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Stop Prediabetes Now: The Ultimate Plan to Lose Weight and Prevent Diabetes

Jack Challem
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That's no better than how the cigarette companies marketed their products. 3 Dangers That Lurk beyond Calories and Carbs People now consume far greater quantities of calories, sugars, and sugarlike carbohydrates than they did just a couple of generations ago, and this increase is one reason why many more people are now overweight and prediabetic. But several other factors exacerbate the situation and propel people toward developing prediabetes and becoming overweight. Food Addictions: Why You Can't Stop Eating Many people have a history of being yo-yo dieters.

Grocery Warning: How to recognize and avoid the groceries that cause cancer, diabetes, heart disease, high cholesterol, high blood pressure, and other common diseases

Mike Adams
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The sort of action taken against people who speak out against MSG is reminiscent of the movie, "The Insider" in which a lone tobacco scientist wanted to share the truth about cigarette companies and their manipulation of nicotine in their products in order to addict customers. In fact, there are strong parallels between the tobacco industry and the MSG industry. Both industries manufacture a product that causes widespread disease. Both industries are well funded and bankroll fraudulent scientific studies to support their baseless positions.

Appetite for Profit: How the Food Industry Undermines Our Health and How to Fight Back

Michele Simon
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I asked Richard Daynard, professor at Northeastern University School of Law and veteran of the tobacco wars, about how cigarette companies used "personal responsibility" as a strategy. He said the concept was "one of the leading defenses that the tobacco industry used both in the courtroom and in the court of public opinion." He continued: Basically, the personal responsibility argument was that anybody who is stupid enough to use their products and gullible enough to believe the companies when they said their products don't cause lung cancer and other diseases, deserve to get those diseases.

The Seven Laws of Nutrition

Mike Adams
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Even cigarette companies now have to label cigarettes with warnings that say smoking promotes cancer and birth defects. But food companies can market all sorts of cancer causing ingredients without having to warn consumers at all. As a result, consumers are right now eating massive quantities of foods and food ingredients that directly promote disease. And as a result, we're a nation with the highest rates of chronic disease ever witnessed in the entire known history of humanity.

If It's Not Food, Don't Eat It! The No-nonsense Guide to an Eating-for-Health Lifestyle

Kelly Harford, M.C., C.N.C.
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In this regard, food companies hardly differ from cigarette companies. Marion Nestle, Food Politics more aggressive marketing schemes Because food preferences, much like personalities, are developed in the formative stages of life, targeting children has become the primary aim of many food manufacturers. Tantalizing commercials and appealing toy prizes catalyze innocent children to torment their parents to purchase processed candy, cereals, and fast-food kid meals.

Disease-promoting ingredients in everyday foods and groceries are far more dangerous than terrorists

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
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It's quite similar to the situation with Big Tobacco. cigarette companies weren't trying to kill people, they were just trying to make a buck. It was the side effect of their product that caused lung cancer, emphysema and cardiovascular disease. Frankly, that was an unintended side effect. Big tobacco would have much preferred to eliminate the toxic side effects of their products as long as they could preserve the addictive quality of nicotine.

The inside scoop: Natural Health Products Expo West industry event

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
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Maybe next we'll have cigarette companies sponsoring Lung Cancer conventions, too. I hope that the Expo West organizers next year will make an effort to find sponsors that aren't so embarrassing to the natural health community. Real health solutions exist right now I've got to shift gears here and cover one last point before wrapping this up. It's the number one thing I learned at the show, through interviewing all of these doctors, alternative health practitioners, product formulators, researchers and so on (from all over the world, by the way, not just the United States).

Big Tobacco and Big Pharma: same tactics, different chemicals

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
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We have a huge smoking problem and it's the American cigarette companies that are over there exploiting those populations and literally poisoning and killing those people just to make a buck, because they figured out they couldn't make their money over here in the US anymore. The game was up. They got caught red handed here in the US. Eventually some of those other countries will figure it out too. Hopefully, we eventually won't have a tobacco industry in this country or anywhere in the world. That would be ideal. Hopefully, people don't need to inhale these deadly products.

Food Fight

Kelly Brownell and Katherine Battle Horgen
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Kenneth Warner from the University of Michigan wrote an editorial for the American Journal of Public Health on how this history unfolded with cigarette companies. To read the cigarette manufacturers' websites, one would think the industry must be a wholly owned subsidiary of the Public Health Service. The sites warn about the dangers of smoking, say smoking is addictive, list chemicals added in manufacturing cigarettes, encourage smoke-free environments for nonsmokers, and offer smokers Web-based quitting resources.

Gary Null's Power Aging

Gary Null
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They urge us not to fall into the victim role and be blamed for our condition: One of the most publicized stories about the "cause" of cancer is the ongoing drama of the cigarette companies and their attempts to show, in extended legal battles, that people develop lung cancer not from smoking, but from their own inherent problems and weaknesses. The Politics of Cancer The authors of "Do Pesticides Cause Lymphoma?" are quite aware that there is hidden bias in the reporting of the pesticide problem, which makes it very difficult to warn people about the hazards of these chemical contaminants.

Big Tobacco racketeering charges mirror pharmaceutical industry crimes

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
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REPPED: The United States Justice Department charges that under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), cigarette companies have deceived the public for decades in an effort to sell their products. Few would deny the deceptions, except perhaps the tobacco companies themselves. But what's most intriguing about this effort to prosecute Big Tobacco for racketeering is that the racketeering charges almost perfectly describe the behavior of Big Pharma (drug companies) today.

Consumption of soft drinks and high-fructose corn syrup linked to obesity and diabetes

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
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It wasn't too long ago when doctors were being paid by cigarette companies to actually endorse cigarettes. So it's really no surprise that there are some doctors on the payroll of the Corn Refiners Association who are going to stand up and deny that high-fructose corn syrup causes diabetes in the same way that tobacco executives deny nicotine is addictive.

The New Detox Diet: The Complete Guide for Lifelong Vitality With Recipes, Menus, and Detox Plans

Elson M. Haas, M.D.
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Nicotine pushers didn't tell the public that smoking was so addictive, and they still downplay this fact and appear to have little concern about getting new customers hooked on their product. Cigarette smoking, our primary method of using nicotine, is the single greatest cause of preventable disease and probably creates the most difficult addiction to deal with. The statistics are shocking: Worldwide, 2.5 million people per year die of tobacco-related diseases.

Reclaiming Our Health: Exploding the Medical Myth and Embracing the True Source of Healing

John Robbins
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Following Morris Fishbein's instructions, company scientists poured diethylene glycol into rabbits' eyes, and found that the damage was less than occurred when they poured another chemical additive, used by other cigarette companies, into the creatures' eyes.18 Based upon this masterpiece of comprehensive scientific inquiry, Philip Morris then turned around and, with Dr. Fishbein's blessing, used this research as the basis for ad campaigns that ran regularly in the AMA Journal and other medical journals for nearly 20 years.
Other cigarette companies threatened to pull their ads from the AMA Journal. And pharmaceutical companies were worried that the cigarette ads would discredit the drug ads they ran in the Journal. Under increasing pressure, the AMA tried to distance itself from the Kent ad campaign, printing an editorial criticizing what it called an unacceptable "commercial exploitation of the American medical profession."27 But it wasn't as easy as the AMA would have liked to disentangle themselves. For it had been none other than Dr.

Food Politics

Marion Nestle
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They lobby Congress to eliminate regulations perceived as unfavorable; they press federal regulatory agencies not to enforce such regulations; and when they don't like regulatory decisions, they file lawsuits. Like cigarette companies, food companies co-opt food and nutrition experts by supporting professional organizations and research, and they expand sales by marketing directly to children, members of minority groups, and people in developing countries—whether or not the products are likely to improve people's diets.

Toxic Sludge is Good For You: Lies, Damn Lies and the Public Relations Industry

John Stauber and Sheldon Rampton
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In 1988 the cigarette companies spent more than $20 million in a failed effort to defeat a major anti-smoking initiative. Since then health activists have passed hundreds of local smoking bans. As a result, California has seen a 27% decrease in cigarette consumption, the most success of any state in reducing tobacco's deadly toll.19 Philip Morris is fighting back through a California PR firm called the Dolphin Group. Dolphin CEO Lee Stitzenberger used a half-million dollars from Philip Morris to set up a front group called "Cali-fornians for Statewide Smoking Restrictions.

Food Politics

Marion Nestle
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As described in Table 2, two of the four leading U.S. cigarette companies, R. J. Reynolds and Philip Morris, bought—and sometimes swapped—food and beverage companies in maneuvers designed to protect stockholders' investments against tobacco liability lawsuits. The increasing consumption of food outside the home also has implications for the food industry—and for health. Table 3 lists the leading U.S. food service companies by category: fast foods, restaurant chains, contract corporations, and hotel operations. The highest-selling food service chains are sandwich houses and fast-food chains.
TABLE 2. Cigarette companies' ownership of food and beverage companies: chronology 1969 Philip Morris, Inc. acquires 53% of Miller Brewing. 1970 Philip Morris buys the remaining 47% of Miller Brewing. 1978 Philip Morris acquires 97% of Seven-Up. 1985 R.J. Reynolds buys Nabisco Foods for $4.9 billion, creating RJR- Nabisco, a public company. Philip Morris buys General Foods for $5.6 billion. 1986 Philip Morris sells Seven-Up to PepsiCo. 1988 Philip Morris buys Kraft, Inc. for $13.6 billion.
Sarcasm aside, if the business press finds parallels between the tobacco and food industries, it is because the parallels are impossible to avoid. cigarette companies famously argue that smoking is a matter of individual choice and that it is wrong for government to interfere unduly in the private lives of citizens. They use science to sow confusion about the harm that cigarettes can cause. They set the standard in use of public relations, advertising, philanthropy, experts, political funding, alliances, lobbying, intimidation, and lawsuits to protect their sales.
As explained in the Introduction, some cigarette companies own food companies. No matter who owns them, food companies lobby government and agencies, and they become financially enmeshed with experts on nutrition and health. Although the food industry frames such tactics as promoting individual liberty and free will, its true objective is (not surprisingly) "trade and unrestricted profit."6 With respect to cigarettes, most Americans by now are thoroughly aware of the marketing practices of tobacco companies; we learned about them through decades of antismoking campaigns.
And in the same way that cigarette companies' promotion of smoking raises ethical issues, so does the food industry's promotion of minimally nutritious products and of overeating in general. THE ETHICS OF FOOD CHOICE Ethical issues arise whenever actions that benefit one group harm another. Food choices have economic, political, social, and environmental consequences that place improvements to the health of individuals or populations in conflict with other considerations. Table 3 6 summarizes some of these conflicts.

Sugar Blues

William Duffy
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There I discovered that the cigarette companies virtually subsidized the university paper with their advertising. Some of the best looking girls on campus worked for the tobacco companies as cigarette pushers—giving away free cigarettes and offering free instruction in inhaling the way Constance Bennett and Bette Davis did in the films. I smoked the free ones but I never developed the habit of buying them. I would always reach for a sweet in preference to a Lucky Strike. One of the boring things we were required to suffer through was a course called physical education.

The Politics of Cancer Revisited

Samuel S. Epstein, M.D.
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Probably one of the most effective ways of decreasing the tobacco death toll would be to make the industry pay for tobacco-associated cancer and other diseases, as well as other national costs. cigarette companies have in the past successfully defended themselves against lawsuits by claiming an "assumption of risk" by the victim or his or her family. This claim could be countered by the fact that the industry advertises widely to entice people, including minors, to start smoking. Such advertisements create "an attractive nuisance," often with fatal consequences.

Staying Healthy with Nutrition: The Complete Guide to Diet and Nutritional Medicine

Elson M. Haas, M.D.
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Television has improved in this regard, but the cigarette companies wbuld buy advertising on kid's cartoon shows if we let them. They are in business to sell pigarettes, not health. We need to find ways to dissociate cigarettes from vitality, virility, and sexuality. Children need to be educated early to make accurate associations with cigarettes, such as poor health, foul smells, and serious disease. Children need to know that cigarettes are very addicting, that they are a drug. Initially, smoking creates sickness— nausea, vomiting, dizziness, and so on.



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This unique compilation of research is copyright (c) 2008 by the non-profit Consumer Wellness Center.

ABOUT THE CREATOR OF NATURALPEDIA: Mike Adams, the creator of this NaturalNews Naturalpedia, is the editor of NaturalNews.com, the internet's top natural health news site, creator of the Honest Food Guide (www.HonestFoodGuide.org), a free downloadable consumer food guide based on natural health principles, author of Grocery Warning, The 7 Laws of Nutrition, Natural Health Solutions, and many other books available at www.TruthPublishing.com, creator of the earth-friendly EcoLEDs company (www.EcoLEDs.com) that manufactures energy-efficient LED lighting products, founder of Arial Software (www.ArialSoftware.com), a permission e-mail technology company, creator of the CounterThink Cartoon series (www.NaturalNews.com/index-cartoons.html) and author of over 1,500 articles, interviews, special reports and reference guides available at www.NaturalNews.com. Adams' personal philosophy and health statistics are available at www.HealthRanger.org.

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