What do You most appreciate on this store?
We've been posting an increasing number of law- and litigation-related items on Fat City. Whether that's simply because legislatures are in session, or due to a busy new administration or several food movements reaching maturity I do not know.
The latest comes not from law but from academia, where Kelly Brownell and Kenneth Warner, Yale and Michigan professors respectively, argue that the food industry's -- they call it "Big Food" -- products carry many of the same dangers that Big Tobacco did in the 1950s. Brownell and Warner are highly respected in the field of food science and thus their paper is getting major press and negative reaction.
The article reminds readers that in the 1950s, Big Tobacco released a paper and paid for it to be placed in hundreds of newspapers. The "Frank Statement to Cigarette Smokers" included the famous lines, "We accept an interest in people's heath as a basic responsibility... We believe the products we make are not injurious to health." Read the whole ad here. It's basically one big lie after another.
Brownell and Warner write, "The basic premise was simple -- smoking cigarettes had not been proved to cause cancer. Not proven, not proven, not proven -- this would be stated insistently and repeatedly. Inject a thin wedge of doubt, create controversy, never deviate from the prepared line. It was a simple plan and it worked."
They suggest that food companies are taking a similar route now that their products are under increasing attack.
The Big Food method is to "focus on personal responsibility as the cause of the nation's un-healthy diet, raise fears that government action usurps personal freedom ... criticize studies that hurt industry as 'junk science,' plant doubt when concerns are raised about the industry." Those four ideas are stolen verbatim from the Big Tobacco playbook.
Written in normal English (as opposed to academic English), the report (PDF) is easy to read. I recommend heading to page 16 where the authors talk about how the sugar industry used its connections inside the Bush Administration to try to get World Health Organization funding cut completely -- the U.S. donates nearly $500 million to prevent starvation -- over a fight on sugar labeling. Page 23 contains a lot of interesting information on caffeine and page 25 lists many commercial examples of food companies advertising in the same way cigarette companies did in the 1950s.
Ultimately, the comparison of food and cheap cigarettes centers on one issue: "whether industry can be trusted to make changes that benefit the public good and can be responsible with the accompanying marketing." For Big Tobacco the answer was a resounding no. Sadly, the answer looks the same for Big Food.
Other cigarettes news and tobacco market events you can find at links bellow:
• Best-Buy-Cigarettes.Com Tobacco News
• Discount Cigarettes & Tobacco News
• CigarettesOn.Com Tobacco News
Officials at the University of Memphis have decided to push for a tobacco-free campus by next summer.The move was spurred by a student government petition last year and similar actions by faculty and staff leaders. Maria Alam, who is chief human resources officer for the university, told The Commercial Appeal that she is "reviewing and putting together a policy" for the campus."The idea is not to go around policing," she said. "But we'd address it as complaints come in."In her position with the university, Alam oversees workplace regulations, including smoking...
The role of the online cigarettes grower cooperatives that formerly administered the cigarettes store price support program has changed drastically since 2004.It had to: the price support program was ended after that season, and the cooperatives had to find new services to offer to their members.Perhaps the most drastic changes among the cooperatives has been made by the Burley Stabilization Corporation (BSC), which served Tennessee, North Carolina and Virginia. In 2010, it moved its headquarters 200 miles to get closer to its primary production area, and it has implemented an aggressive...
After a lengthy period of consideration, Minnesota State University will become a tobacco-free campus on Jan. 1.MSU, however, won’t be the first institution in the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities system to enact the cheap cigarettes ban.In 2010, the MnSCU Board of Trustees passed a resolution encouraging campuses to adopt such a policy. Shortly after, South Central College became one of the first to do so and has been followed by a number of others, including Winona State and Minnesota State-Moorhead.“This is a movement that’s been endorsed by MnSCU,” said Rick Straka,...
In most parts of the state, Californians appear to be kicking the cigarettes habit.Last year, 11.9% of Californians said they smoked, down one percentage point from 2009. California has the second-lowest smoking cigarettes rate in the country, according to recent reports from the California Department of Public Health and CDC. Utah, where 9.1% of residents are smokers, has the lowest rate.Another recent report paints a picture of a different kind of cheap cigarettes habit in Sacramento. The report -- "Tobacco Money in California Politics" by the American Lung Association in California --...
When apartment tenants light up a cigarette, it's not just their smoking cigarettes-averse neighbors who suffer. Landlords are also sucking it up — in increased cleaning costs. But by implementing complete smoke-free rules throughout their properties, owners of California multi-unit rental buildings could save up to $18 million a year statewide on the cost of cleaning apartments vacated by tenants who smoke, according to a new UCLA study. These policies can also protect their other tenants from the secondhand smoke cigarettes that seeps between units.The study was published online Aug....