The National Education Association, the nation's largest teachers union, has
said "yes" to moulah made on diets that say "no" to many fruits and
vegetables.
Atkins announced that it was joining forces with the National
Education Association to educate children about nutrition, in part by sponsoring
a school health Web site.
Or, as Greg Toppo put it so well in his USA
Today account of the deal: "The folks who brought back three-egg omelets and
triple cheeseburgers want to teach your kids a thing or two about health,
nutrition and exercise."
When more than half of kids go without fruit on
any given day, and childhood obesity has made this generation the first with a
shorter life expectancy than their parents, what kids should be learning is that
a diet low in saturated and trans fats and rich in fruits and vegetables is the
foundation for preventing disease and maintaining a healthy
weight.
Instead, they'll receive a "nutrition" message bankrolled by
dollars earned selling a high-fat, low-fruit diet. Atkins claims it only wants
to provide the NEA with "the latest research and information available on
controlled-carbohydrate nutrition."
Really? Do you suppose that will
include the research just published in The Lancet regarding the battery of
negative side-effects - headaches, muscle fatigue, foul breath, constipation -
suffered by Atkins dieters? What about the recent MIT research that suggests
that low-carb dieting can cause serotonin levels to plummet? Or the Mayo Clinic
survey linking a marked increase in saturated fat intake over the past five
years with the Atkins craze? I don't think so.
If the Atkins folks
thought that using educators to carry their low-carb message would be easy, then
they were in for a rude awakening. The Partnership for Essential Nutrition - a
coalition of consumer, nutrition and public health groups - has launched a
letter-writing campaign to demand the immediate cancellation of the NEA-Atkins
deal. The partnership warned that "there are very real dangers to children if
they were to adopt a low-carb diet because the brain requires 130 grams of
glucose a day for normal functioning, a quantity of carbohydrates that even the
maintenance level of the Atkins diet does not deliver."
Sad to say, the
NEA gets a big fat "F" when it comes to taking a responsible stand on children's
nutritional needs, though we'll give 'em a bright red "A" for Atkins when it
comes to irresponsibly taking money made on diets that disregard such
needs.
But maybe the unions aren't so much irresponsible as indifferent.
As Albert Shanker, the late, great crusader for teachers' labor rights once
observed: "I'll start representing kids when kids start paying union dues."
Which raises the question once again: Just whose interests is the NEA
representing?
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