Q: Your important consumer education work on the 
		sweetener "aspartame" is 
	well known and we are delighted to speak to you. Is it true that the large 
	majority of non-drug complaints to the Food and Drug Administration are 
	about adverse reactions to aspartame, also called NutraSweet or 
		Equal? 
		
		
A: Currently, it’s about 78% of all complaints. At one time, the figure was 
	85%! Yet, this isn’t reported in the newspapers or announced through other 
	media. It’s a well-hidden secret. 
 
		
Q: Imagine if it were a vitamin or herbal product, we’d have the federal 
	pill police swarming like angry bees. Would you please list for us some of 
	the symptoms caused by aspartame?  
A: Aspartame not only causes individual symptoms, it can mimic entire 
	syndromes! For example, the CFIDS (chronic fatigue and immune deficiency 
	syndrome) newsletter calls it the "sweet poison, NutraSweet," because it can 
	mimic the symptoms of CFIDS. It can also cause grand mal seizures. 
		
		 
		According 
	to H.J. Roberts, M.D., it can cause decreased vision, pain in the eyes, 
	decreased tears, ringing in the ears, hearing impairment, headache, 
	dizziness and unsteadiness, confusion, memory loss, drowsiness, sleepiness, 
	slurring of speech, numbness and tingling, tremors, depression, 
	irritability, aggression, anxiety, insomnia, phobias, heart palpitations, 
	shortness of breath, high blood pressure, nausea, diarrhea, abdominal pain, 
	itching, hives, menstrual changes, weight gain, hair thinning and hair loss, 
	urinary burning and frequency, excessive thirst, fluid retention, bloating, 
	increased infection, and even death. 
 
		
Q: Death? 
A: Five deaths reported prior to 1987. We don’t know the number since then.
		
 
		
Q: What’s in this stuff? 
A: Among other things, it’s about 10% 
		methanol (wood alcohol,) famous for 
	causing blindness in alcoholics. In the body, methanol metabolizes into 
		formaldehyde, a neurotoxin; formic acid, a venom in ant stings; and
		diketopiperazine, which causes brain tumors in animals. It’s so bad that in 
	July of 1983, the National Soft Drink Association presented official 
	objections to putting aspartame in beverages. I’ll read you one of their 
	objections: 
		
			
			"It is well established under Section 402(a)(3) that a food 
	which contains a decomposed substance...is subject to seizure by 
			FDA." 
		
		
		It’s 
	thoroughly established that after a number of weeks and at temperatures over 
	85 degrees F, there’s no aspartame left in a soft drink, only breakdown 
	products. So, why isn’t FDA seizing it under Section 402 (a)(3)? 
 
		
		Q: Your book, Deadly Deception reports that initially FDA had started 
	investigations of the G.D. Searle Company, makers of aspartame. 
A: Yes. In 1977 an 
		FDA task force submitted a 15,000 page document covering 
	their investigation. Here are two quotes: 
		
			
			"We have uncovered serious 
	deficiencies in Searle’s integrity..." 
			
 
			"The cumulative findings of problems 
	within and across the studies we investigated reveal a pattern of conduct 
	which compromises the scientific integrity of the studies." 
		
		
		 
		Q: These are from 
		FDA’s own task force report on Searle’s aspartame research?
		
A: Exactly. Your readers may not know that aspartame
		was originally approved 
	in 1974, but when the brain-tumor issue arose, the approval was withdrawn.
		
 
		
Q: Tell us about the "brain-tumor issue." 
		A: Many of the test animals fed aspartame developed large tumors. These were 
	actually cut out, and the animals returned to the study. In some cases, the 
	tumors weren’t even examined for malignancy, and the tumors weren’t reported 
	to FDA. In several cases, animals were reported as dead and later reported 
	as alive again. 
 
		
Q: No wonder FDA’s task force "uncovered 
		serious deficiencies in Searle’s 
	integrity!" 
A: The results of the task force investigation of aspartame and other 
		Searle 
	drugs were presented to the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Labor and Public 
	Welfare. Senator Edward Kennedy said that, 
		
			
			"the extensive nature of the 
	almost unbelievable range of abuses discovered by the FDA on several major 
			Searle products is profoundly disturbing." 
		
		
		 
		Q: So, how did aspartame ever get approved and progress so far into our food 
	supply? 
A: Well, for one thing, a former member of Congress and Chief of Staff in 
	the Ford Administration, Donald Rumsfeld, was hired as President of Searle 
	in 1977. Rumsfeld was paid $2 million in salary and $1.5 million in bonuses 
	between 1979 and 1984. 
 
		
Q: Oh-oh. 
A: Also, in 1977, Senior Assistant U.S. Attorney, William Conlon was 
	assigned to the Searle case. He took no action, despite repeated prodding by 
		Richard Merrill, Chief Counsel to the FDA. One year later, 
		Conlon took a 
	position with Sidley and Austin, the law firm representing Searle. 
 
		
		Q: A pattern seems to be emerging. 
		
A: Rumsfeld, now Searle president, hired: 
		John Robson as Executive Vice-President 
	- he had been a spokesman of the Civil Aeronautics Board; William Greener as 
	Chief Spokesman for Searle - he had been a spokesman in the Ford White House; 
	and, Robert Shapiro as General Counsel, who later became head of Searle’s 
	NutraSweet Division - he had been a Special Assistant in the Department of 
	Transportation. 
But, here’s the pay-off! 
 
		
Q: No pun intended? 
		
A: The facts are interesting, aren’t they? In 1983, the Commissioner of the FDA, Dr. Arthur Hull Hayes, Jr. approved NutraSweet for 
		soft drinks two 
	months before leaving office. Two-to-three months later, he accepted a 
	position as Senior Medical Advisor to Searle’s public relations firm, Burson 
	Marsteller. He was paid $1,000 per day as consultant. 
 
		
Q: Really, $1,000 a day? This is a matter of public record? 
		
A: A matter of public record. And, Michael Taylor was also involved in the 
	approval of aspartame. 
 
		
Q: Michael Taylor, the 
		Bovine Growth Hormone (rBGH) man, who worked for 
		FDA, lawyered for Monsanto to get rBGH approved, then went to work for 
		FDA 
	writing the rBGH regulations? 
A: The very same. Didn’t you know that 
		G. D. Searle is a wholly-owned 
	subsidiary of Monsanto, with Robert Shapiro as current CEO? 
 
		
		Q: What a surprise. And a not unfamiliar pattern. But, tell us about 
		aviation and aspartame. 
A: The official 
		Air Force safety magazine, FLYING SAFETY, and the Navy’s 
	flight magazine, NAVY PHYSIOLOGY, have both published warnings about using 
		aspartame and flying. 
 
		
Q: Will you give us an example? 
		A: A pilot called ACSN’s Pilot Hotline two nights ago and told me about his 
	experience. Flying for Peninsula Airlines in Alaska, he had a seizure in 
	flight at 10,000 feet and was grounded. He had been drinking eight to ten 
	cups of coffee a day sweetened with Equal, another aspartame compound. Since 
	he quit aspartame, he’s been seizure-free, but he hasn’t been allowed to fly.
		
 
		
Q: We need to know more about this. 
A: In my book, 
		Deadly Deception, there’s a reprint of a scientific paper 
	showing that aspartame aggravates abnormal brain waves in children with 
	epilepsy (Neurology 1992;42:1000-1003.) 
 
		
Q: Maybe airline passengers should question pilots about aspartame use 
	before boarding! What about those U.S. Senate hearings during which pilots 
	testified about the adverse effects of aspartame on their flying abilities?
		
A: There have actually been three hearings. 
 
		
Q: Here we go again! 
		
A: Speaking of contributions... watch out diabetics! The
		NutraSweet company 
	has given money, money, money to the American Diabetic Association. And, 
	remember when you hear a registered dietitian say aspartame is safe for 
	pregnant women, children, and everyone else, the Registered Dietitian’s 
	professional association has been given $75,000 to expound on the virtues of 
	aspartame. The American Dietetic Association has even stated that the 
		NutraSweet company writes their "Fact Sheets." 
 
		
		Q: So, there’s money everywhere... to members of Congress, former 
		regulatory 
	bureaucrats, professional associations... 
A: Absolutely. 
		Aspartame approval and persistence on the market has 
	everything to do with money and politics, and almost nothing to do with 
	science and reason. Even the FDA’s own reviewers were against aspartame 
	until those political/financial events I’ve mentioned. 
 
		
Q: Is there any hope to reverse all this? 
		
A: Each of us will have to do it ourselves, one at a time and by spreading 
	the word. Fortunately, it appears that the public pays more attention to 
	this issue when they’re given access to the information I’ve been outlining. 
	The last TV show I appeared on about this issue, received 100,000 calls over 
	the next three days. 
 
		
Q: Thank you so much for devoting your time and energy to spreading the word 
	about the hazards of aspartame. 
A: Your readers can call the 
		ASPARTAME CONSUMER SAFETY NETWORK at 
	(214)352-4268 for more information as well as many suggestions for helping 
	to make known the truth about aspartame.