- New Mexico Senate President sides with World's Largest
Neurotoxic Carcinogenic Artificial Sweetener Maker, Ajinomoto, to Kill
Consumer Protection Request of FDA to Rescind Aspartame
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- It saddens me to inform your readers that Wednesday morning
Senator Tim Jennings cast the vote that killed a vital consumer protection
measure in Senate Rules Committee. That was Senate Memorial 9 of Gerald
Ortiz y Pino which asked the FDA to take this carcinogenic and neurotoxic
artificial sweetener off the market, since it is still found in 6000 products,
from food to pharmaceuticals.
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- This chemical was patented by G.D. Searle, which back
in 1966 was investigating peptic ulcer drugs; the story from Searle is
that the chemist licked his finger, and discovered that it was 200 times
as sweet as sugar, profit lights went off in the chandelier in the corporate
board's cerebelum, but the FDA turned them down for approval for 15 years
because of concerns over the methyl ester in aspartame becoming methanol
then formaldehyde, and causing harm to the consumer. Jennings mentioned
in the committee that he had had problems with acid reflux and would vote
against the Memorial which he did (as if it still had something to do with
peptic ulcer drugs!); I wonder if that was apparently all he had read of
the Memorial, the first sentence: but I pointed out as politely as I could
muster, that it had been considered as a peptic ulcer drug 46 years ago,
but that was kind of like talking with Rip Van Winkel after his 300 year
nap.
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- [Try to picture a Roswell rancher, a little overweight,
impeccably dressed, with a dry scratchy voice, kind of populist appeal,
like a New Mexico version of Will Rogers, homespun, witty, with a long
background in Senate Finance, given the position as Pro Tem after the last
one died suddenly, then elected in a fierce struggle between progressive/liberals
and Republicans/Conservative Democrats. (Guess who won?)]
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- With all due respect to the Senate Pro Tem, Jennings
ought to have been somewhat alarmed when the word "carcinogen"
comes up in any serious legislative context, having just lost his wife
at the age of 53 to a long ordeal with cancer. If he were genuinely concerned
for the health of New Mexicans rather than just capitulating to the phalanx
of corporate lobbyists speaking against it, he would have helped to pass
it.
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- This is truly New Mexico's deep and avoidable loss, as
California is moving forward with consideration of aspartame as a carcinogen
under Proposition 65, which allows them to label it as "a chemical
known by the state of California to cause cancer," and to even sue
the manufacturers and corporate users, like Coca Cola, Pepsi, and Wrigley's
Gum. The California Attorney General, Edmund Gerald Brown, Jr., is already
doing this in suits against Whole Foods for knowingly including a different
carcinogen (1-4-5 Dioxane) in their 365 lines of Organic Soaps and Body
Products, and then basically concealing it. Mark my word, these suits will
come for aspartame and they will resemble the Tobacco Suits of the 1990's,
which resulted in judgments of $235 Billion.
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- The legislators love to spend that money now, but back
in the early 1990's, as then-Attorney General now-U.S. Senator Tom Udall
told me many years ago, the Legislature would not contribute 50 cents
to help fund the lawsuits, because of corporate lobbyists opposing such
allocations by the Legislature. Similarly, these legislators who would
not ask the FDA to take it off the market, will want to spend the proceeds
of the aspartame suits. Ludicrous!
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- The Ministry of Education in British Columbia Canada
recently agreed to remove ALL artificial sweeteners from the elementary
and middle schools, as a result of parents' demands, in spite of Health
Canada, the equivalent of our FDA, still parroting the corporate line that
aspartame/methanol/formaldehyde/diketopiperazine was somehow acceptable,especially
for diabetic children and overweight children.
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- This is the real world regarding aspartame. Tim Jennings'
vote was not part of the real world. He asked after voting "do not
pass," for more copies of the studies proving it causes cancer, and
I should have said then (but didn't out of deference to the committee)
that "I have been bringing you those same studies since 2004, like
the Ramazzini report, when I first talked with you, Senator, about the
dangers of this artificial sweetener, and it looks like you never read
them!" Three years ago, I brought Jennings (and most of the legislature)
at my expense an outstanding DVD, SWEET MISERY, on Aspartame's proven medical
effects, but he must never have watched it. [You can see it now free, on-line,
and I recommend it strongly. Just google SWEET MISERY].
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- Truly I always liked Tim Jennings until today's performance
in Senate Rules. There was a group of Senior Senators who guzzle the stuff
still, even though one of them died, one resigned because of "old
age," (what could make you age faster than consuming formaldehyde?),
and two got clobbered in the 2008 elections and they are I hope permanently
gone (they was the worst obstructionists of them all). Senate Majority
Leader Michael Sanchez is trying to quit, he says. The bottling companies
bring dolly's full of cases to the legislature in order to ingratiate the
legislators and legitimize their products.
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- I really don't know if Tim Jennings is among the diet
soda guzzlers still. If he has quit, he did so out of concern for his own
health. If he DIDN'T quit consuming aspartame, he certainly is in no real
position to be deciding such things for the rest of the state, especially
since it was only a Memorial REQUESTING the FDA to taken it off the market,
and to vote from a position of such a total lack of accurate medical information
is absolutely shocking to me.
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- The world's largest Aspartame maker, Ajinomoto of Japan,
hired slick and powerful lobbyists as well as the state's largest lawfirm,
the Rodey Firm; in 2005 and in 2006 knocked down and prevented both the
Board of Pharmacy and the Environmental Improvement Board from considering
getting rid of aspartame in medicines and food products, respectively,
by threatening them with lawsuits.
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- Ajinomoto manipulated the Governor by hiring two of his
good friends (one of these was Michael Stratton, who has subsequently been
tied to the pay-for- play Federal Grand Jury investigation that unfortunately
caused Richardson to choose to step down from being Obama's first choice
for Commerce Secretary---I still think he would have excelled at that job!)
as lobbyists to influence him to renege on his prior strong support for
the EIB hearings, and those EIB hearings, without the Governor's support
and the assurance from Patsy Madrid that they didn't have to worry about
such threats, crumbled.
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- Thus, now Ajinomoto has manipulated the Legislative Branch
into obsequious acquiescence. Quite a score, eh? 3 out of 3! What's next?
Put a pro- aspartame lobbyist on the New Mexico Supreme Court? After all,
another aspartame maker from back in the 80's and 90's, Monsanto, got their
own former corporate lawyers appointed as Supreme Court Justice (Clarence
Thomas) and as US Attorney General, John Ashcroft.
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- Fortunately, the Rules Committee Chair, Senator Linda
Lopez, and Rules Member/Senate Public Affairs Chair, Dede Feldman, had
the sense to vote for the Memorial. The three Republicans voted against
it, I think, just because both Ortiz y Pino and I mentioned the unavoidable
historic fact that Donald Rumsfeld forced the approval for aspartame in
1981, even thought the FDA had turned them down for the prior 15 years!
Maybe Rules member Stuart Ingle gave them "marching orders" to
vote against it; he is the Minority Leader in the Senate.
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- But you might say, "But wait! Rummy's gone, out
of the picture," but those Republicans apparently see some residual
partisan pride in drinking formaldehyde, and for you and your children
to do so, and never question the miserable ethics of Rumsfeld for his role
in that matter! He made $12-15 million on the deal, and what was good for
his bank account must still be good for America!?
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- It is sickening when you really examine the corporate
manipulation and control of government at all levels, especially in the
regulatory branches. I am sad to conclude today that Tim Jennings is part
of that mess, rather than part of the real solution. Roswell's other Senator,
Republican Rod Adair, always sided with activists on this issue, and even
cosigned as cosponsor some earlier related measures introduced in 2006,
truly "reaching across the aisle," as they are so fond of saying.
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- This really is not what a Senate President Pro Tem should
be doing, siding with every Tom, Dick, and Harry corporate lobbyist who
comes along. He should be helping to educate the vast lot of New Mexicans
who still naively believe the FDA is there to protect them.
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- If you drink Diet Sodas or chew sugarless gum or consume
Equal, and if you come down with migraine headaches, epilepsy, brain tumors,
blindness, or any of the other 92 symptoms recognized by the FDA as caused
by aspartame, remember Tim Jennings' vote today in Senate Rules to deny
a request of the FDA to take this proven poison off the market.
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- In the USA, products like asbestos, Thalidomide, leaded
gasoline, cigarettes with horrible additives, Vioxx, Celebrex...(the list
goes on and on), stay on the market because of the efforts of corporate
lobbyists and obstructionist corporate lawyers. The USA only responds when
one of two things happens:
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- 1. the bodies of victims pile up
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- 2. the lawsuits from the dead bodies and their heirs
pile up.
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- Otherwise, you will see legislatures and regulatory boards
and Governors and lobbyists from Ajinomoto, Coca Cola, Pepsi Cola, Monsanto,
Equal, etc., sweep the dead bodies and the maimed and the impaired youth
under the rug, until there is so much death and suffering under the rug,
some nation will simply throw out the rug, and the health of that nation's
citizens will be the better for it.
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- Could that Nation ever be the United States? Doubtful,
but if enough people communicated to Obama, to HHS Secretary Sebelius and
to the next, as yet unappointed FDA Commissioner and Surgeon General, it
could very well be the USA that takes aspartame off the market first.
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- After all, California took a mighty step in that direction
just last Friday, regarding aspartame and Proposition 65. It doesn't take
a rocket scientist to realize that there is here an equation at work:
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- Lung Cancer and Emphysema/Tobacco suits in the 1990's=
Neurodegenerative Illnesses/Aspartame suits in the 2010's!
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- Respectfully,
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- Stephen Fox
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- Editor, New Mexico Sun News
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- Santa Fe, New Mexico
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