Walnuts Are Drugs, Says FDA

DamianTV

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http://www.thenewamerican.com/usnews/health-care/8294-walnuts-are-drugs-says-fda

Seen any walnuts in your medicine cabinet lately? According to the Food and Drug Administration, that is precisely where you should find them. Because Diamond Foods made truthful claims about the health benefits of consuming walnuts that the FDA didn’t approve, it sent the company a letter declaring, “Your walnut products are drugs” — and “new drugs” at that — and, therefore, “they may not legally be marketed … in the United States without an approved new drug application.” The agency even threatened Diamond with “seizure” if it failed to comply.

Diamond’s transgression was to make “financial investments to educate the public and supply them with walnuts,” as William Faloon of Life Extension magazine put it. On its website and packaging, the company stated that the omega-3 fatty acids found in walnuts have been shown to have certain health benefits, including reduced risk of heart disease and some types of cancer. These claims, Faloon notes, are well supported by scientific research: “Life Extension has published 57 articles that describe the health benefits of walnuts”; and “The US National Library of Medicine database contains no fewer than 35 peer-reviewed published papers supporting a claim that ingesting walnuts improves vascular health and may reduce heart attack risk.”

This evidence was apparently not good enough for the FDA, which told Diamond that its walnuts were “misbranded” because the “product bears health claims that are not authorized by the FDA.”

The FDA’s letter continues: “We have determined that your walnut products are promoted for conditions that cause them to be drugs because these products are intended for use in the prevention, mitigation, and treatment of disease.” Furthermore, the products are also “misbranded” because they “are offered for conditions that are not amenable to self-diagnosis and treatment by individuals who are not medical practitioners; therefore, adequate directions for use cannot be written so that a layperson can use these drugs safely for their intended purposes.” Who knew you had to have directions to eat walnuts?

“The FDA’s language,” Faloon writes, “resembles that of an out-of-control police state where tyranny [reigns] over rationality.” He adds:

This kind of bureaucratic tyranny sends a strong signal to the food industry not to innovate in a way that informs the public about foods that protect against disease. While consumers increasingly reach for healthier dietary choices, the federal government wants to deny food companies the ability to convey findings from scientific studies about their products.

Walnuts aren’t the only food whose health benefits the FDA has tried to suppress. Producers of pomegranate juice and green tea, among others, have felt the bureaucrats’ wrath whenever they have suggested that their products are good for people.

Meanwhile, Faloon points out, foods that have little to no redeeming value are advertised endlessly, often with dubious health claims attached. For example, Frito-Lay is permitted to make all kinds of claims about its fat-laden, fried products, including that Lay’s potato chips are “heart healthy.” Faloon concludes that “the FDA obviously does not want the public to discover that they can reduce their risk of age-related disease by consuming healthy foods. They prefer consumers only learn about mass-marketed garbage foods that shorten life span by increasing degenerative disease risk.”

Faloon thinks he knows why this is the case. First, by stifling competition from makers of more healthful alternatives, junk food manufacturers, who he says “heavily lobb[y]” the federal government for favorable treatment, will rake in ever greater profits. Second, by making it less likely that Americans will consume healthful foods, big pharmaceutical companies and medical device manufacturers stand to gain by selling more “expensive cardiac drugs, stents, and coronary bypass procedures” to those made ill by their diets.

But people are starting to fight back against the FDA’s tactics. “The makers of pomegranate juice, for example, have sued the FTC for censoring their First Amendment right to communicate scientific information to the public,” Faloon reports. Congress is also getting into the act with a bill, the Free Speech About Science Act (H.R. 1364), that, Faloon writes, “protects basic free speech rights, ends censorship of science, and enables the natural health products community to share peer-reviewed scientific findings with the public.”

Of course, if the Constitution were being followed as intended, none of this would be necessary. The FDA would not exist; but if it did, as a creation of Congress it would have no power to censor any speech whatsoever. If companies are making false claims about their products, the market will quickly punish them for it, and genuine fraud can be handled through the courts. In the absence of a government agency supposedly guaranteeing the safety of their food and drugs and the truthfulness of producers’ claims, consumers would become more discerning, as indeed they already are becoming despite the FDA’s attempts to prevent the dissemination of scientific research. Besides, as Faloon observed, “If anyone still thinks that federal agencies like the FDA protect the public, this proclamation that healthy foods are illegal drugs exposes the government’s sordid charade.”

Can you say it? A Federal Alphabet Agency overstepping its jurisdiction?
 
The FDA doesn't want us to consume things that are actually good for us. The would take profits away from Big Pharma.
 
This case seems to definately go too far. What they have tried to do in the past is ot require anybody making medical claims about any product (whether that is supplements or a particular food or whatever) only make statements which have been proven.
 
This case seems to definately go too far. What they have tried to do in the past is ot require anybody making medical claims about any product (whether that is supplements or a particular food or whatever) only make statements which have been proven.

Proven by whom? The FDA?
 
"Let food be thy medicine, and let thy medicine be food." Hippocrates, 460 BC, Father of Western Medicine

The FDA doesn't protect people, it protects big pharma's drug monopoly, and big food corporations that sell crappy food with no nutritional value.
 
This case seems to definately go too far. What they have tried to do in the past is ot require anybody making medical claims about any product (whether that is supplements or a particular food or whatever) only make statements which have been proven.

Wow, Zippy. You are so unaware that there is a whole deeper level to this nonsense. What's funnier is that you seem intent on avoiding acknowledgment of it at all costs. I'm sure you still think all pharmaceuticals are miracles of modern medicine and scientific advancement, despite the ridiculousness of the FDA, as well as the efficacy of pharmaceuticals... at killing people.
 
This isn't isolated. The FDA sent similar letters to General Mills last year for claiming Cheerios can help reduce cholesterol which, according to the FDA, means they're advertising it as a drug which they need to regulate.


... I wonder if the FDA would prosecute a food producer if they slapped a label on their product warning the food may increase cholesterol.
 
So I went to Wal Mart earlier to go grocery shopping, and this story popped into my mind while looking at Cashews. I started looking for Walnuts (no, that isnt a term applied to people who shop at Wal Mart for Nuts, or who are nuts), and was unable to find ANY. I didn't look very hard and didnt bother to ask, but that seemed kind of odd to me that this may already be showing its effects in the market.
 
Walnuts are usually found on the baking aisle in grocery stores- they aren't sold as often with the canned nuts (I don't see them in cans or jars usually). My local store also ha some in the produce department. Stores like Whole Foods or Trader Joes have them in bags with their other bagged nuts.
 
This isn't isolated. The FDA sent similar letters to General Mills last year for claiming Cheerios can help reduce cholesterol which, according to the FDA, means they're advertising it as a drug which they need to regulate.

I was about to put forth this proposition as a joke. Already too true to be funny, eh? Why am I not surprised in the least? Wonder how long before carrots are pulled off of the market for half a decade of testing because everyone knows betakeratine is good for the eyes?

Obviously Diamond and General Mills haven't been keeping up with their brib--er, I mean campaign contributions....
 
"an apple a day keeps the doctor away" will start landing moms in jail before long...

Speaking of apples.... if walnuts are going to be a problem, perhaps I need to tie some plastic apples on my English Walnut tree.
 
If the USDA says you should eat it, the FDA is going to make good and sure the DEA arrests you for having it.

"Never was a country in the throes of more capital letters than the old U.S.A., but we still haven't sent out the S.O.S."--Will Rogers

Can we send out that distress call yet?
 
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