• @Carnelian
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    425 hours ago

    From reading about it, it’s really a risk/reward call. Red 3 has no nutritional or flavor-enhancing purpose. It’s just a decoration, so why take any risk, however small?

    • Flying Squid
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      -264 hours ago

      Because this took a hell of a lot of time and effort and taxpayer money that the FDA could have spent on so many other more important things.

      • @[email protected]
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        336 minutes ago

        They do more than one thing at a time. It isn’t like all other evaluations stopped to look at red dye #3.

        • Flying Squid
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          -134 minutes ago

          They have a limited amount of time and resources. What was spent on this could have been spent on something more dangerous.

      • Shadow
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        4 hours ago

        Why are you complaining about the FDA doing their job, rather than the large corps that likely lobbied to avoid this and make it much harder for them?

        They banned it in cosmetics in 1990, it seems pretty obvious that if it’s unsafe for the outside of our body it shouldn’t be inside either.

        • Flying Squid
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          -124 hours ago

          If they were doing their job, they would remove dangerous “herbal” remedies people are giving to their kids and hurting or even killing them, not something that has a small chance of causing cancer if you feed a shit ton of it to a rat.

          As I showed to someone else, it took ten years for the FDA to get a company to voluntarily recall a product that was causing seizures in hundreds of babies. https://www.statnews.com/2017/04/13/homeopathy-tablets-recall/

          • finley
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            144 hours ago

            That’s a deflection, not an answer

            • Flying Squid
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              -103 hours ago

              How is that a deflection? I don’t agree that they are doing their jobs.

              • finley
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                2 hours ago

                In the context of this article, they are. Your argument about something else is a straw man and a whataboutism.

                If you think the FDA should regulate something else that it currently does not, take it to Congress. They’re the ones who decide what the FDA does and does not regulate.

      • @Carnelian
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        24 hours ago

        I’d be curious about what the cost actually is?

        Right so I mean—the cost of research and analysis and the entire process of determining the possible risks is money that simply must be spent either way, even on products that are ultimately deemed suitable for market. That’s the entire purpose of the FDA, to find these things out.

        So we’re really just looking at the costs associated with the ban itself. Such as the labor hours of FDA employees setting it up? Communicating it to people? I agree with your concerns I’m just trying to get a sense of what we actually spent to arrive here

        • Flying Squid
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          -14 hours ago

          I can’t give you numbers, but it’s a federal regulation. A lot of reports have to get written and a lot of research has to be done, especially in the field of federal regulation as a whole, which is so insane that we literally have no idea how many federal laws there are. And then all of that documentation has to be read by other people and approved all the way up the chain. So we are talking a lot of people’s time and effort (which translates into taxpayer money) that could have better been spent on things which are causing active harm.