By Alan Caruba
Can you
imagine going to Wal-Mart, Kroger’s, Safeway, Home Depot, and Best Buy, as well
as your favorite supermarket only to find that literally thousands of products
that rely on a wide range of chemicals to perform had been removed from the
shelves?
That is
the objective of “Mind the Store”, a campaign by an extensive coalition of
environmental and health groups, to remove commonly used products such as
cleaning supplies, furniture, children’s toys, food packaging, water bottles
and a very long list of others that actually provide a healthier home and work
environment for Americans.
In late
May, another coalition, mostly free market advocates, sent a letter to the
retailers mentioned and others, expressing their concern about the “Mind the
Store” campaign and urging them “to stand firm against this well-funded,
anti-science campaign of fear. Families don’t need false alarmism; they need
access to safe and affordable products that make their lives easier, safer,
cleaner and more comfortable.
Twenty-one
representatives of groups signed the letter. I am an adviser to two of them,
The Heartland Institute and the Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow (CFACT),
but joining them was the Competitive Enterprise Institute, the National Center for
Public Policy Research, the Family Business Defense Council, National Center
for Policy Analysis, and even the founder of Tea Party Nation.
Arrayed
against them in the "Safer Chemicals, Healthy Families" coalition that has
launched the new pressure campaign is a rogue’s gallery of environmental
organizations that include Earthjustice, the Environmental Defense Fund,
Natural Resources Defense Council, and a number of “health” organizations that
depend on keeping the public frightened in order to raise funds. They include
the Association for Reproductive Health and Developmental Disabilities, Breast
Cancer Fund, Autism Society of America, and the Learning Disabilities
Association.
In the letter to retailers concerning the “Mind the Store” campaign, the coalition stated that the “Safer, Healthy Families organization which is leading the effort” to get thousands of products removed “is notorious for spreading incomplete information about chemicals. While the organization portrays itself as a consumer ‘watchdog’, it is better described as an attack dog determined to destroy free enterprise and consumer choice.”
“The
organization has a pattern of relying on junk science; it capitalizes on the
natural anxieties of parents by spreading scary stories about a long list of
common products…”
In 1990 I
created The National Anxiety Center as a clearinghouse for information about
“scare campaigns” designed to influence public opinion and policies. In 2011, I
wrote a six-part series about the on-going international attack on Bisphenal-A (BPA), a chemical that has been safely used for decades to protect plastic
bottlers and other containers against the threat of botulism and breakage. It
has been exonerated from the charges that continue to be made against it by the
U.S. government, Canada, and other nations.
“Mind the
Store” continues to spread lies about BPA, phthalates, formaldehyde, and
certain flame retardants. All of these and more ensure a safer environment for
the consumer. As the letter to retailers notes, “flame retardants, which are
now common in furniture and building materials, are largely responsible for the
sharp decline in household fires since the 1970s. Formaldehyde, which is used
in personal care products, helps prevent bacterial growth. Phthalates are added
to plastics to make toys less breakable. And Bisphenal-A, a chemical used in
food packaging, safeguards against deadly botulism in canned food.”
On its
Internet page, “Mind the Store” repeats all the lies that environmental and
some “health” groups have been telling for decades. The language used speaks of
“links” to diseases from cancer to asthma. There is a vast difference between
alleged “links”, often based a skewed “scientific” studies, and the real
science that has been conducted by U.S. and other governmental agencies.
“Mind the
Store” is the continuation of well-funded campaigns that are, as often as not,
simply repeated, but never investigated, claims intended to harm the economy
and deprive consumers of products that keep them safe.
© Alan
Caruba, 2013
So now it is complete. There are the food nazis, the air SS, the energy gestapo and in a moment, the brown shirts who, through fear, will find fault in everything else.
ReplyDeleteSUV, four-wheel drive owners, and anyone with diesel or gas powered automobile will be asked to take one more, one way road trip (no need to pack). Gun ownership will have to be revealed and then wearing a large yellow "G" will be mandatory. People will stand by and marvel at the efficiency of everyone who works for the government (that will be most everybody) and hope that their neighbor, a GS 18, will bring them something extra from the "government employees" only food bank.
All this not because the government was powerful, but because the people are ignorant and apathetic.
Mind the Store needs to mind their OWN business...
ReplyDeleteThe *Nanny State* is a reality it seems, and quite frankly, I don't know how us *baby boomers* survived without someone telling me about the dangers of beer and hotdogs...
Keep up the good fight and for the rest of us, make it a point to tell these retailers we will continue to shop in their stores as long as they stand against these fear mongering groups.
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ReplyDelete