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June 4, 2004
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The Assault On Personal Choice

In response to the FDA's consideration of cigarette-style warning labels on "foods deemed unhealthy by government scientists," this week's special obesity-hype issue of TIME magazine prominently features a full-page "Common Sense Obesity Warning" from the Center for Consumer Freedom. A consortium of obesity hysterics and food cops descended on Williamsburg, Virginia this week at the "TIME/ABC News Summit on Obesity." As the event ground to a merciful halt today, TIME science editor Philip Elmer-Dewitt let the magazine's agenda be known: "We're going to keep [food] companies' feet to the fire, and this is not the last you're going to hear from TIME magazine on the subject of obesity." Here are just a few more low-lights from this week's assault on consumer choice:

In response to nutrition zealots' cry for marketing bans on food advertising to kids, Federal Trade Commission Chairman Timothy Muris declared: "Our dogs and cats are fat and it's not because they're watching too much advertising ... a ban on advertising is impractical, ineffective, and illegal." Impractical, he argued, because children watch plenty of advertising on adult television. Ineffective, because banning ads oriented toward children -- as the Swedish example makes clear -- doesn't slim them down. And illegal, because of a little thing called the First Amendment. Muris also noted that when the FTC considered a similar ban more than 25 years ago, the Washington Post editorialized that such a policy would turn the agency into a "national nanny." The editorial added that "a flat ban on commercials involving, as it would have to, certain judgments a government shouldn't be encouraged to make and enforce, would make parents less responsible, not more."

Like a bad food cop working outside the law, CSPI's Margo Wootan coldly responded to the FTC chairman's concerns: "People are just hiding behind the First Amendment."

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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 »

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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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