Wednesday, September 26, 2018
'Food Evolution' Trailer
Wednesday, August 15, 2018
Combating the Religion of Alternative Wellness
Monday, July 16, 2018
More Added Sugar Confusion
Monday, May 7, 2018
Dr. Oz Goes to Washington
Saturday, April 30, 2016
Everything is Toxic!
I'm never surprised when I read an alarmist headline reporting that some new dangerous chemical has been found in our food supply. Most of the time these headlines are purely click-bait, with the article itself actually playing down the cause for alarm. Nevertheless, these headlines are enough to fuel chemophobes and orthorexics alike, so I thought it might be nice to write a quick post on the so-called poisons in our food.
My attention was recently brought to this subject from an article posted at Reason.com. The gist of the story was that a recent study found trace amounts of glyphosate - the herbicide better known as RoundUp - in some popular cereals and other foods. From the article:
So a new set of environmentalist pit bulls calling themselves the Alliance for Natural Health USA is reporting that they tested a bunch of commercial brands of cereals, some eggs, bagels, and coffee creamers. What horrors did they uncover? Take corn flakes, for example. AHA-USA reports that the glyphosate was detected at less 75 ppb which even they acknowledge is 66 times lower than the EPA's safety threshold of 5,000 ppb. Their highest detection was for an instant oat meal which was 22 times lower than the EPA's safety threshold for oats 30,000 ppb. The AHA-USA did manage to find organic cage free eggs in which glyphosate residues were double to triple the EPA's very low threshold of 50 ppb.
This particular article reminded me of another unwarranted scare I had to deal with a few years ago when I still worked at GNC. One day I started receiving a large influx of customers wanting to return their protein powders because a recently published consumer report wrote that they contained 'potentially dangerous' levels of heavy metals. I was fortunate enough to have a customer bring me a printed copy of the actual article in question. As usual, the headlines totally outweighed the actual cause for concern. In most of the cases, the actual levels of heavy metal contamination were below the threshold of the FDAs allowable amount. In fact, all of the protein powders in question were within safe limits when used properly. I find it necessary to emphasize 'when used properly', because the levels of heavy metals listed throughout the consumer report were all based on 3 servings of protein powder. Their only justification for using such a high dose was that, "Nutritionists and trainers say they commonly see people who consume three servings a day."
Shoddy research methods aside, articles like these are not hard to produce, as there is an abundance of potentially toxic contaminants in all of our food supply. In fact, the very food itself can sometimes be toxic as well. The reason is simple: Toxicity is based on dosage. All chemicals have a level at which consumption can be harmful or even life-threatening. This includes all the conventionally accepted 'healthy' foods, from organics to all-naturals to non-GMO to conventional. Over-consumption of anything can have negative consequences, and moderation and variety should always be a staple of a balanced diet.
The good news is that all chemicals also have a safe level for consumption - even scary sounding ones like cyanide, arsenic, and yes, even glyphosate. Running any kind of headline claiming that certain scary sounding chemicals may be in our food, only to eventually admit that the chemicals in question pose no risk to the average consumer is absolutely irresponsible. It only continues to feed in to the culture of misinformation and pseudoscience that is already far too prevalent in the areas of health and nutrition. One can only cry wolf so many times before the general population stops listening, and may even eventuslly ignore a real cause for alarm.
Saturday, February 27, 2016
New Pro-organic and Anti-GMO Conspiracy Theories
I know I'm late to the party on this, and it's been over a month since I have posted, but better late than never, right? I received an article from a friend a few weeks ago talking about how Mike Adams over at Natural News (no link = no traffic) is claiming that the recent E. coli outbreak at Chipotle is a part of a conspiracy led by biotechnology companies such as Monsanto. While Mike Adams should hardly be a concern to any rational person, the real concern is how quickly and easily such unfounded theories spread. In agreement with Adams, some of the following remarks were highlighted in the article:
"I said this last week! Glad I'm not the only one who thinks so."
"From the first I heard about Chipotle's e.coli problem I smelled a rat!"
"I said that to my husband, I knew that Big Ag was behind it! You don't get e-coli in organic foods. Chipotle said they couldn't find anything in the food. Very suspicious!"
That last one truly is a pro-organic hail Mary. "You don't get e-coli in organic foods." Really? Do people actually believe this?
Let's make this clear: You can absolutely get E. coli from organic foods. You can also get it from genetically modified foods, and even non-GMO conventional foods. E. coli is a form of bacteria that can affect all of these types of foods, simply because there is no discernable difference between them. As Hank Campbell writes over at Science 2.0:
Anti-science progressives have waged a decade-long war on genetically-modified food but, to-date, not so much as a single stomach ache has been caused by any modified vegetables, with 400 million people having eaten GMOs, while persistent outbreaks in E. coli correspond to increases in organic food claims that it is nutritionally superior or better in any way at all than ordinary farm-raised food, despite numerous studies showing the opposite. The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has refused to recognize "organic" food as distinguishable in any way from any other food, except in growing process, because it simply isn't.
For the record, I do not consider myself pro-GMO per se. I am, however, pro-science, and it does not take a scientist to see that the anti-GMO crowd relies on conspiracy theories and pseudoscientific claims to push their agenda. For this reason, I prefer to label myself as anti-anti-GMO.