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Healthy Home Economist / Archives / Healthy Living / Eden Foods: Opposed to Birth Control But Sells Soy Milk?

Eden Foods: Opposed to Birth Control But Sells Soy Milk?

by Dr. Kaayla T. Daniel / Affiliate Links ✔

eden soy milkEden Foods bills itself as the “oldest natural and organic food company in America” and is best known for its EdenSoy line of organic soy milk.

Most of Eden’s products are organic and nearly all are vegan.

It’s a very familiar brand in health food stores and marketing studies have shown it to be a favorite of female and liberal customers.

These customers, to put it mildly, are not pleased with the news that Eden hired the Thomas More Law Center to file a lawsuit against Kathleen Sibelius, Secretary of Health and Human Services, and other government parties, associated with the Obama administration’s rule on contraception.

The lawsuit claims the contraception rule violates Eden Foods owner Michael Potter’s religious freedom under the First Amendment and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act by requiring him to provide his employees with medical coverage for contraception.

Potter believes contraception “almost always involves immoral and unnatural practices.”

Irin Carmon at Salon.com launched the story yesterday (April 11, 2013). Predictably enough, it has gone viral, with a massive outcry on Facebook and other social media.

In brief, protesters are not pleased by Eden’s pursuit of a right-wing ideological agenda and its espousal of Catholic church teachings on the evils of contraception. Thousands of people have already voiced their intent to stop buying Eden products, including Facebook commenter Cheryl DeMarco who summed up the issues particularly well. “Now that you’ve sued to avoid providing birth control coverage to your employees based on bogus science, I don’t trust you to provide me with clean food based on good science. I won’t be buying your products.”

As yet, the debaters have not pointed out the supreme irony of Eden Foods — one of the top manufacturers of soy milk — coming out against birth control. All soy milks — including organic soy milks — include high levels of the plant estrogens known as isoflavones. Over the past seven decades, scientists have linked isoflavones to reproductive problems in all animal tested, including the human animal. For women, soy contributes to anovulatory cycles and other symptoms indicative of infertility; for men, it causes adverse effects on the quality and quantity of sperm.

The illustration posted by Salon.com — and posted here — was surely not intended to be literal. But yes, this product can make birth control unnecessary!

Indeed, in the 1970s the World Health Organization funded a $5 million study through the University of Chicago and sent researchers out in the field in search of all-natural contraceptives. The idea was to find a safe and effective alternative to the high-dose birth control pills of that era. Researchers visited dozens of native cultures to discover which herbs and plants were being used to prevent pregnancy, examined hundreds of plants and analyzed their phytochemicals. Although they found many contraceptive plants — soy, prominently among them — they ultimately abandoned the project. Not because “natural” methods didn’t work, but because the side effects were similar to — and just as serious — as those of the birth control pill.

The obvious conclusion here is that customers who consume EdenSoy “soy milks” are unwittingly —and almost certainly unwillingly — swallowing liquid birth control.  Lest any readers at this point think soy milk might a good “all natural” form of contraception, however, my advice is don’t count on it! Soy isoflavone content varies from carton to carton, and any contraceptive effects would depend as well on the amount and duration of consumption.

Eden Foods furthermore has a shabby track record in terms of supporting the health of babies. In 1990 the FDA investigated after a two-month old girl in California was hospitalized with severe malnutrition. Her parents had fed her EdenSoy brand soy milk instead of infant formula. Because of this and a similar incident in Arkansas involving the SoyMoo brand of soy milk, the FDA issued a warning on June 13, 1990, stating soy milk was “grossly lacking in the nutrients needed for infants.” The FDA asked — but unfortunately has never required — all manufacturers to put warning labels on soy milk so that they would not be used as formula substitutes.

Since these tragic incidents, most brands of soy milk — but not EdenSoy — include warning labels in tiny print on their packaging.

Sadly, babies continue to be hospitalized and die because of EdenSoy and other brands of soy milk. At least four couples have been found guilty of the deaths of their babies fed soy milk in lieu of soy infant formula. Many of these parents were health conscious, well-meaning vegans who truly thought they were doing a good thing for their babies by choosing organic soy milk instead of commercial soy formula. The myth that soy is a health food and Eden’s irresponsibility led to these tragic deaths.

How many more unnecessary and tragic cases of malnutrition and deaths will occur before Eden takes the right action? For me, the “right action” is clear: Boycott Eden Foods.

Sources

For more information about Eden’s lawsuit:

http://www.salon.com/2013/04/11/organic_eden_foods_quiet_right_wing_agenda/

For more information about soy formula and the effect soy milk and other products containing soy vegetable protein on reproduction, The Whole Soy Story: The Dark Side of America’s Favorite Health Food.

Photo Credit

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Category: Healthy Living
Dr. Kaayla T. Daniel

Kaayla Daniel PhD, CCN is known as the Naughty Nutritionist. She is author of The Whole Soy Story and co-author of Nourishing Broth both endorsed by leading health experts.

Dr. Daniel’s practice offers solutions for healthy aging, cognitive enhancement, digestive and reproductive disorders, and recovery from soy and vegetarian diets.

She has appeared on the Dr. Oz Show and the PBS series Healing Quest and is a sought after lecturer around the world.

drkaayladaniel.com/

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Reader Interactions

Comments (448)

  1. Molly Wimmer via Facebook

    Apr 13, 2013 at 10:44 am

    You did post a few days ago of 22 NON GMO companies we should support. Eden is listed on there.

    Reply
  2. Juliana Sutton via Facebook

    Apr 13, 2013 at 10:43 am

    Seriously? That’s the best response you have to all of your subscribers? Your reasoning for this article is bunk. The “hypocrisy” of the situation is minor, if at all. That being said, there are far bigger fish to fry.

    Reply
  3. Patricia

    Apr 13, 2013 at 10:40 am

    The birth control message is certainly bizarre. Very shoot-self-in-foot. However, American use of soy products might be the culprit, not soy. I think combinations of foods and other influences are at work here, such as erroneously thinking soy milk is human milk or formula? Or other elements of the American diet in combination with soy. Or, the cooking or non-cooking processes used for soy. Otherwise, we would be talking about the historical birth rate emergencies in Japan and China, two countries that have eaten soy products for eons.

    Reply
  4. Juliana Sutton via Facebook

    Apr 13, 2013 at 10:35 am

    Yes, you get to choose. Some of us human beings STILL BELIEVE IN PROTECTING LIFE. Food company or church, life is not a choice. Birth control pills do cause early term abortions. There are plenty of companies that do provide this type of “healthcare” coverage, if you don’t like the policies were you work, then get a new job.

    Reply
  5. Molly Wimmer via Facebook

    Apr 13, 2013 at 10:33 am

    I always laugh at the “natural” soy products when I’m at the grocery store, because I see the irony in that alone. I just really don’t like the agenda of the author with regards to the lawsuit, that’s what I’m responding to. Especially the quote from the commentator (who is probably on birth control and obviously drinks soy…). Anyways, I like your posts and enjoy reading them.

    Reply
  6. Lucy

    Apr 13, 2013 at 10:31 am

    Thank you, Christine!
    Drop the politics, Kayla! It just doesn’t suit here.

    Reply
  7. kathy

    Apr 13, 2013 at 10:13 am

    I am with all who are supporting the Eden Company. There are some great comments on here so as much as I wanted to comment as soon as I read this I will just throw my support for all of you who are not happy about reading this kind of stuff on here. I get enough of this stuff on other venues, sure don’t want to see it here. Disappointed. 🙁

    Reply
  8. thehealthyhomeeconomist via Facebook

    Apr 13, 2013 at 10:09 am

    My beliefs are immaterial to this post. It is about the corporate hypocrisy of Eden Foods. Whatever one chooses to believe on this issue is personal and should be free from the judgment of others.

    Reply
    • jenny

      Apr 13, 2013 at 6:14 pm

      The personal views of the CEO of Eden Company should be free from judgement also. I have absolutely loved your blog up until now. This was one of the most illogical, incoherent articles I have ever read in my life. I am sorry you posted it, as I will never visit your blog again.
      Maybe you should be more concerned about the Obama administration forcing companies to provide contraceptives that unnaturally disrupt hormones, destroy women’s health, and not only prevent conception, but sometimes kill babies by impeding implantation.

      How can women be so concerned about getting hormone free meat and dairy products, and then pop hormone pills everyday. I will take my sex all-natural, and organic, the way nature intended.

      I am so surprised by your inability to see this author’s seething bias. She must have struck a personal chord with you. Maybe you are trying to justify your own use of birth control.

    • Jason

      Apr 13, 2013 at 7:05 pm

      Sarah, since when are our beliefs immaterial to our posts? our actions? and our very selves? I still don’t know what “hypocrisy” you see here. Does soy milk definitively end the life of a human being? and are people forced to pay for soy milk for others? Eden foods provides soy milk which some, (including myself) believe is unhealthy, so I don’t buy it. Artifical contraception, (sometimes) provides the end of a human life, which I KNOW is unhealthy. So not only do I not buy it, I TOTALLY object that anyone would be FORCED to buy it.
      I know a lot of people who say they were “raised Roman Catholic”, but if you aren’t offended that someone is being forced to pay for what amounts to the death of a human being , then I’d say you were probably never REALLY raised Catholic.
      Do you really think everyone here is “overreacting”? The tone of this article is that Eden foods should be boycotted because they oppose the “birth control” mandate. “Whatever one chooses to believe on this issue is personal and should be free from the judgment of others.”? What about Michael Potter’s right to follow HIS beliefs?
      BTW, I’m not offended by this article, (or your defense of it) I’m saddened. I will definately continue to follow and read your posts because I respect your knowledge on nutrition. But on this issue, you’re dead wrong. No pun intended.

    • Trudy

      Apr 13, 2013 at 11:22 pm

      Jason,

      I think that was very well put.

    • Beth

      Apr 14, 2013 at 1:07 am

      HHE, what proof do you or Dr Kayla have Eden Foods is knowingly selling soymilk in order to intentionally ruin others’ health and is purposely selling their soymilk because they want to make women infertile?

      And what proof do you have that soymilk is an actual contraceptive?

  9. Dee Ellen via Facebook

    Apr 13, 2013 at 10:08 am

    Well, hopefully his employees aren’t loading up on his product (IMO); otherwise he’ll be paying for lots of expensive health issues!

    Reply
    • Jennifer J

      Apr 13, 2013 at 3:47 pm

      🙂

  10. Cathy Cox via Facebook

    Apr 13, 2013 at 10:00 am

    Not even close to the same thing….nice try.

    Reply
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Since 2002, Sarah has been a Health and Nutrition Educator dedicated to helping families effectively incorporate the principles of ancestral diets within the modern household. Read More

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