The federal city is your mortal enemy.
Your children are nothing more than cattle to be exploited there.
Michael Obama's initiative was horrific; new figureheads in the WH make no difference to Leviathan. Read this piece with an understanding that
Bloomberg, like most other swamp worshippers, labors under the belief that all America needs is for the "right" people in federal city to be in charge of Little Timmy's lunch in Bumfuct, MT.
Big Dairy Is About to Flood America’s School Lunches With Milk
The tenseness of the SNA’s recent history perhaps explains why it imposed a militant media-minding policy at its Las Vegas conference. Attendance at any speech and interviews with any SNA member had to be cleared with the group’s spokespeople. They also sat in on every interview and allowed only supervised strolls through the convention floor.
The association gets a majority of its funding from food companies and other vendors, which sponsor its biggest moneymaker, the annual conference. Last year, Domino’s Pizza, General Mills, PepsiCo, and Land O’Lakes were among the conference’s biggest sponsors, each contributing as much as $24,999. Companies also paid to host sessions at which they could directly pitch school food officials. A “culinary demo” such as Smith’s Land O’Lakes cheese-o-rama cost $3,500.
Kellogg Co. and the National Dairy Council teamed up to present Nutrition Smackdown!, billed as a kind of ammunition-gathering session for lunch ladies to contend with griping parents. It was led by Dave Grotto, an executive for Kellogg, the cereal maker in Battle Creek, Mich., and Jim Painter, a volunteer adjunct professor at the University of Texas School of Public Health in Brownsville. Painter told the crowd he’d try to talk them through one of their common frustrations: “moms that have it their goal in life to get rid of chocolate milk in your school.” The teaspoon and a half of added sugar in the typical half-pint carton of chocolate milk, Painter said, is worth it for the calcium it contains. He asked people to imagine a 16-year-old girl: “If she doesn’t get enough by the time she turns 30, her bones start turning to dust.” Of course, as the Swedish study demonstrated, that’s debatable—and calcium is also found in beans, oranges, and leafy greens.