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  "description": "If Kennedy suggested that gravity existed, some media outlets might feel compelled to defend levitation. Which is how a debate about hidden sugar ends with a major newspaper defending the sugar industry rather than the health of our children.",
  "path": "/when-transparency-about-sugar-becomes-controversial/",
  "publishedAt": "2026-03-11T00:30:26.000Z",
  "site": "https://goodoil.news",
  "tags": [
    "**Maryanne Demasi**",
    "editorial board",
    "tighten that system",
    "secretly paid",
    "responded",
    "US dietary guidance",
    "estimated",
    "MD Reports"
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  "textContent": "**Maryanne Demasi**\n _Maryanne Demasi PhD is an investigative journalist who writes for online media and top tiered medical journals. For over a decade, she was a TV presenter for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC)._\n\nA _Washington Post_ opinion column attacking Robert F Kennedy Jr for questioning the sugar content of commercial drinks reveals how quickly public health debates can become political.\n\nKennedy proposed that companies selling drinks containing enormous quantities of sugar should be able to demonstrate that their products are safe.\n\nIn response, the editorial board of the _Washington Post_ argued that this proposal represents an unacceptable intrusion on consumer freedom, in an article titled **“ _In Defense of Sugar._ ”**\n\nBut the issue is not personal freedom. It is industrial manipulation of our food supply with hidden sugar.\n\nThe modern food industry does not simply sell sugar. It engineers it into products in ways that are largely invisible to consumers. Sweetened coffee drinks illustrate the problem clearly.\n\nSome popular versions contain as much as **180 grams of sugar** in a single serving – roughly **45 teaspoons**. That is about the sugar content of **around 17 donuts** , delivered in what is marketed as a morning coffee beverage.\n\nNo one mistakes a donut for a health food. But a coffee drink is sold as an everyday beverage, often to young consumers who have little reason to suspect they are consuming the sugar equivalent of an entire box of pastries.\n\nThat is not a matter of free choice. It is buyer beware in a marketplace designed to obscure what people are actually consuming.\n\nAnd asking companies to demonstrate safety before selling such products is hardly radical. It is basic consumer protection.\n\nIn most areas of public health, manufacturers must show their products are safe before they reach consumers. Pharmaceutical products and medical devices undergo regulatory scrutiny.\n\nBut when it comes to food additives and ultra-processed products, the system works very differently.\n\nUnder the United States’ “generally recognised as safe” (GRAS) framework, companies are often allowed to declare ingredients safe themselves. Many additives enter the food supply without prior FDA review.\n\nThis loophole has allowed thousands of substances to be introduced into processed foods with minimal independent oversight.\n\nKennedy’s proposal to tighten that system has been portrayed by critics as authoritarian overreach. In reality, it would simply shift the burden of proof back to where it belongs – on the companies profiting from these products.\n\nUltra-processed drinks loaded with sugar operate in a very different regulatory environment. They are marketed as harmless refreshments while quietly delivering metabolic loads that nutrition scientists have warned about for decades.\n\nThe _Washington Post_ ’s defence of the sugar industry might be easier to understand if the industry had a history of transparency, but it doesn’t.\n\nIn the 1960s, sugar industry groups secretly paid Harvard scientists to publish research minimising sugar’s role in heart disease while shifting blame onto saturated fat. The payments were not disclosed and those papers influenced dietary guidelines for decades.\n\nInternal documents later revealed the strategy plainly: shape the science, redirect the narrative and keep attention away from sugar.\n\nIt was a playbook borrowed directly from the tobacco industry.\n\nIn that context, the question Kennedy raised – whether companies selling products loaded with sugar should be able to demonstrate safety – does not sound extreme.\n\nYet even this modest proposal quickly became political.\n\nThe governor of Massachusetts – where Dunkin’ is headquartered – weighed in. Governor Maura Healey responded on X with a blunt defence of the company, writing: “ _Come and take it_.”\n\nKennedy is not proposing to ban sugar or outlaw sweet drinks. He is asking whether companies selling products that deliver extreme quantities of hidden sugar – particularly to adolescents – should be able to demonstrate that those products are safe and transparent about what they contain.\n\nTo me, it sounds like a call for better evidence and clearer information.\n\nConsumers cannot exercise meaningful choice if the ingredients and metabolic consequences of products are obscured.\n\nAsking companies to disclose information, demonstrate safety and allow people to make informed decisions is not authoritarian, it’s the foundation of consumer protection.\n\nIt is also consistent with Kennedy’s stated mandate to “Make America Healthy Again.”\n\nUnder recent US dietary guidance, a meal should contain **no more than about 10 grams of added sugar**.**** Yet a single commercial coffee drink can deliver up to 18 times that amount.\n\nMore than a third of US teenagers are estimated to have pre-diabetes, so understanding what people are consuming is a public health necessity.\n\nAnd yet, in today’s polarised political environment, even that principle can become controversial.\n\nThe _Washington Post_ column reads less like a defence of consumer freedom and more like a reflexive attack on anything Kennedy has to say.\n\nIf Kennedy suggested that gravity existed, some media outlets might feel compelled to defend levitation.\n\nWhich is how a debate about hidden sugar ends with a major newspaper defending the sugar industry rather than the health of our children.\n\nThis article was originally published by MD Reports.",
  "title": "When Transparency About Sugar Becomes Controversial",
  "updatedAt": "2026-03-11T00:30:25.407Z"
}