| More
Home / Food Scares / Headlines


December 19, 2007
printable version email to a friend join our e-mail list


A Little Less Scare, A Little More Sense

A Little Less Scare, A Little More Sense

A new study illustrates that scare tactics are ineffective when it comes to changing people’s eating behavior. The University of Adelaide in Australia found that unrelenting warnings about “bad” food don’t impact consumers’ choices, leading researchers to conclude that “promoting ‘healthy’ fast food consumption might be the best option to adopt.” Sound familiar? It should. Decades of research supports the notion that encouraging healthful choices is the most effective way to influence eating habits. In fact, earlier this year the nation’s 67,000 registered dietitians agreed, formally announcing that (figurative) carrots, not sticks, are the way to go.

But it doesn’t take a consensus of nutritionists for most Americans to realize that bureaucrats and activists have no place disparaging their dinner choices. In an Associated Press feature on likable food scientist, Brian Wansink, the newly-appointed executive director of the USDA’s Center for Nutrition Policy and Promotion, summed up this common-sense approach to diet, health, and personal responsibility: “So much of the answer lies not in counting calories, not in legislating, but in the middle range of what we can do by changing some of our own habits.”

email us comments




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

Daily Headlines

  • Hype Masters Call Out Corn Syrup Falsehoods
    Posted On: Thursday 3/11/2010
  • TIME Trawls for Tuna Terror
    Posted On: Wednesday 2/24/2010
  • Corn Syrup Marketing Myths
    Posted On: Thursday 2/18/2010
  • The Big Apple’s Salt Shakedown
    Posted On: Monday 1/11/2010
  • Back to Make-Believe with Dr. Oz
    Posted On: Wednesday 1/6/2010


  • Activist Cash

    Environmental Working Group
    Background | Quotes | Financials
    The Environmental Working Group is the cauldron where some of the worst science and most creative smear campaigns are cooked up. A web of vested interests including both organic marketers and their public relations operatives reap the benefits of these deceptive advocacy campaigns. read more here »

    Environmental Media Services
    Background | Quotes | Financials
    If you’ve ever been advised to steer clear of a food, beverage, or other consumer product based on the claims of a nonprofit organization, you’ve likely been “spun” by Fenton’s multi-million-dollar message machine — and Environmental Media Services (EMS) has probably been the messenger. read more here »

    OpEds

    Food activists are all jeer, no cheer
    Don't let the holiday season magic be tainted by activists' food curses. One thing we can be thankful for is our ability to ignore them. read more here »

    Leave food choices to eaters
    Sometimes, a public-health movement goes too far. read more here »


    Copyright © 1997-2010 Center for Consumer Freedom. Tel: 202-463-7112.