Center for Consumer Freedom Charges Food Cops With False Arrest, Excessive Force and Nutritional Profiling
Immediately after the New York City Board of Health announced its proposal to unilaterally ban trans fat from all of the city's food service outlets, the Center for Consumer Freedom (CCF) responded on behalf of all hungry New Yorkers by telling the food police to "back off" in a national television ad.
The ad, titled "Smash," begins airing today and will run throughout the week on CNN and the Fox News Channel. The commercial starts with a young boy enjoying an ice cream cone, only to have it ripped from his hands. The script reads:
Everywhere you turn, someone's telling us what we can't eat. It's getting harder just to enjoy a beer on a night out. Do you always feel like you are being told what to do? Find out who is driving the Food Police at ConsumerFreedom.com
"The New York City Board of Health has gone too far with this proposal," said CCF senior analyst J. Justin Wilson. "Trans fats may not be good for you- just like too many calories or too much butter isn't good for you-but foods that contain trans fat aren't unsafe. The Board of Health has mischaracterized trans fat as a food safety problem so they can interfere with New York restaurant menus."
Wilson continued: "Activist groups and overzealous politicians have politicized food to the point where the government is actually telling businesses what they can serve and telling consumers what they can enjoy. If there's E. coli in my spinach, I'll thank the Board of Health to intervene. Otherwise, please keep your laws off my food."
To view "Smash," visit http://www.consumerfreedom.com/.
The Center for Consumer Freedom is a nonprofit coalition supported by restaurants, food companies, and consumers, working together to promote personal responsibility and protect consumer choices.
Reader Comments:
|
gov should stay the hell out of my life
last time i checked i was living in the united states of america....not the old soviet union.......government should stay away from making choices for me about what i can and cannot eat....it is nobodies business but my own....and i resent it....what happened to freedom of choice 2006-12-05 bob |
|
|
|