Guest guest Posted March 3, 2001 Report Share Posted March 3, 2001 From: Ilena Rose <ilena@...> Sent: Saturday, February 24, 2001 1:15 PM Subject: WHOSE INTERESTS DOES ACSH SERVE? > > http://www.mindfully.org/Pesticide/ACSH-Koop.htm> > > American Council on Science and Health (ACSH)> > Led by Dr. Whelan, ACSH bills itself as: > > " ..a consumer education organization concerned with issues related to > food, nutrition, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, lifestyle, the environment > and health. " > > > WHOSE INTERESTS DOES ACSH SERVE?> > > " Who eats my bread dances to my tune. > - Old German Proverb > > > ACSH is heavily financed by corporations with specific and direct interest > in ACSH's chosen battles. Since it was created in 1978, it has come to the > enthusiastic defense of virtually every chemical or additive backed by a > major corporate interest. In many of these cases, investigative > journalists already have exposed direct connections between ACSH and its > funders. But in almost every instance, it takes little effort to discover > which funder on the left side of this page has a vested interest in > supporting ACSH's message. > > Everything Bad is Good Again > > Endocrine Disruptors: In 1999 ACSH Scientists found no convincing evidence > that certain synthetic chemicals in the environment endanger human health > by disrupting the human endocrine system. > > rBST (rBGH) Milk: In 1998 ACSH called an attack on milk from rBST-treated > cows an unwarranted distortion of science. The report stated that milk > from such cows will lead to elevated levels of a hormone called IGF-1 > which in turn will cause increased risk of prostate cancer. > > Cholesterol: ACSH issued a report in 1991 stating that there is no proven > link between heart disease and a diet high in fat and cholesterol. > > Saccharin: According to a 1985 article in the Washington Post by > Kurtz, ACSH received funding from Coca-Cola, Pepsi, NutraSweet and the > National Soft Drink Association, and attacked reports that saccharin is > carcinogenic. > > Formaldehyde: The same article noted that ACSH filed a friend-of-the-court > brief in 1982 in a lawsuit brought by the Formaldehyde Institute. The suit > successfully overturned a federal ban on insulation made with > formaldehyde. Georgia-Pacific Co., a leading producer of the chemical and > member of the Formaldehyde Institute, paid its Washington, DC, law firm to > write the brief ACSH submitted the brief under its own name. > > Global Warming: In its position paper on global warming, ACSH states that > implementation of fossil-fuel restrictions could " weaken the global > economic system, [and] increase the incidence of poverty-related illness > worldwide... " This is a case of selective reasoning-choosing the facts > that fit and discarding the rest. Mainstream scientists recognize that a > primary effect of global warming would be an increase in poverty-related > illnesses such as malaria, cholera and dengue feverdiseases dependent upon > warm, wet climates. > > Love Canal: Dr. M. Whelan says, " Was there ever any real health > problem at Love Canal? Yes, there was, in the sense that there was an > enormous amount of media-induced stress placed on residents who were > terrified that they and their children would become ill. " > > Alar: In many ways, ACSH's work on the Alar issue is exemplary of the way > the group works. Chemical makers-with the assistance of industry front > groups like ACSH-found a gold mine in keeping the decade-old Alar > controversy alive. Although the chemical was banned by the government in > 1991 and the EPA named it a possible human carcinogen, saying that > " long-term exposure to Alar poses unacceptable risks to the public > health, " the American public generally recalls the issue as a case in > which environmentalists were wrong. They are incorrect. > > In a 1973 study, Alar, a chemical used to lengthen the amount of time that > apples could be left to ripen on the tree, was found to break down into a > product called UMDH that is 1,000 times more carcinogenic than Alar > itself. UMDH is formed when apples are cooked to make applesauce or apple > juice. > > When environmental groups claimed that Alar was a danger, ACSH attacked > the groups, maintaining the chemical was safe and the target of a media > scare. Not surprisingly, ACSH receives funding from Uniroyal, the company > that made Alar. > > Over the last decade, ACSH has made the Alar controversy a prominent part > of its hallmark " Facts Versus Fears " report. A review of more than 25 > " unfounded health scares, " including dangers associated with saccharin, > hormones in beef and DDT, the report is a who's who of products > manufactured by ACSH's funders. > > ACSH's disinformation campaign on Alar has been alive almost since the > controversy began; dozens of articles in papers from around the country > have published articles on the so-called " health scare. " Though one of > ACSH's main points about the incident was that it had a devastating effect > on the apple industry, even the Washington Apple Commission noted that > only two to three percent of consumers still were concerned about the > chemical just a year after the story broke. > > Less than a year ago, ACSH and " Facts Versus Fears " even made it into the > pages of the New York Times - twice. The first piece was summary of the > report's highlights. The second was an official correction in which the > Times named Uniroyal as an ACSH funder, and clarified that the Alar was > pulled from the market by the company before an EPA ban could take effect. > > C. EVERETT KOOP'S HISTORY WITH ACSH > Former U.S. Surgeon General C. Everett Koop's association with ACSH and > Whelan is longstanding. In 1992, the pair joined forces in the > same way they would years later in their partnership on the " blue-ribbon > panel " on phthalates. > > ACSH sponsored a Washington, DC, press conference on the third anniversary > of the Alar controversy. Koop headed a panel of " experts " that claimed > Alar never posed a health risk. According to an article in PR Watch, the > Hill and Knowlton public relations firm persuaded Koop to write a > statement that apples were safe. > > Whelan and Koop teamed up again to denounce Diet for a Poisoned Planet, a > book that warned against the use of pesticides and chemical residues in > foods. That campaign was organized by Ketchum Public Relations before the > release of the book. Lorraine Thelian, the director of the Washington > office of Ketchum, sits on the ACSH Board of Directors. Thelian is an > expert on " environmental PR work, " and her office represents a number of > ACSH funders. Koop issued a statement calling the book " trash. " > > On May 25 of this year, ACSH announced that it had joined forces with > Koop's new Internet healthcare site, drkoop.com. From the release: > > " The American Council on Science and Health (ACSH), a non-profit, > consumer-advocacy organization is creating an exclusive health wire > service for drkoop.com consumers. Guided by ACSH experts and written by > experienced wireservice journalists, the daily ACSH newswire will help > people better understand the health stories they see on the news by adding > the often-missing scientific perspective. This partnership with drkoop.com > gives consumers, who are constantly bombarded with conflicting and often > alarming health news, an unbiased, scientific analysis of the latest > trends in health and medicine, as well as clarifications of health > misinformation found in the mainstream press. " > > Before consumers or reporters rely on ACSH for an " unbiased " analysis, > they should review the record on the real sources of funding and points of > view. > > > A final word on the relationship between ACSH and its funders... > > > A 1992 memo from Whelan, referenced in a Consumer Reports expose, bemoans > the loss of funding from Shell in a particularly revealing way: > > " When one of the largest international petrochemical companies will not > support ACSH, the great defender of petrochemical companies, one wonders > who will. " > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > ACSH receives 76 percent of its funding from corporations and corporate > funders, and 17 percent of its funding from private foundations, according > to Congressional Quarterly's Public Interest Profiles. > > Some current and past ACSH corporate and foundation funders: > > > > * ALCOA Foundation > * Allied Signals Foundation > * American Cyanamid > * American Meat Institute > * Amoco > * Anheuser-Busch > * Archer s Midland > * Ashland Oil Foundation > * Boise Cascade Corp > * Bristol-Myers Squibb > * Burger King > * Carnation Co > * Chevron > * CibaGeigy > * Coca-Cola > * Consolidated Edison > * Industries Foundation > * Coors > * Coors Foundation > * Dow Chemical > * Dow Chemical Canada > * DuPont > * Ethyl Corp > * Exxon > * Ford Motor Co. > * Frito-Lay > * G. D. Searle Charitable Trust > * General Electric > * General Mills > * General Motors > * Gerber Products > * Hershey Foods Corp Fund > * & > * 's Wax Fund > * M. Olin Foundation > * ph E. Seagrams & Sons > * Kraft Foundation > * Kraft General Foods > * Merck Co Foundation > * Merck Pharmaceuticals > * Mobil Foundation > * Mobil > * Monsanto Fund > * Monsanto > * National Agricultural Chemicals Association > * National Dairy Council > * National Soft Drink Association > * National Starch and Chemical Foundation > * Northwood Institute > * Nestle > * NutraSweet Co. (owned by Monsanto) > * Mayer Foods > * Pepsico > * Pepsi-Cola > * Pfizer > * PPG Industries > * Procter & Gamble > * Rohm & Haas > * Salt Institute > * Nobel Foundation > * Scaife Foundation > * Seagrams > * The Schultz Foundation > * Shell Oil > * Starr Foundation > * Sterling Drug > * Stouffer Corp > * Stroh Brewery Co > * Sugar Association > * Sun Company, Inc > * Syntex Corp > * Union Carbide Corp. > * Uniroyal Chemical Co. > * USX Corp. > * Warner-Lambert Foundation > * Wine Growers of California > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.