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Jerry Falwell Attacks Life Extension Foundation


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#1 Bruce Klein

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Posted 11 September 2003 - 04:43 PM


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Jerry Falwell Attacks Life Extension Foundation

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On July 8, 2003, an editorial by the Reverend Jerry Falwell was published in The Washington Times newspaper. The purpose of this editorial was to discourage lawmakers from passing a bill that would enable Americans to purchase lower-cost medications from countries that have safety standards comparable to those of the United States.

Since there is no logical basis for denying Americans identical FDA-approved drugs sold in other countries, the pharmaceutical industry (and Jerry Falwell) have launched a defamatory campaign against consumer advocates who support this drug importation bill.

In his editorial, Jerry Falwell makes allegations against The Life Extension Foundation that are blatantly false and misleading. Reverend Falwell's comments reveal just how desperate the drug cartel is to protect its monopoly on sales of over-priced pharmaceuticals to Americans.

Jerry Falwell is the TV evangelist who set up an organization called "The Moral Majority." One purpose of this organization was to induce Congress to enact laws that would impose the "moral" standards of Jerry Falwell on the entire U.S. population. This group exerted a lot of pressure on Congress before it was disbanded in 1989.

One of Jerry Falwell's most famous attacks was on a children's TV show called "Teletubbies." In an article published in his own National Liberty Journal, Falwell announced that one of the Teletubby puppets was exhibiting homosexual behavior and that this was promoting a "gay role model." At the time, I had young children who watched Teletubbies, and my wife had to go to great length to show me which of the puppets was exhibiting this alleged homosexual behavior.

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#2 Lazarus Long

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Posted 11 September 2003 - 04:47 PM

Well now I am confident that I have picked the right side and the true alternatives as my allies. [lol]

Anyside Falwell is on I will definitely go to the LEF of ;))

#3 till

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Posted 11 September 2003 - 11:17 PM

You really gotta love these morons. With Falwell (who's getting fatter, older and uglier by the day) and Kass on the other side, how can we lose? I think we should needle them into some more vitriol; get a bit more mileage out of them... ;)

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#4 Bruce Klein

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Posted 12 September 2003 - 01:20 AM

Now that's the ticket.. [lol]

#5 Bruce Klein

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Posted 25 September 2003 - 05:19 PM

http://www.reason.co.../rb092403.shtml

Snake Oil or Health Tonic?
What the FDA doesn't want you to know about dietary supplements
Ronald Bailey

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Snake oil is a worthless preparation fraudulently sold as a cure for many ills. Nineteenth century medicine shows notoriously peddled all manner of tonics and physicks to cure everything from bunions to cancer. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) was established ostensibly to protect the public against such hucksters. But nowadays the FDA is also treating companies and people who want to communicate scientific findings about nutritional supplements to the public as though they, too, are snake oil hawkers.

For example, I recently got a form letter from William Faloon, who heads up the Florida-based Life Extension Foundation (LEF), from which I receive discount vitamins and supplements, warning me to stock up on a three-month supply because the FDA had "initiated an intrusive multi-day inspection" of the group's facilities. (Full disclosure: I've been a member of the LEF for a couple of years.) Faloon is worried because the FDA has actually arrested him and LEF founder Saul Kent in the past for allegedly violating FDA regulations. This is not to say that there are not real snake oil sellers out there, but the LEF hardly seems a likely candidate.

What's at issue? "The fundamental question is whether or not consumers can receive information based on peer-reviewed scientific studies and authoritative government statements about how foods and supplements affect their health," says Jonathan Emord, one of LEF's attorneys. In 1997, Congress enacted the Food and Drug Administration Modernization Act, which explicitly allows supplement makers and distributors to make health claims for their products if a government agency "has published an authoritative statement, which is currently in effect, about the relationship between a nutrient and a disease or health-related condition to which the claim refers." That is, vitamin and supplement makers can communicate to their consumers the findings of conclusive government research. Only, the FDA now says that they cannot.

Emord notes that the FDA has set up guidelines that clearly undermine the intent of the law. The rules allow the FDA alone to decide whether or not a government agency's statement is sufficiently "authoritative." Furthermore, according to Emord, the FDA has now worked out tacit agreements with most federal scientific agencies to issue disclaimers with their research findings saying that they're not "authoritative." This bit of underhandedness is "a way to restrict scientific information to government elites and disallow access to it by the public," says Emord.

Let's look at a few telling cases. Supplement makers Durk Pearson and Sandy Shaw (again full disclosure: Pearson and Shaw have been supporters of the Reason Foundation) wanted to add the following claims to their supplements based on peer-reviewed scientific studies:

• "Consumption of antioxidant vitamins may reduce the risk of certain kinds of cancers."

• "Consumption of fiber may reduce the risk of colorectal cancer."

• "Consumption of omega-3 fatty acids may reduce the risk of coronary heart disease."

• ".8 mg of folic acid in a dietary supplement is more effective in reducing the risk of neural tube defects than a lower amount in foods in common form."

The FDA opposed all of them. Yet the American Association for Cancer Research cited many peer-reviewed articles in 1999 supporting the claim that antioxidant vitamins helped prevent cancer. As it turns out, there is now some doubt that high fiber diets protect against colon cancer, yet that had been the advice of nutritionists and oncologists for nearly three decades. The case for the cardio-protective effects of omega-3 fatty acids has only been strengthened over the years. And most bafflingly, whereas the FDA wouldn't allow supplement makers to point out the benefits of folic acid, in 1996 the agency required that bread and pasta makers include the nutrient in their products.

In 1999, the Federal District Court for the District of Columbia ruled against the FDA in Pearson v. Shalala, ordering the FDA to set up a procedure whereby such claims could be properly evaluated. Nevertheless, since then the FDA has resisted nearly every proposed benefit claim for a nutritional supplement that has been brought before it.

For example, the FDA nixed the claim that B vitamins can lower homocysteine levels. (High homocysteine levels are increasingly associated with heart disease.) The FDA also disallowed the claim that saw palmetto extract may relieve the symptoms of enlarged prostates. Fortunately, the agency has lost nearly every one of these cases in court.

Companies should, of course, be held legally accountable for disseminating false and/or misleading information. Furthermore, if a supplement has a defined level of toxicity, e.g., vitamin A, then warning labels are appropriate. But surely the Federal District Court was right when it noted in Pearson v. Shalala that: "Truthful advertising related to lawful activities is entitled to the protections of the First Amendment." It's high time that the FDA recognized that that includes scientific information about health supplements and vitamins.



Ronald Bailey is Reason's science correspondent and a fellow at the International Policy Network.

#6 amazingpawnhawk

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Posted 15 June 2004 - 04:58 AM

Check out the Life Extension Foundation's website at www.lef.org

#7 icyT

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Posted 01 July 2006 - 03:07 PM

Actually, I'm glad the FDA is acting conservative on this. Vitamins are great, sure, but their deilvery system is actually pretty complicated, seeing as how the various compounds interact through digestion and bloodstream delivery. I think it's a better idea to get them in food than from pills, at least for the moment, but yeah, monitoring their levels in the foods is very important.

#8 dannymarshall

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Posted 18 July 2006 - 11:13 PM

Posted Image

Jerry Falwell Attacks Life Extension Foundation

Posted Image

On July 8, 2003, an editorial by the Reverend Jerry Falwell was published in The Washington Times newspaper. The purpose of this editorial was to discourage lawmakers from passing a bill that would enable Americans to purchase lower-cost medications from countries that have safety standards comparable to those of the United States.

Since there is no logical basis for denying Americans identical FDA-approved drugs sold in other countries, the pharmaceutical industry (and Jerry Falwell) have launched a defamatory campaign against consumer advocates who support this drug importation bill.

In his editorial, Jerry Falwell makes allegations against The Life Extension Foundation that are blatantly false and misleading. Reverend Falwell's comments reveal just how desperate the drug cartel is to protect its monopoly on sales of over-priced pharmaceuticals to Americans.

Jerry Falwell is the TV evangelist who set up an organization called "The Moral Majority." One purpose of this organization was to induce Congress to enact laws that would impose the "moral" standards of Jerry Falwell on the entire U.S. population. This group exerted a lot of pressure on Congress before it was disbanded in 1989.

One of Jerry Falwell's most famous attacks was on a children's TV show called "Teletubbies." In an article published in his own National Liberty Journal, Falwell announced that one of the Teletubby puppets was exhibiting homosexual behavior and that this was promoting a "gay role model." At the time, I had young children who watched Teletubbies, and my wife had to go to great length to show me which of the puppets was exhibiting this alleged homosexual behavior.

Complete Article



this guy needs to shut up and have another donut so his heart will fail.

#9 doug123

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Posted 20 July 2006 - 04:58 AM

As far as I know, LEF has been amongst a few groups that have played an active role in keeping supplements in the United States unregulated (and thus affordable). LEF also provides high quality, pure supplements -- and also blood testing for their members.

As the term life extension is not in the FDA's vocabulary (LONG term studies in humans are required), supplements might play an instrumental role in extending human lifespan; so it's critical to keep them available. As far as some of LEF's claims about supplement efficacy, they might be a little too liberal for the FDA...and that might get them into trouble...

#10 kottke

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Posted 21 September 2006 - 03:08 AM

Man Falwell has really lost it. Theres no sin in health. Jesus wanted us to be pure of toxins and one with the earth.I mean Jesus was a freakin hippie for crying out loud. WWJD? Not this.

Jerry has ruined our town (Lynchburg) enough with his regulations and anti everything slogans that nobody wants to move here. Theres no nightlife here, he banned a hooters, no gay bars aloud, and i remember when he banned resident evil from coming to our blockbusters (man i wanted to play that game so bad!). The only thing hes got going for him is the absolutely gorgeous girls that join his school. They also know about missionary style :). Oh and just so everyone knows theres so many gay people there its not funny. Also his sermons include promoting a few new products in the begining and end, hate speaches, jibberish,and .....food speaches (not really but you know he wants to talk about food)

He also obviously doesnt think gluttony is a sin. Hasnt he ever seen Seven?




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