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VEGA Rants Up
a Campaign for Browned-off Consumers
Safety Without Cruelty and a Halt to Stupid Testing for Tarted-up
Foods and Beverages are Achievable Aims
Unite in Purchaser Power for Human and
Animal Welfare and Health. Read Labels. Choose Critically.
Waving Cheque and Card with Credit Within the Shop and Store
Unfurls the Banner of Overdue Reform.
If a good wine needs no bush, a good whisky or beer surely
needs noalbeit safety-tested- colorants
to tart it up. Artificial additives are used widely in various
hues to alter the appearance, flavor and texture of many foods
and beverages, as well as pet-foods (in some cases for the
satisfaction of owners rather than for the preferences of
the animals), and in the formulations of pharmaceuticals.
Indirect effects may be exerted by substances added to feeds
so that the flesh of fish or the yolks of eggs accord with
commercial perceptions of market demand. Some of these additives
find use with the FD and C numbers in toiletries and household
goods and perhaps in a purer form with E-numbers
in the food industry.
Food production is part of the industries in which health
and safety at work regulations apply and the modern farms
equipment includes stores of chemical pesticides, growth boosters,
and drugs in a veritable laboratory store of potential mischief
to consumers of crops and feeds and of harm to the ecology
and environment. Scares over foodstuffs, beverages,
and water supplies have intensified calls for tests to establish
the safety of these substances and practices and their corollaries.
Live animals are the victims in these experiments for
non-medical purposes.
It was mainly veggie campaigners who instigated actions to
oust the use of leather, furs, and wool for clothing and footwear
and of dubious ingredients and tests used for commercial toiletries
and household goods. The pioneering efforts of Beauty Without
Cruelty led to increasing momentum as Body Shop reinforced
the campaign ultimately to almost general sales as supermarkets
and major factors, including the press and the fashion industry
itself, espoused these.phpects of the cruelty-free cause.
In those early days veggies could enjoy offerings of toiletries
fit to eat and the campaigners succeeded in budging an obstinately
secretive industry and stodgy governments into disclosures
on labels of the ingredients in the formulations. It is difficult
to believe now that bans on testing with animals of ingredients
intended for cosmetic purposes or of final formulations are
being implemented or introduced in the UK and in European
countries; however, these restrictions dont apply to
imported products. The momentum that drove those campaigns
must now roll on to eliminate similar cosmetic tricks in the
bigger and more important industry selling us our food and
drink.
The band of veggie campaigners plotting in the offices of
the Vegetarian Society perceived objections to the array of
cosmetic food additives with E numbers that were earning disquiet
over putative ill-effects on consumers health and behavior.
Tests on animals were many and troublesome in various ways.
No scientific or medical purposes could be adduced for them:
the additives could be omitted, they served only a commercial
end to market meretriciously cheap food and beverages, and
they entailed avoidable and offensive tests on animals. Here
was another challenge to the forces of the cruelty-free world.
We didnt duck it.
Tricks with Caramel
Caramels focussed our attention. Caramelization has for years
been a mainstay of the cooks chemical wizardry. Not
for nothing are cooking and confectionery generic words in
English for the preparation of foods and meals even when they
arrive on the table from the kitchen serving raw foods. Chemical
changes well beyond the analysis of white-coated scientists
and technicians have gone unremarked in many cuisines, and
have probably been acknowledged as a means of overcoming threats
of bacterial and viral contaminations arising from unhygienic
practices while retaining or developing acceptable tastes
and textures. Grandparents of today may recall delights they
were expected as children to esteem, among them milk
pure and white and warm from the cow. Tuberculosis and
memories of school milk with clots and rapid development of
a sour, off-white nose changed all that: pasteurization,
sterilization, UHT, evaporation, and condensing were accepted
with, ultimately, little demur (and even by a compulsory ban
in Scotland and health warnings on commercial sales of milk
in England and Wales); the chemical significances of the processing
(which could be more drastic than irradiation) drew complaints
only on cardboardy taints, and the dairy-industry
managed to alter concepts of the milk of human blindness by
doorstep deliveries almost at sunrise and latterly cooler
still from the chiller or fridge in the supermarket or shop.
However, somewhere along the line distancing bottle and carton
from the cows warm udder heat-processing and the corresponding
chemical reactions had been introducedand as recently
remarked by the Food Standards Agency, inadequatelyto
overcome the transmission of dangerous microorganisms as a
result of unhygienic and unsavoury practices on the farm and
dairy.
Those grandparents knew caramel as a confection made in the
kitchen in a saucepan (a brown color by heating sugar
above its melting point; permitted additive to foods. Also
known as Black Jack, according to a Dictionary of Nutrition
and Food Technology). Sugar was taken to mean sucrose from
cane or beet, in some form. In general brown was a coloring
that enhanced a food, bestowing a sense of warmth and good
cooking, although the context had to be judged carefully to
avoid associations with waste products. A sludgy brown windsor
soup would not feature among the prime offerings of todays
supermarkets or restaurants, and no health-professional nowadays
would treat patients, as subjects on the panel suffered before
the NHS, with dispensed Saccharum Ustum burnt sugar
for complaints the doctor could only describe as God-knows.
For years and years caramel, varied in preparation and composition
as it was, passed like many of the processes of cooking and
food technology as safe and, at least,
harmless.
Whatever variations might be perceived in the contents of
hot granny-saucepans, food technology demanded greater versatility
from such starting materials, extending the range of hues
and developing other properties, such as the effects on textures
of manufactured foods and beverages. Growers of sugar-producing
crops and, more generally, of suitable pentoses and dextroses
obtainable from other starchy waste-products also took note
of possibilities from further browning effects visible in
the chemistry conducted in the oven or under the grill rather
than over the bunsen burner.
Color Without Cruelty
Reactions between sugars and nitrogenous substances such
as proteins yield so-called Maillard compounds, which are
usually brown and confer colorings associated with attractive
foods from toffee to sauces and from ales, stouts, beers,
porters, and lagers to bakery, meat and vegetable products.
Ammonia and urea are the cheapest sources of nitrogenous compounds,
and their addition to the heated sugars augmented the utility
of simple caramels, but took the food-technology
into the realms of heterocyclic chemistry and even more deeply,
when additions of ammonium sulfite complicated matters of
analysis and possibly adverse effects, such as toxicity, even
more. The chemist could perceive likenesses with some heterocyclic
compounds associated with the carcinogenicity of smouldering
tobacco and of overcooked and barbecued meat (actually, some
tobacco is colored with artificial caramels).
The simple, complacent allocation of food-additive number
E150 to caramel had become inadequate and 4 or 5 sub-categories
were defined. Analysts and toxicologists set to work and food
technologists experimented with variations to avoid problems
with neurotoxins in the chemicalized and ammoniated
caramels that stayed approval by the authorities of the use
of new forms, notwithstanding the food industrys impatience
to incorporate them in a wide range of comestibles and pet
foods. These tests involved a number of procedures on rats
and mice. One set of tests was considered invalidated because
adverse effects on the rats were attributed to deficiency
of vitamin B6 in their diets.
Palate and Palette
Manufacturers and retailers exploit the caramels, like other
synthetic colorings, to impart standard attractive hues to
products with naturally brown (or other) colors
and tints such as soft drinks, soups, sauces, beers, pies,
yeast extracts, and spirits. Retailers demand the additives
for cosmetic reasons to allay any consumers misgivings
of even minor batch-to-batch variations, especially if these
can be noticed by easy comparisons in stock displayed on the
shelf or obvious in collections in the kitchen cupboard. For
some materials variations may be disguised by the material
of the container or, if it is glass, by the coloring of the
bottle, as for beers. Spirits sold in clear bottles are tinted
with caramels to the distillers or vendors standard
on the color chart; this practice is applied even for noble
whiskeys.
All this panders to a dedication to uniformity and obliteration
of what a discerning customer would accommodate in choices
of naturally-derived products. For beers, wines, and spirits
exemptions in the labelling regulations in the UK permit sales
with no descriptions of the ingredients and processing aids
used in manufacture, and merchants persist in taking advantage
of a loophole that is due for early closure (but belated)
to satisfy EU regulations. This practice of disguise is not
new in other applications: white sugar was sold in cartons
and bags colored blue to conceal traces of brownness remaining
from incomplete refining, and in the days before detergents
were formulated with optical whiteners clothes were rinsed
with water containing blue bags to enhance whiteness and overcome
dinginess when the soap had failed to restore pristine brightness.
Scrutiny, Labels, Choice
Discerning shoppers can generally make choices, scrutinizing
labels; many would avoid luridly-colored soft-drinks anyway.
There are yeast-extracts to be had without added caramels,
as well as some veggie alternative meat-products.
In some supermarkets the refreshing own-brand summer ginger
beer comes with added caramel, but maybe not market leaders
that dont stoop to such tricks. Some meat-products are
extended with textured vegetable protein and colored with
caramels to add to the many other plow-to-plate objections
that might be levelled at these commodities.
Some years ago Marks and Spencer put on sale tinned peas
without artificial colorings (which would have undergone tests
of toxicity, just as the caramels have). The hue of tinned
peas and of many served in restaurants was and still
is achieved in the main by additions of two coal-tar
dye-stuffs, one blue, the other yellow, to override the dingy
greens from unadulterated food preparation. The experiment
was a commercial failure: probably it was before its time,
the likely customers were not adequately informed and inspired,
animal welfarists intent on campaigns over what can only be
rated as frivolous testing of cosmetic effects in toiletries
missed an opportunity and, anyway, many of the shoppers with
scruples bought fresh peas or frozen. However, this example
has not been forgotten: Sainsbury have introduced mushy peas
with no cosmetic tarting up, in defiance of the lurid competition
in other supermarkets, branded versions, and in chippies.
VEGA recently sent back a vividly dyed chana masala in a Brummy
balti, because the cook had obviously added liberally to natures
palette with permitted (i.e. tested on animals)
E numbers from the chemistry laboratory. This is a not uncommon
coloring exuberance.
Chemical Caramels Color the Cola
Manufacturers and retailers of cola drinks were the main
driving force behind the preparation and testing of chemicalized
caramels. In the British Isles a factory making the colorings
fed straight into the cola plant. Hardly any commercial brand
of cola drinks now on sale in Britain doesnt contain
chemicalized caramelsand in gram quantities in average
consumption by children: they would be consuming continuously
quantities comparable to intakes of drugs administered under
supervision (for adverse effects) and for occasional and short
courses. The authorities anxieties have understandably
prompted recourse to much testing on animals, and some restrictions
on foods and beverages intended for babies and toddlers (not
necessarily excluding some intakes of adult versions) have
been applied. The caffeine and sugar and acidity contents
are further causes for concern.
Notwithstanding the fatuous testing on animals for the safety
of these cosmetic nutrients, doubts over adverse reactions
and hyperactivity and behavioral disturbances linger. E numbers
in general have acquired a bad reputation : some labels evade
the opprobrium by disclosing only apparently less offensive
descriptions, of which caramel is, misleadingly, one.
When the protracted experimentation and delays over acceptance
of the caramels in their various versions had come to a head,
vegetarian campaignerswho were motivated by imperatives
of both human and animal welfaresought to rally support
from various interests who would recognize that testing for
cosmetic tricks in foodstuffs was as deplorableor even
more sothan similar practices involved in and behind
the toiletries industry and provoking growing reaction expressed
by the entry of cruelty-frees and beauty-without-cruelty in
the market. These are issues on which the power of the purchaser
and leverage on retailers can demonstrate most effectively
the extent of public disgust, prompt reform, and engage even
the costive scientific establishment in efforts at disengagement
from embarrassing involvement in experimentation for non-medical
products and avoidable commercial purposes.
Veggie Might E150 OUT
The veggie campaigners pursuing Green Plan ploys had the
confidence that the lostest cause since the flat earth
(a dismissal once published in the Sunday Times) could be
turned into a success like the planners Campaign for
Real Bread (CAMREB), which had mobilized a great body of support
and, a little later, such enthusiasm from the Sunday Times
that it more or less appropriated CAMREB for its own. This
was a time when Beauty Without Cruelty was enjoying appreciable
success and influence, and a vehicle for promotion of a campaign
to do for foodstuffs what BWC and Body Shop and various animal
welfare organizations were doing was offered in the year when
the car with the number-plate E150 OUT would carry a message
to stir animal welfarists, foodies, and critics of junk-foods
into concerted and redoubled endeavor in the common good.
VEGA urges exercise of purchasing power augmented by critical
communication with manufacturers and retailers, awarding praise
and complaint as appropriate. Tell us too of the results,
please.
Blatant withdrawal of custom works. Coca Colas attractions
are waning in the USA, and Sunny Delight and its presentation
have faltered in the UK. Purchaser-power means meeting with
a closed purse the lures of the soft-drinks industry and other
advertisers who shamelessly aim their temptations at children
and stimulate the consequent pester-power on parents.
Unfortunately the Vegetarian Societys establishment
was rock solid, full stop. Doubts over the origins of soaps
in the cloak rooms and kitchens were matched by the certainty
of Coke and Pepsi prominent in the officesthe very embodiment
of the devil in beverages in the style of the McDonaldization
of the High Street, then and still. Many organizations share
VEGAs objections to these harmful agencies and particularly
their corruption of childrens appreciation of food and
drink, and thus of their parents concern. At the moment
the Dairy Council regards soft-drinks as offering competition
more significant than the nutritionally-preferable cruelty-free
drinks at last making their mark in the trade in beverages.
Color of the Tests
So is it too late to visit the issue again? The Research
Defence Societys appraisal of the Home Offices
latest statistics (for the year 2000) on the research and
testing of laboratory animals reports that 6% of the 2.7 million
scientific procedures carried out in Great Britain were for
safety-testing of non-medical products used in the home, agriculture,
and industry (none for cosmetics or toiletries after 1998).
The rest comprise the claimed purposes shown here
and statistics from Switzerland can be seen here.

These data apply only to the UK and ignore tests done elsewhere
for substances sold and consumed in the UK. Most of the procedures
were performed on rats, mice, and fish, which are hardly representative
of the major consumption of food for human beings or their
pets. Scientists like, in their cool and objective way, to
persuade the lay public that at least few experiments are
performed on animals such as the usual pets, horses, farm
species, or primates, although no refereed publications on
comparative readings on standardized painometers are adduced
(VEGA has gone so far as to remind the Farm Animal Welfare
Council of its responsibilities in the destruction of the
commensals in modern agriculturevermin such as rodents,
foxes, badgers, and birds, whose expressions of natural instincts
put them beyond the pale for compassionate treatment by scientists
and by the great and good in the dominance of human affairs;
even then, the Geneva Convention was recognized to accord
respect and freedom from torture to the vanquished enemy in
war).


FRS - Follower of Received Sophistry?
Scientists pose as arbiters on ethical issues and, then,
when the challenge gets tense, abdicate these responsibilities
to politicians, whose decisions they are wont nonetheless
to deride. The present controversy over hunting illustrates
these shifts and dilemmas; worse, on the basis of one bad
turn deserves another, scientists can be found excusing almost
any assault on the animal kingdom by mentioning the relentless
exploitation in providing food and clothing. The kind and
merciful reaction from them would be vigorous response in
the form of disengagement, example, and search for alternatives.
Many esteemed scientific advances entail humiliatingly crude
practices and tardy recognition of misgivings that the unscientific
are trying to communicate. The leverage that the likes of
us can bring to bear on the competitive and enterprising markets
offer opportunities as never before, if only the radicals
and reformers demonstrate in the supermarket and at the tills
that they scrutinize labels and open their purses cannily.
Scientists are now content with changes in the testing of
cosmetics and toiletries, where only a few decades ago they
were contemptuous and dismissive. The trend in searches for
alternatives must capture their energy and example ever more
powerfully.
The 6,000 scientific procedures for the year 2000 compare
with nearly 11,000 in 1991, the decline being bumpy, but with
an increase of about 16% in the last year. However, this figure
for 2000 is nearly double the toll for procedures 10 years
before for cosmetics and toiletries. If that fomenting campaign
finally ousted testing in the UK to allay objections to offensive
practices and products, a campaign bids fair to succeed in
ridding foods and beverages of unnecessary ingredients with
an undue flavor of evil. Let's agitate for it!
Manifest victory in this campaign will strengthen the resolve
in coping with demands from a body of consumers in the UK
and Europe generally expecting assurances of safety on the
consumption of foods and many household goods and conniving
at the increase of testing that organizations such as the
Food Standards Agency and Ministries will feel obliged to
meet. (In the Irish Republic the FSA is actually defined as
a Food Safety Agency, and the European Food Safety Authority
has recently come into being). Misunderstandings over the
value of such tests and connivance over the unnecessary cruelties
are factors commissioning bureaucrats may blink in forms of
dubious political protection. This is a trend that we hope
a well-versed commercially effective population of customers
can influence in a kindly and persuasive way.
Alternatives
If in doubt, leave it out: the market is rich with alternatives
to ingredients and practices of ill repute. Advances in biological
sciences now offer refinements that can replace experiments
on live animals. These are used already in the pharmaceutical
industry to screen collections of substances with potential
therapeutic value: lack of toxicity to a battery of 30 or
so essential and carefully chosen enzymes denotes substantial
safety and is probably of higher validity than interpretations
of results on other living species in other circumstances
than would be apt for human consumers and users.
Effective participation in this campaign will demand well-publicized
abstention from cola drinks, for which untainted cruelty-free
alternatives are few. This boycott and sacrifice will manifest
to the food and catering industries that purchasing power
in the interests of human and animal welfare and health is
a force they must recognize and can profitably serve. Let's
drink to that, and appropriately encourage producers who demonstrate
the desirable possibilities!
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