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  • "Who Says Eggs Aren't Healthy or Safe?"

  • The American Egg Board is a promotional marketing board

  • appointed by the U.S. government whose mission

  • is to " increase demand for egg and egg products"

  • "on behalf of U.S. egg producers."

  • Now if an individual egg company

  • wants to run an ad campaign

  • they can say whatever they want,

  • but if an egg corporation wants to dip

  • into the 10 million dollars the American Egg Board

  • sets aside for advertising,

  • because the board is overseen by the federal government

  • corporations are not allowed to lie with those funds.

  • What a concept!

  • Which leads to quite revealing exchanges

  • between egg corporations that want to use that money

  • and USDA on what egg companies

  • can and cannot say about eggs.

  • Thanks to the Freedom of Information Act

  • I was able to get my hands on some of those emails.

  • Of course, a lot of what I got looked like this...

  • "Please note a number of items"

  • about our salmonella crisis module

  • "any questions?"

  • Or even better entire sheets of paper

  • that literally just said this.

  • That was the whole sheet of paper.

  • Our tax dollars hard at work.

  • But check this out.

  • This is some egg company trying to put out a brochure

  • on healthy snacking for kids.

  • But because of existing laws

  • against false and misleading advertising

  • the head of the USDA's poultry

  • research and promotion programs reminds them

  • that you can't couch eggs or egg products

  • as being healthy or nutritious.

  • See the words nutritious and healthy

  • carry certain connotations

  • (you know that a food is actually good for you),

  • but because eggs have the amount of cholesterol they do

  • (plus all the saturated fat)

  • the words healthy and nutritious are problematic

  • when it comes to eggs.

  • This is the USDA saying this!

  • However, the USDA helpfully suggests,

  • you could say eggs are nutrient dense.

  • Wait a second!

  • Why can you say eggs are nutrient dense but not nutritious?

  • Because there's no legal definition of nutrient dense.

  • You can say Twinkies and Coca Cola are nutrient dense,

  • but legally, you can't say something is nutritious

  • unless it's actually... nutritious!

  • So for example, the egg industry wanted to run this ad

  • calling eggs a nutritional powerhouse

  • that aids in weight loss.

  • The USDA had to remind the industry

  • you can't portray eggs as a diet food

  • because of the fat and cholesterol content.

  • In fact, they have nearly twice the calories

  • of anything that can be called low-calorie.

  • "Nutritional powerhouse" can't be used either.

  • Fine, the industry said, they'll move to plan B,

  • and headline the ad Egg-ceptional nutrition.

  • Nope, because again given the saturated fat and cholesterol

  • you can't legally call eggs nutritious.

  • So, the ad ended up "find true satisfaction"

  • and instead of weight loss they had to go with

  • "can reduce hunger."

  • USDA congratulated them on their cleverness.

  • Yes, a food that when eaten can reduce hunger

  • what a concept!

  • You can't even call eggs a food relatively low in calories.

  • Can't say eggs are low in saturated fatthey're not.

  • Can't say they're relative low in fat.

  • Can't even call them a rich source of protein,

  • because they're not.

  • It's illegal to advertise that eggs pack a nutritional wallop

  • can't truthfully say that,

  • or have a high nutritional content.

  • You can't say eggs are "nutritious" at all.

  • Can't say nutritious;

  • cannot say eggs are nutritious.

  • (Sometimes you have to tell the industry a few times).

  • Eggs have so much cholesterol

  • you can't even say they contribute nutritionally.

  • Can't say eggs are healthful,

  • certainly can't say they're healthy

  • have you seen how much cholesterol

  • there are in those things?

  • Can't say healthy.

  • Can't even say eggs contribute healthful components.

  • Since you can't say eggs are a healthy start to the day,

  • the USDA suggests satisfying start.

  • Can't call eggs a healthful ingredient,

  • but you can call eggs a recognizable ingredient.

  • Can't truthfully say eggs are good for you.

  • Can't say they're good for you.

  • By law, the egg industry

  • "needs to steer clear of words like healthy or nutritious."

  • For a food to be labeled "healthy" under FDA rules,

  • it has to be low in saturated fat

  • eggs fail that test

  • and less that 90mg of cholesterol per serving

  • even half an egg fails that criteria.

  • For the same reason you can't tout ice cream

  • for healthy bones,

  • you can't say eggs are healthy because

  • they exceed the limit for cholesterol.

  • Egg corporations aren't even allowed to say things like

  • "Eggs are an important part of a well balanced, healthy diet",

  • on an egg carton because

  • it would be considered misleading,

  • according to the USDA's National Egg Supervisor

  • since eggs contain significant amounts of fat and cholesterol,

  • and therefore contribute to the

  • leading killer in the United States, heart disease.

  • The industry can't afford to tell the truth about eggs,

  • or even the hens that lay them.

  • The industry crams 5 to 10 birds in cages

  • the size of a file cabinet their whole lives,

  • but when providing footage to the media

  • the American Egg Board instructs

  • "do not show multiple birds in cages-"

  • "they look too crowded "

  • "and open us up to activist criticism."

  • In other words, do not showthe truth.

  • Not only is the industry barred from saying

  • eggs are healthy,

  • they can't even refer to eggs as safe,

  • "all references to safety must be removed."

  • because more than a hundred thousand Americans

  • are salmonella poisoned every year from eggs.

  • The egg board response to this eggborne epidemic is that

  • Salmonella is a naturally occurring bacteria.

  • The egg industry didn't think that should

  • necessarily be the key message,

  • fearing "it may be counterproductive"

  • "by implying there is no avoiding salmonella in eggs"

  • "aside from avoiding eggs altogether."

  • That's why the American Egg Board

  • can't even mention anything but eggs cooked hard and dry.

  • No soft-boiled, no over-easy, no sunny-side up

  • because of salmonella.

  • The American Egg Board's own research showed

  • that the sunny-side up cooking method

  • should be considered unsafe.

  • And because of avian influenza as well, not just salmonella.

  • In light of bird flu viruses eggs must be cooked firm.

  • The VP of marketing for the Egg Board complained

  • to the USDA saying they'd really like to not have to dictate

  • that yolks are firm.

  • What about some Washington Post article

  • saying runny yolks may be safe for everyone

  • except pregnant women, infants, elderly,

  • or those with chronic disease?

  • Turns out that was a misquote

  • they can't be considered safe for anyone.

  • Instead of safe you can call eggs fresh,

  • the USDA marketing service helpfully suggests.

  • But you can't call eggs safe,

  • you cannot say eggs are safe to eat,

  • can't say they're safe,

  • can't even mention safety,

  • can't say they're healthful.

  • All "references to healthfulness must be deleted" as well.

  • Wait a second...eggs can't really be called healthy?

  • Eggs can't even really be called safe?

  • Says who

  • Says the United States Department of Agriculture.

"Who Says Eggs Aren't Healthy or Safe?"

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