From the outside in

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Drinking Coke Causes Cancer, Obesity, Diabetes And Putrification

via DownWithTyranny! by DownWithTyranny on 2/2/11

Not being one of Palin's "real Americans," I watch almost no TV. But it seems that every time I've put it on in the last month I saw the ad above on my screen. It's so full of blatant Madison Avenue manipulative techniques that it made my blood boil. And the first question, of course, has to be "Who the hell are these people?" Because, let's face it, they're certainly not "just plain folks" sick of the government taxing disease-causing products.

Their website gave me a good hint that these Americans Against Food Taxes are corporations selling cancer- and obesity-causing beverages. And the main financier is a Turk named Muhtar who's made $19,628,585 from his job at Coke, so the oh-so-prominent prominent "American" thing, well... it's possible, but which Americans do they represent? SourceWatch describes AAFT as "a front group funded by the beverage industry which consists of major restaurant chains, food and soft drink manufacturers and their associated lobbying groups," pointing back to a column that NY Times ethicist Randy Cohen wrote in September 2009, called "An Anti-Tax Argument That's Hard To Swallow."
The Issue

Proposals to tax sugary drinks as a way to fight obesity and finance health care reform have found support from medical experts and some interest from President Obama while meeting resistance from the beverage industry in general and the Coca-Cola C.E.O. Muhtar Kent in particular. “I have never seen it work where a government tells people what to eat and what to drink,” he told the Rotary Club of Atlanta last month. “If it worked, the Soviet Union would still be around.” Is this sort of argument so dubious, and does it come from the maker of products so damaging, that Muhtar Kent should be dragged off in handcuffs-- or worse?

The Argument

I am an expert on neither tax policy nor nutrition, but it is worth examining a few of the arguments against taxing sugary drinks as examples of the reasoning all of us can encounter when making moral choices or weighing the issues of the day or confronting a bumptious uncle at Thanksgiving.

Muhtar Kent’s assertion is fishy because it confuses a positive and a negative. The various plans under consideration do not tell us what we should drink; they are concerned with what we should not drink-- sugary beverages, what critics call “liquid candy.” Urging people not to drive short distances is different from saying they should reach the corner store by hopping. Urging people not to drink cola is different from pressuring them to drink cat pee.

And of course our government does tell people what to eat and has for years. Perhaps “tell” is too coercive a term-- no federal food police pound on your door at dinnertime demanding to see your broccoli. But “strongly recommend” is apt. Kent should check out the Department of Agriculture’s food pyramid at the delightfully titled MyPyramid.gov or visit nutrition.gov where jackbooted thugs engage in tyrannical meal planning-- O.K., there are no jackboots and no thuggery, but there are some tasty menus. (The recipe for cranberry-nut muffins looks delish.)

Our government, as many a nation does, also tells people what to eat in other ways, both directly, by creating menus for public-school cafeterias and military mess halls, and indirectly, influencing our diets through farm policies, tariffs, trade agreements and food regulation.

(Kent’s further assertion, his evocation of the Soviets, is entirely meretricious, deploying the familiar debater’s tactic of deprecating something by linking it to what is widely reviled. The Beatles are bad because Pol Pot liked “Hey, Jude.” Bowling is evil because Satan plays-- he’s on a team with John and George.)

It is commonplace for a democracy to concern itself with the nutrition of its citizens. What is rightly and vigorously debated-- by, for example, the writer Michael Pollan, the documentary film “Food, Inc.,” the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association or the American Academy Of Pediatrics-- is not if government should involve itself in such things, but how. That’s politics in the best sense.

...Such errors of reasoning might be seen as intellectual, not moral, failings, but it is difficult to extend that benefit of the doubt to Americans Against Food Taxes, which describes itself as “a coalition of concerned citizens-- responsible individuals, financially strapped families, small and large businesses in communities across the country.” As was reported in The Times, A.A.F.T. looks like a veiled industry organization; calls to a media contact listed on the group’s Web site go to the American Beverage Association. This smells like Astroturf, or corporate lobbyists posing as a grass-roots organization. It is entirely suitable for interested parties to participate in public debate; it is not suitable to conceal who’s doing the debating.


SourceWatch notes that AAFT "was organized by the American Beverage Association to fight a proposed three to ten cent tax on soda, sugary drinks and energy drinks to help fund health care reform in the United States."
Its domain name, www.nofoodtaxes.com, is registered to Goddard Claussen public relations, based in Washington, D.C. Goddard Claussen's Web site boasts, "Fortune magazine branded us the 'Go-to guys in issue advocacy' because of our groundbreaking public affairs and branding campaigns, our industry-leading 9 out of 10 win record on ballot measure campaigns, and our history-making issue advocacy campaigns."


UPDATE: Tomorrow Is John Boehner Day

Boehner is all about poisoning America with sugar and empty calories and then leaving them sick and without healthcare. The National Enquirer will be running a major exposé on him tomorrow-- regarding a different kind of sugar... but the same kind of corruption:

Yes, tomorrow, Thursday-- and it's the Valentine's Day issue:

Posted via email from The New Word Order

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