Much has been said and written about pharmaceutical companies and their tendency to fund only research that could fill their pockets, and make people totally dependent on their products ."The Pharmaceutical industry does not create cures, they create customers" (seen on FB).
Food companies are not far behind. Moreover, the food industry exerts its influence to prevent publication of research that could directly affect its profits, such as serious scientific finds on ultra processed food (junk food, fast food).
I've recently read about a biochemist at the Agriculture Faculty in Jerusalem, prof. Ephrat Oren, who tried to publish the results of a long- term research based on rats and humans, dealing with the effect of junk food on children's growth (obesity and bone disorder mainly).
It got rejected by all relevant publications. She suspected it had to do with 'politics of food', so she arranged a meeting with another scientist, prof. Robert Lustig of California university in USA, known as an expert in 'food politics'.
After checking her work for several weeks, he said to her - 'that's explosive material you have here'. (He was probably referring, among other things, to her suggestions on the need to lay heavy taxes on ultra processed food, and put restrictions on ads. regarding that kind of food).
He advised her to try and rewrite the article, giving it some sort of dry- facts 'facelift' . She followed his advice; the article was accepted and published at the end of 2020, in the prestigious 'Nature' medical journal under the subject of Bone Research.
*
Politics in its various forms, is the source of much evil. Most of us people, know that, but seem to be quite helpless about it.
Parents could do a lot about ultra processed food, but they are too weak and too busy to resist buying for their kids sweet corn flakes for breakfast, pizza, hamburger for the rest of the day. And so, this kind of food stays triumphant and might definitely harm children's growth in ways we are not even aware of, until later in life.
* - web pictures.