Comment by CGMthrowaway
4 days ago
I see how the article is framed, but I see a lot of good things in that timeline:
MAHA Commission assessing health risks from food ingredients and chemicals and developing a strategy to combat childhood chronic disease
Closing the GRAS loophole
Phasing out synthetic food dyes
$235 million specifically aimed at improving nutrition, controlling food additives and addressing food safety
$15 million specifically for modernizing infant formula oversight
$7 million to support critical laboratory operations
> $235 million specifically aimed at improving nutrition, controlling food additives and addressing food safety
Musk’s disastrous months with the admin defunded and ended a program bringing local farmers’ produce et al to public schools around my state so I’m a little bitter seeing this one.
Even then, 95% of it is probably already earmarked / targeted for some friend's grift.
Without a doubt
Anything with money amounts, my next question is how much money were we previously spending on that thing.
If simply spending money worked USA would be the most healthy.
Look, we could spend a fraction of what we do, but then there would be people who get things for free or even fraudulently. You can see just how bad that would be from an American mindset.
Roughly $20-30 million/year specifically aimed at nutrition, additives and diet-related food safety. So this is a 8-10x increase.
I'm not seeing numbers supporting that https://www.fda.gov/media/166050/download
What they see as necessary to combat childhood chronic disease is not necessarily what most scientists would say is necessary to combat childhood chronic disease, and might even be detrimental. Also if the new dietary recommendations are any clue, what they see as "improving nutrition" might be questionable.
The devil is in the details.