MICHELLE’S LOW-FAT FRAUD
Michelle Obama's Food Police are on the prowl: if you hear a knock on the door, hide the sugar bowl, the butter dish and the salt. Her campaign to force us all to eat a "low-fat" diet - called "My Plate" - is just getting started. What's happening in Tennessee is a good example.
Her war on foods that are high in saturated fats, sugar and salt is all in the name of "protecting the children." Yet there is a strong possibility that the "diabesity" epidemic she campaigns against has been caused largely by the very food police whom she champions.
So argues a devastating new book: The Big Fat Surprise by Nina Teicholz, an experienced journalist who spent eight years tracking down all the evidence for and against the advice to eat low-fat diets. She finds that it was based on flimsy evidence, supported by an intolerant consensus backed by vested interests and amplified by a docile press. And it made us fatter.
Low-fat became a craze. It still is: look at supermarket shelves. Read Mrs. Obama's press releases. But it's all a fraud.
