Farmer's Fate
Putting the government in our
kitchen
Lately there’s been a lot of hype about healthy diets: what to eat,
what not to eat. What to cook with, what not to cook with. What to do about
trans fats.
Trans fats occur naturally, in small quantities, in meat and dairy products.
Most trans fats consumed today, however, are industrially created as a side
effect of the partial hydrogenation of plant oils. Partially hydrogenated
oils are attractive to food manufactures for several reasons: it reduces rancidity
and consequently increases product shelf life and decreases refrigeration
requirements—the downfall is that it increases the risk of heart disease.
New York City’s Board of Health voted to ban trans fat in restaurant
food in December. Restaurants will be barred from using most frying and spreading
fats containing trans fats above 0.5 g per serving by July 1, 2007, and will
have to meet the same target in all of their foods by July 1, 2008.
Supporters are praising the new measures and probably wishing other states
would adopt them as well. But research also directly links chewing tobacco
to mouth cancer—the government isn’t stepping in to “fix”
that problem.
So why are we asking the government to do our cooking? When questioned, American’s
typically say the government is already in too much of their lives…yet
here we are asking them to supervise our diets. While cleaning up our diets
isn’t a bad idea for most of us—is it really the government’s
job to oversee it? What’s next? Micromanaging our tooth brushing habits—after
all, poor dental hygiene can cause gum disease.


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Brianna
Walker |
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