In
Amerikaanse staat “hearings” over een mogelijk verbod van aspartaam.*
Activisten
in de staat New Mexico van de USA hebben een begin van succes geboekt waardoor
er nu “hearings” komen over de veiligheid van de kunstmatige zoetstof
aspartaam. Het is een gewone burger van deze staat, Stephan Fox, die met zoveel
mogelijk nadelige gevolgen van het gebruik van aspartaam de Environmental
Improvement Board van de staat heeft kunnen overtuigen nu deze “hearings” te
gaan houden. Srephan Fox stelt alles in het werk een verbod op aspartaam in juli
2006 te kunnen realiseren.
New Mexico activists hope to achieve an
unprecedented ban on aspartameNew Mexico may become the first state in the nation to
enact an official statewide ban on the artificial sweetener aspartame, if a
group of determined activists has its way. Activists there are fighting hard to
ban the sale of any and all products containing the chemical sweetener, and they
achieved a major victory in October when the state's Environmental Improvement
Board agreed to hold hearings on a possible aspartame ban in July of 2006.
Efforts
to ban aspartame in New Mexico have been spearheaded by concerned citizen
Stephen Fox, who enlisted the help of numerous medical and legal experts to help
him with the battle. After years of unsuccessfully trying to establish a state
Nutrition Council in New Mexico – free of Food and Drug Administration
limitations – to tackle issues like the dangers of artificial
sweeteners,
Fox has found a different path that could allow him to bring harmful food
additives
to the attention of the state government. That path involves using an existing
state statute that prohibits the use of poisonous or deleterious food additives.
Specifically,
the statute states, "A food shall be deemed to be adulterated, (1) if it
contains any poisonous or deleterious substance which may render it injurious;
(2) if it contains any added poisonous or added deleterious substance which is
unsafe, and (3) if it consists in whole or in part of…decomposed substance, or
if it is otherwise unfit." Although the statute has never been used to ban
the sale of a particular food item or additive in the state, Fox and his
supporters hope to convince the Environmental Improvement Board – the
regulatory body with statutory control over food quality in the state – that aspartame
fits the bill of a dangerous ingredient.
While
the official establishment and enforcement of a state ban on aspartame sales may
be a long way off, and will certainly be met with many challenges, Fox is
confident the ban will pass the Environmental Improvement Board, which would be
a major step in the right direction. Fox, a civilian activist who says a past
girlfriend sparked his interest in health and nutrition,
also says it is time for each individual state to take action to protect
citizens from potentially harmful foods, since he believes the FDA
is failing to do so. "The FDA is so far gone and so far broken down that it
can't be fixed. So, I think that every state has to do what we're doing if it's
going to genuinely protect people's health," Fox said. "I think there
should be a Nutrition Council in every state."
Although
aspartame gained FDA approval in 1981, by no means does that ensures its safety,
Fox says. In fact, before aspartame was approved by then-FDA director Dr. Arthur
Hull Hayes – who later went to work for the public relations department of the
company that owned the patent on, manufactured and sold aspartame – internal
agency reports identified 92 symptoms triggered by the artificial sweetener,
including seizure and death. However, knowledge of the adverse effects of
aspartame was widely ignored then and continues to be today.
New Mexico's
Environmental Improvement Board agreed to schedule hearings on the safety of
aspartame after Fox and his colleagues presented board members with a wealth of
evidence illustrating the potentially damaging health effects of aspartame,
along with numerous personal accounts from people whose health had been affected
by the artificial sweetener.
In one letter
to the board, a woman describes how her habit of drinking six to eight Diet Dr
Peppers a day led to severe mood swings, panic attacks and a sudden fear of
heights, which sparked doctors to put her on anti-depressants that were
ineffective. Unaware that aspartame could be the source of her troubles, she
continued ingesting artificially sweetened products and, three years later,
experienced post-partum complications after the birth of her second child. Her
doctors, not knowing what caused the difficulties, performed a partial
hysterectomy and removed her uterus. The woman now believes aspartame was
responsible, and writes, "When I think now that it was the aspartame, I get
so mad I could bite nails in half."
Another
letter tells the story of a woman whose first child was born with diabetes and
her second with brain malformations, neurological tremors and other serious
defects due to the woman's heavy aspartame intake during pregnancy. A third
letter comes from a man in the Falkland Islands in the South Atlantic, who,
although not a resident of New Mexico, supports the proposed ban wholeheartedly,
claiming aspartame caused his wife to develop a brain tumor and caused his
18-year-old daughter to suffer severe and frequent epileptic seizures, which
only ceased after artificial sweeteners were eliminated from her diet.
Those are
just a sampling of the heartbreaking accounts provided to the Environmental
Approval Board, and there is a great deal of evidence that supports the link
between aspartame and many of the symptoms described in those accounts. Dr.
Russell Blaylock, in his book, Excitotoxins: The Taste that Kills, goes
into great detail on the effects of artificial sweeteners on the brain and
nervous system. His book is a wonderful and detailed resource for anyone who may
feel they are victims of "aspartame poisoning."
In short,
aspartame is a neurotoxic chemical that has been linked to many health problems,
including neurological disorders, brain tumors, vision problems, migraines,
seizures, liver problems, sexual dysfunction, infertility, lymphoma, leukemia,
various cancers, serious birth defects and behavioral problems like those
attributed to ADHD. Aspartame is also thought to have negative reactions with
numerous prescription medications.
The
byproducts of aspartame – aspartic acid and phenylalanine – are brain toxins
held together by methyl alcohol, which turns into formaldehyde in the liver and
can cause serious neurodegenerative damage. Reports also show that aspartame
beaks down into formaldehyde at high temperatures, and many of Fox's supporters
note in their letters to the board an instance in the Gulf War in which diet
sodas sent to the troops were left in the sun for some time, turning them into
what one physician called in her letter "formaldehyde cocktails."
Fox says it's
time America stopped poisoning its own citizens with chemical sweeteners. "We're
really at a crisis level in the United States," he said. "The food
manufacturing people have made such a chemical feast, I'm convinced (aspartame)
is one of the major, if not the major cause for this huge spike in
neurodegenerative diseases and the increase in cancer and heart disease and
diabetes to the extent that the U.S. has dropped to 29th in terms of longevity
statistics."
The fact that
aspartame, with its potentially harmful effects, is contained in so many of the
foods and beverages consumed by people every day is troubling. But what makes it
even more troubling is how available it is to the nation's children. In fact,
some schools, under pressure to offer more nutritious vending machine options to
students, are actually offering diet soda containing aspartame as a "healthier"
alternative.
Likewise, diabetics are frequently told by physicians to drink diet sodas, but these physicians don't warn of the potentially harmful effects of consuming aspartame. That's because many physicians don't know about these effects, and just as many members of the public continue guzzling diet soda and chewing sugar-free candies without realizing they are bad for them. In fact, many people believe these are smarter, healthier options. Fox and others hope to change that view as they push forward with their unprecedented campaign to ban aspartame in New Mexico. (November 2005) (Opm. Hier meer informatie over Aspartaam uit Amerika )