Resize Font Increase Font Size Decrease Font Size Reset Font Size

Home / Food Police / Headlines

February 25, 2005
printable version email to a friend join our e-mail list


CSPI's Bogus Assault On Salt

Not content knowing that some people continue to occasionally enjoy a meal, the self-described "food police" at the Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI) launched their latest attack yesterday -- this time on salt. So CSPI has reaffirmed salt's place on its long list of nutritional no-nos, which includes milk, salad, and seafood. If you listen to CSPI -- why you would, we don't know -- that shaker on your dinner table might as well contain rat poison or cyanide. But considering the mixed scientific evidence, as well as CSPI's draconian solutions, you should take their latest attack with one gigantic grain of -- well, you know what.

According to CSPI, salt is a "silent killer" that takes the lives of 150,000 Americans a year. That number comes from a four-page commentary written by a member of CSPI's own advisory board -- hardly an unbiased source. And this commentary provides no explanation for how the death total is calculated.

Many rigorous scientific investigations have found little or no link between salt and mortality. A meta-study published in the prestigious British Medical Journal summarized the findings of a number of studies on the subject and found: "It is unclear what effects a low sodium diet has on cardiovascular events and mortality." Another study published in the American Heart Association journal Hypertension concluded:

[F]ew data link sodium intake to health outcomes, and that which is available is inconsistent. Without knowledge of the sum of the multiple effects of reduced sodium diet, no single universal prescription for sodium intake can be scientifically justified.

Despite largely inconclusive evidence on salt's health impact, CSPI didn't pull any punches when it comes to trying to forcibly cut its unfavored ingredient out of our diets. CSPI's plan includes extra taxes on salty foods, warning labels on salt canisters, and government regulations on how much salt certain foods may contain. The group also wants another bureaucracy -- "a new FDA Division of Salt Reduction."

And CSPI's not done there. As with their campaign against Acrylamide in French fries and potato chips, they suggest that once companies reformulate their products to meet new government-imposed guidelines, "the limits could be reduced to the new median (or other lower) value." Like a game of limbo, CSPI's proposed regulatory salt standards only get lower once companies meet them. And that means our food would never be the same again.

email us comments



printable version email to a friend join our e-mail list
Headlines


Are Restaurants Really Supersizing America? Nope.
Posted On: Tuesday 1/6/2009

Ringing Out 2008: A Look Back
Posted On: Wednesday 12/31/2008

CCF In The News: New Year’s Edition
Posted On: Tuesday 12/30/2008

Merry Christmas!
Posted On: Wednesday 12/24/2008

The FDA Loves Stevia. Guess Who's Panicking?
Posted On: Monday 12/22/2008

All Together Now: "It's The Exercise, Stupid!"
Posted On: Monday 12/8/2008

The Sweet Sound Of Being Right About Soda Bans
Posted On: Thursday 12/4/2008

Happy Thanksgiving from the Center for Consumer Freedom!
Posted On: Wednesday 11/26/2008

Gobble, Gobble, Sue!
Posted On: Monday 11/24/2008


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 »

Op-Eds

Taxes on soda, juice an ‘experiment’ we should skip
In an attempt to shore up the state’s $13.3 billion deficit, Gov. David A. Paterson is trying to give New Yorkers a Christmas present they do not want: Taxes. read more here »

Solution to holiday weight gain? Get moving
As usual for the holiday season, newspaper health pages have been full of tips on how to make it through December without looking like a fat Santa Claus by New Year’s. read more here »


About Us | Contact Us | Please Help Us | Site Map
Ad Campaigns | Press Center | Daily News Archive | Email Subscription | Op-Eds | Cartoons | Games | Link To Us
Copyright © 1997-2009 Center for Consumer Freedom. Tel: 202-463-7112.