by Joe Martino
January 19, 2013
from
Collective-Evolution Website
Did you know that Aspartame was banned
by the FDA twice? How is this product legal now?
The bittersweet argument over whether Aspartame is safe or not has
been going on for a long time. On one side we have medical evidence
that suggests we should avoid using it and on the other side we lean
on the FDA's approval that suggests it is safe.
Since generally that seems to be the
factor that many continue to hold trust based upon, I thought we
could look into the Aspartame story to find out how it came to be
accepted as safe by the FDA.
You would think that something so widely
used and so well accepted would have quite the pristine story
leading to its acceptance. I imagine one will discover otherwise
after reading this post.
It all starts in the mid 1960′s with a company called
G.D. Searle.
One of their chemists accidentally
creates aspartame while trying to create a cure for stomach ulcers.
Searle decides to put aspartame through a testing process which
eventually leads to its approval by the FDA. Not long after, serious
health affects begin to arise and G.D. Searle comes under fire for
their testing practices.
It is revealed that the testing process
of Aspartame was among the worst the investigators had ever seen and
that in fact the product was unsafe for use.
Aspartame triggers the first criminal
investigation of a manufacturer put into place by the FDA in 1977.
By 1980 the FDA bans aspartame from use after having 3 independent
scientists study the sweetener.
It was determined that one main
health effects was that it had a high chance of inducing brain
tumors.
At this point it was clear that
aspartame was not fit to be used in foods and banned is where it
stayed, but not for long.
Early in 1981 Searle Chairman Donald Rumsfeld (who is a
former Secretary of Defense... surprise surprise) vowed to "call in
his markers," to get it approved. January 21, 1981, the day after
Ronald Reagan's inauguration, Searle took the steps to re-apply
aspartame's approval for use by
the FDA.
Ronald Reagans' new FDA commissioner
Arthur Hayes Hull,
Jr., appointed a
5-person Scientific Commission to review the board of inquiry's
decision. It did not take long for the panel to decide 3-2 in favor
of maintaining the ban of aspartame.
Hull then decided to appoint a
6th member to the board, which created a tie in the
voting, 3-3.
Hull then decided to personally break
the tie and approve aspartame for use. Hull later left the FDA under
allegations of impropriety, served briefly as Provost at New York
Medical College, and then took a position with Burston-Marsteller.
Burstone-Marstella is the chief public relations firm for both
Monsanto and GD Searle.
Since that time he has never spoken
publicly about aspartame.
It is clear to this point that if anything the safety of aspartame
is incredibly shaky. It has already been through a process of being
banned and without the illegitimate un-banning of the product, it
would not be being used today. Makes you wonder how much corruption
and money was involved with names like Rumsfeld, Reagan and Hull
involved so heavily.
In 1985,
Monsanto decides to purchase the
aspartame patent from G.D. Searle. Remember that Arthur Hull now had
the connection to Monsanto.
Monsanto did not seem too concerned with
the past challenges and ugly image aspartame had based on its past.
I personally find this comical as Monsanto's products are banned in
many countries and of all companies to buy the product they seem to
fit best as they are champions of producing incredibly unsafe and
untested products and making sure they stay in the market place.
Since then, aspartame has been under a lot of attack by scientists,
doctors, chemists and consumers about it's safety and neurotoxic
properties.
Piles of comprehensive studies have been
completed that show aspartame is a cause for over 90 serious health
problems such as,
-
cancer
-
leukemia
-
headaches
-
seizures
-
fibromyalgia
-
epilepsy,
...just to name a few.
Full Aspartame Timeline
-
December 1965 - While working on
an ulcer drug, James Schlatter, a chemist at G.D. Searle,
accidentally discovers aspartame, a substance that is 180
times sweeter than sugar yet has no calories.
-
Spring 1967 - Searle begins the
safety tests on aspartame that are necessary for applying
for FDA approval of food additives.
-
Fall 1967 - Dr. Harold Waisman,
a biochemist at the University of Wisconsin, conducts
aspartame safety tests on infant monkeys on behalf of the
Searle Company. Of the seven monkeys that were being fed
aspartame mixed with milk, one dies and five others have
grand mal seizures.
-
November 1970 - Cyclamate, the
reigning low-calorie artificial sweetener - is pulled off
the market after some scientists associate it with cancer.
Questions are also raised about safety of saccharin, the
only other artificial sweetener on the market, leaving the
field wide open for aspartame.
-
December 18, 1970 - Searle
Company executives lay out a "Food and Drug Sweetener
Strategy' that they feel will put the FDA into a positive
frame of mind about aspartame. An internal policy memo
describes psychological tactics the company should use to
bring the FDA into a subconscious spirit of participation"
with them on aspartame and get FDA regulators into the "habit of saying,
"Yes"."
-
Spring 1971 - Neuroscientist Dr.
John Olney (whose pioneering work with monosodium glutamate
was responsible for having it removed from baby foods)
informs Searle that his studies show that aspartic acid (one
of the ingredients of aspartame) caused holes in the brains
of infant mice. One of Searle's own researchers confirmed
Dr. Olney's findings in a similar study.
-
February 1973 - After spending
tens of millions of dollars conducting safety tests, the G.D.
Searle Company applies for FDA approval and submits over 100
studies they claim support aspartame's safety.
-
March 5, 1973 - One of the first
FDA scientists to review the aspartame safety data states
that "the information provided (by Searle) is inadequate to
permit an evaluation of the potential toxicity of
aspartame". She says in her report that in order to be
certain that aspartame is safe, further clinical tests are
needed.
-
May 1974 - Attorney, Jim Turner
(consumer advocate who was instrumental in getting cyclamate
taken off the market) meets with Searle representatives to
discuss Dr. Olney's 1971 study which showed that aspartic
acid caused holes in the brains of infant mice.
-
July 26, 1974 - The FDA grants
aspartame its first approval for restricted use in dry
foods.
-
August 1974 - Jim Turner and Dr.
John Olney file the first objections against aspartame's
approval.
-
March 24, 1976 - Turner and
Olney's petition triggers an FDA investigation of the
laboratory practices of aspartame's manufacturer, G.D.
Searle. The investigation finds Searle's testing procedures
shoddy, full of inaccuracies and "manipulated" test data.
The investigators report they "had never seen anything as
bad as Searle's testing."
-
January 10, 1977 - The FDA
formally requests the U.S. Attorney's office to begin grand
jury proceedings to investigate whether indictments should
be filed against Searle for knowingly misrepresenting
findings and "concealing material facts and making false
statements" in aspartame safety tests. This is the first
time in the FDA's history that they request a criminal
investigation of a manufacturer.
-
January 26, 1977 - While the
grand jury probe is underway, Sidley & Austin, the law firm
representing Searle, begins job negotiations with the U.S.
Attorney in charge of the investigation, Samuel Skinner.
-
March 8, 1977 - G. D. Searle
hires prominent Washington insider Donald Rumsfeld as the
new CEO to try to turn the beleaguered company around. A
former Member of Congress and Secretary of Defense in the
Ford Administration, Rumsfeld brings in several of his
Washington cronies as top management.
-
July 1, 1977 - Samuel Skinner
leaves the U.S. Attorney's office and takes a job with
Searle's law firm. (see Jan. 26th)
-
August 1, 1977 -
The Bressler Report, compiled by FDA investigators and
headed by Jerome Bressler, is released. The report finds
that 98 of the 196 animals died during one of Searle's
studies and weren't autopsied until later dates, in some
cases over one year after death. Many other errors and
inconsistencies are noted. For example, a rat was reported
alive, then dead, then alive, then dead again; a mass, a
uterine polyp, and ovarian neoplasms were found in animals
but not reported or diagnosed in Searle's reports.
-
December 8, 1977 - U.S. Attorney
Skinner's withdrawal and resignation stalls the Searle grand
jury investigation for so long that the statue of
limitations on the aspartame charges runs out. The grand
jury investigation is dropped.
-
June 1, 1979 - The FDA
established a Public Board of Inquiry (PBOI) to rule on
safety issues surrounding NutraSweet.
-
September 30, 1980 - The Public
Board of Inquiry concludes NutraSweet should not be approved
pending further investigations of brain tumors in animals.
The board states it "has not been presented with proof of
reasonable certainty that aspartame is safe for use as a
food additive."
-
January 1981 - Donald Rumsfeld,
CEO of Searle, states in a sales meeting that he is going to
make a big push to get aspartame approved within the year.
Rumsfeld says he will use his political pull in Washington,
rather than scientific means, to make sure it gets approved.
-
January 21, 1981 - Ronald Reagan
is sworn in as President of the United States. Reagan's
transition team, which includes Donald Rumsfeld, CEO of G.
D. Searle, hand picks Dr. Arthur Hull Hayes Jr. to be the
new FDA Commissioner.
-
March, 1981 - An FDA
commissioner's panel is established to review issues raised
by the Public Board of Inquiry.
-
May 19, 1981 - Three of six
in-house FDA scientists who were responsible for reviewing
the brain tumor issues, Dr. Robert Condon, Dr. Satya Dubey,
and Dr. Douglas Park, advise against approval of NutraSweet,
stating on the record that the Searle tests are unreliable
and not adequate to determine the safety of aspartame.
-
July 15, 1981 - In one of his
first official acts, Dr. Arthur Hayes Jr., the new FDA
commissioner, overrules the Public Board of Inquiry, ignores
the recommendations of his own internal FDA team and
approves NutraSweet for dry products. Hayes says that
aspartame has been shown to be safe for its' proposed uses
and says few compounds have withstood such detailed testing
and repeated close scrutiny.
-
October 15, 1982 - The FDA
announces that Searle has filed a petition that aspartame be
approved as a sweetener in carbonated beverages and other
liquids.
-
July 1, 1983 - The National Soft
Drink Association (NSDA) urges the FDA to delay approval of
aspartame for carbonated beverages pending further testing
because aspartame is very unstable in liquid form. When
liquid aspartame is stored in temperatures above 85 degrees
Fahrenheit, it breaks down into DKP and formaldehyde, both
of which are known toxins.
-
July 8, 1983 - The National Soft
Drink Association drafts an objection to the final ruling
which permits the use of aspartame in carbonated beverages
and syrup bases and requests a hearing on the objections.
The association says that Searle has not provided
responsible certainty that aspartame and its' degradation
products are safe for use in soft drinks.
-
August 8, 1983 - Consumer
Attorney, Jim Turner of the Community Nutrition Institute
and Dr. Woodrow Monte, Arizona State University's Director
of Food Science and Nutritional Laboratories, file suit with
the FDA objecting to aspartame approval based on unresolved
safety issues.
-
September, 1983 - FDA
Commissioner Hayes resigns under a cloud of controversy
about his taking unauthorized rides aboard a General Foods
jet. (General foods is a major customer of NutraSweet)
Burson-Marsteller, Searle's public relation firm (which also
represented several of NutraSweet's major users),
immediately hires Hayes as senior scientific consultant.
-
Fall 1983 - The first carbonated
beverages containing aspartame are sold for public
consumption.
-
November 1984 - Center for
Disease Control (CDC) "Evaluation
of consumer complaints related to aspartame use."
(summary by B. Mullarkey)
-
November 3, 1987 - U.S. hearing,
"NutraSweet:
Health and Safety Concerns," Committee on Labor
and Human Resources, Senator Howard Metzenbaum, chairman.
Sources
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