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December 19, 2002
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California Kooks Cook Up 'Crisis'

A partisan but official-sounding organization called the California Center for Public Health Advocacy (CCPHA) released a study last week claiming that childhood obesity is “a state emergency” in the Golden State. Predictably, California’s major newspapers pounced, calling for everything from increased budgets for physical education programs to harsh, new restrictions on the types of food that can be sold in school cafeterias.

Of course, CCPHA director Harold Goldstein is downplaying the idea that this new study represents an attack on food providers. He tells the Los Angeles Times that it’s all about “healthy eating and physical activity.”

But this is the same Harold Goldstein who spoke to the 2002 conference of the American Public Health Association (APHA), in a session titled “Challenging the Fast Food Culture.” There, he told a crowd of over 1200 public health officials that “people will say that this obesity epidemic is only a matter of personal responsibility,” but “we in public health know differently.”

Goldstein’s organization (CCPHA) was the primary sponsor of California Senate Bill 19, which set new standards for demonizing soda pop. Goldstein also encouraged the APHA conferees to “make sure that SB19 and [the] LA Unified [soda ban] are implemented fully.”

Sacramento Bee columnist Daniel Weintraub analyzed CCPHA’s study of California’s children and concluded: “Parents, not state government, are in the best position” to make sure kids stay healthy. “It is parents -- not the government, not the fast-food companies, not the video-game manufacturers -- who are responsible for teaching kids healthy eating and exercise habits.” Weintraub also notes that, contrary to Goldstein’s spin about phys-ed reform, “many of the report’s long-term recommendations [are] focused on the fast-food industry.”

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Center for Science in the Public Interest
Background | Quotes | Financials
The Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI) is the undisputed leader among America’s “food police.” CSPI’s joyless eating club has issued hundreds of high-profile — and highly questionable — reports condemning soft drinks, fat substitutes, irradiated meat, biotech food crops, French fries, and just about anything that tastes good. read more here »

Op-Eds

Eat well, but don't skip your exercise
Unsuccessful dieters and overzealous policymakers might consider that they might have been focusing on the wrong side of the weight-loss equation. read more here »

Lack of exercise is the problem
State-by-state obesity trends make more sense when you look at the other side of the obesity equation — physical activity. Simply put, residents of states with high obesity rates tend to move less. read more here »


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