From John Ray's shorter notes
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August 17, 2016
Greenie food faddism kills Orang Utans
Food processors used to use a lot of animal fat in making their products. Then Greenies discovered that such fats were "saturated", which was a very bad thing -- even though the human race has been consuming animal fats as far back as we can go. Anyhow, with their constant attention-seeking activism, the faddidsts managed to get saturated fats banned and looked with favour on the alternative: hydrogenated vegetable oils. But wait a minute! Hydrogenated vegetable oils contain trans-fats, which are VERY bad. So after a while everybody had to dance to that insane tune.
But there was a substitute to trans-fats which the manufacturers wearily adopted: Palm oil. So a huge new demand for palm oil arose. It was a new goldrush. If you had palm oil you were in the money. So businessmen in S.E. ASia started huge palm oil plantations. OK? No problem?
BIG problem. To create those big new plantations, lots of natural jungle had to be cut down. Greenies might have objected to that but did not. So lots of jungle was lost. But the jungle was where the Orang Utans lived. They were thrown out of their homes and often died along the way. So that is how food faddism kills the Orangs. People who care for them are doing what they can but they are up against a juggernaut
Major zoos in New Zealand are joining their Australian counterparts in calling for the clear labelling of palm oil in food products.
Auckland Zoo, Hamilton Zoo, Wellington Zoo and Orana Wildlife Park have joined the initiative, spearheaded by activist group Unmask Palm Oil, asking patrons to send postcards to NZ Food Safety Minister Jo Goodhew to show their support.
Unmask Palm Oil founder Ben Dowdle said palm oil was estimated to be in about half of products available in supermarkets, and was only currently required to be labelled as "vegetable oil" in Australia and New Zealand.
"Every New Zealander should be able to choose what's in their food," he said.
"Clear labelling is the best step forward."
Palm oil is controversial due to its environmental impact — its production is linked to deforestation, which Unmask Palm Oil says results in the deaths of up to 1,000 orangutans in South-East Asia each year.
Food Standards Australia and New Zealand has previously rejected an application for its mandatory labelling.
The New Zealand campaign follows on from a long-running initiative of Zoos Victoria to have palm oil clearly labelled in Australian products.
What's the deal with palm oil?
What you need to know about the environmental impacts of palm oil and the worldwide movement to make it sustainable.
"We have worked on the palm oil issue for the last seven years," Zoos Victoria general manager of communications Jacquie O'Brien told the ABC, adding that she was thrilled to see New Zealand's zoos on board. "It's really important because this is really about the consumer's right to know what is in their food. 'How they use that information is up to them.
"[Whether they have] environmental values or health values ... what we're asking is to give people that right."
She said polling conducted this year by Zoos Victoria in Australia and New Zealand showed 84 per cent of Australians supported palm oil labelling, along with 92 per cent of New Zealanders. The research included 1,125 New Zealanders and 1,003 Australians.
So far, 50,000 people have signed Zoos Victoria's petition for more transparent food labelling.
SOURCE
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