What Passes for Animal Rights Credibility:Pretending a Child Has Cancer Due to Eating Hotdogs.
A new TV commercial shows kids eating hot dogs in a school cafeteria and one little boy's haunting lament: "I was dumbfounded when the doctor told me I have late-stage colon cancer." It's a startling revelation in an ad that vilifies one of America's most beloved, if maligned, foods, while stoking fears about a dreaded disease.Without reading the whole story, I thought this will be the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, a PETA creature, as mendacious a group as you will find. Yup:
But the boy doesn't have cancer. Neither do two other kids in the ad who claim to be afflicted. The commercial's pro-vegetarian sponsors say it's a dramatization that highlights research linking processed meats, including hot dogs, with higher odds of getting colon cancer. But that connection is based on studies of adults, not children, and the increased risk is slight, even if you ate a hot dog a day
Dr. Neal Barnard, president of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, called the ad "a way to raise appropriate concern about a deadly concern." Barnard also heads The Cancer Project, an offshoot of his anti-meat advocacy group.Never believe anything the PCRM or the Cancer Project say. Less than 5% of the committee are physicians. They are quacks in this field, their assertions products of their ideology rather than objective science. If in doubt about what they claim, turn to a credible source.
Labels: Animal Rights. Mendacity. PCRM.



4 Comments:
PCRM is hardly a reputable source for any Scientific value within diets or reasons for looking towards expanded health provisions for the human family. They would draw us back into the dark ages of Science if it were within their power to do so.
One thing Barnard is quite lucky about though. You don't need to be to sharp to fool the gullible as proven by Barnard who is busy convincing pretentious herbivore humans that they are not omnivore by nature while they pop vitamin supplements down their throat to garnish the food value that they should be getting from meat.
He doesn't need to fool many folk when popping out questionable science associated with his lucrative book sales.
http://www.amazon.com/s?ie=UTF8&search-type=ss&index=books&field-author=Neal%20D.%20Barnard&page=1
I have a relative who at the age of 33 had qualified for the Ironman Triathlon, and noticed when playing adult league soccer that he was short of energy. He was diagnosed with colon cancer at a stage that would have had most people immobile in a hospital bed. He is still fighting that battle.
I wonder what part of his lifestyle PCRM would blame for his cancer.
They are PCRM. They are automatically wrong by default.
If PCRM told you the sky is blue, look out your window to see if it is, and then go to a credible science journal or whatever to find the latest paper on the blueness of the sky.
This is the same yardstick one must apply with anything they package as "health advice".
Check out the link I provided and you will see the main ratio that Barnard worries about is book sales that seem to become more devalued with his claims of expertise being exposed as disputed by real researchers.
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