scale of 1-10): “8,” “3,” “5,” “2,” “7.”

* Texture: unanimously dry (one taster said, “Can’t swallow!).

* Appearance: “Uneven,” one said. “Good,” said the rest.

Splenda

* Flavor: “Corn flavor.” “Bleh.” “Unnaturally sweet.” “Corny!” “Initial taste is too sweet; chemical-like flavor; aftertaste is not very sweet.”

* Sweetness (on a scale of 1-10): “5,” “6,” “8,” “2,” “5.”

* Texture: Three tasters said dry; two said cake-y.

* Appearance: “Good” from four. “Uneven, not golden,” said one.

Ideal

* Flavor: “Tasty.” “Not sweet enough; no aftertaste, but missing something.” “My second favorite; no aftertaste; pretty good.” “Muffin-y; second best.” “More corn than sweet.”

* Sweetness (on a scale of 1-10): “3,” “1 or 2,” “8,” “3,” “4.”

* Texture: “Dense, cake-y.” “Great.” “Dry.” “Good, not too dry.” “Moist, cake-y.”

* Appearance: “Uneven color, uneven top.” “Good.” “Golden.”

Sugar

* Flavor: “Good, no aftertaste.” “Sweet, like candy.” “Yum, rich!” “Good; perfect sweetness.” “Good.”

* Sweetness (on a scale of 1-10): “7,” “5,” “8,” “8,” “8.”

* Texture: One said, “Just right.” Four said, “Moist.”

* Appearance: “Good.” “More uniform in color.” “Golden.”

© 2010, Knoxville News Sentinel Co.
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