July 21, 2005

Mikey is quiet -- who shall we watch now?

Michael Moore has been very low profile recently and the folks at Moore-Watch are wondering what is up. They also point to another Watching site -- this one watches Morgan Spurlock, the guy who ate nothing but fast food for 30 days and documented the changes to his body. An interesting premise but it seems that Spurlock plays a little bit loose with accountability and basic facts and Spurlockwatch is all over it. One thing to note is that although Spurlock's physical changes were very dramatic, he also upped his caloric intake to over 5,000 Cal/Day (a good level is 1,800 to 2,200) and he also made a concerted effort to do as little physical activity as possible. A sample entry from Spurlockwatch:
PCRM
One of Spurlock's favorite sources in his book is the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine. After the Center for Science in the Public Interest, PCRM ranks second on his "Acknowledgements" page, and he uses them in both the text and the end notes. He runs an excerpt from a book written by Neal Barnard, the group's founder (p. 93). Barnard also gets a brief appearance in Super Size Me. It's probably safe to say that the group helped out with a good deal of the book's content. See Spurlock's blog here, where he mentions his attendance at PCRM's swanky black-tie fundraising gala.

So what exactly is the Physicians' Committee for Responsible Medicine? They aren't physicians. Less than 5% of the group's membership are actual physicians.

In fact, PCRM is a rather militant animal rights group. Its aim? To end medical research on animals, and to foster public fear of eating cheese and meat with scare campaigns. Through lawsuits, intimidation, and stealth media placement, they're trying to push the vegan lifestyle.

PETA has directed more than $1 million to PCRM over the years. The group has been repeatedly and publicly reprimanded by the American Medical Association for spreading misinformation on the use of animals to test new AIDS treatments. The AMA's president said of PCRM in 1991, "They are neither responsible, nor are they physicians." PCRM has also called for an end to donations to groups like the American Cancer Society and the American Heart Association because those groups support testing on animals.

Barnard is a psychiatrist. He has no training in nutrition, diet, or internal medicine. Yet for some reason, Spurlock and others take him seriously when he talks about the health effects of meat and cheese consumption. Barnard has lobbied government agencies to put a "biohazard" warning label on meat and dairy, and once called cheese "morphine on a cracker." He has said, "there is no room for chicken in a healthy diet." And he's an inductee in the "Animal Rights Hall of Fame."

More disturbing, however, are PCRM's ties to animal rights terrorism. Barnard has engaged in several letter-writing campaigns with a guy named Kevin Kjonaas, who has ties to two animal rights terrorist groups, including the Animal Liberation Front. Kjonaas is now on trial on domestic terrorism charges.
Much more at the site... Needless to say, added to the Blogroll -- the author of the site stays in the background but their fact-checking chops are excellent. Good stuff and I plan to visit this one regularly! Posted by DaveH at July 21, 2005 10:41 PM | TrackBack
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