Author Topic: People Who Sell Jelly With Six Fruits or More as Food Are Criminals  (Read 306 times)

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Offline Paladin

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Leviathan strikes again. And we call ourselves a free people.

"Pushing the boundaries of jelly science is risky. You may sell food labeled as “jelly” only if it has a combination of two, three, four or five fruit juice ingredients pursuant to the specifications in paragraph (b)(1) of section 150.140 of title 21 of the Code of Federal Regulations. [linked]

You are free to sell a jelly that combines Dewberry, Gooseberry, Loganberry and Youngberry. The Food and Drug Administration appears to be OK with that mixture under 21 C.F.R § 150.140(b)(2). You could even sell a jelly with the same recipe that adds Boysenberry or Prickly Pear. But if you add Boysenberry and Prickly Pear, you’ve got six fruit juices, and you can’t label and sell your food as “jelly.” If you do, you’re a criminal.

You might try to feign ignorance of 21 C.F.R. § 150.140(a)–(e), but the Supreme Court established that only police can get the law wrong and not face charges. If you mistakenly think your six-fruit jelly is legal, that’s just sour grapes.

These federal regulations, under paragraph g of section 343 of Title 21 of the U.S. Code, do indeed make it a federal crime to sell a food product labeled as “jelly” unless the food meets specific definitions and standards.

Large corporations that sell jelly like Smucker’s know these rules well. But mom-and-pop vendors could mistakenly run afoul of the jelly regulations or myriad other food regulations. Consider the Food and Drug Administration’s “fight to shut down an Amish farmer who was selling fresh raw milk.” Or the 2011 federal and county raid of a raw food club in Venice, Calif., in which agents seized “computers, files, cash and $70,000 worth of perishable produce.”

Virginian farmer Martha Boneta was subjected to IRS audits after environmental groups and county officials began harassing her. She said: “There are federal regulations, state regulations, county regulations that are endless. Miles and miles and miles of red tape.” People who want to farm are “stopped before they can even get started.”

http://dailysignal.com/2015/10/28/people-who-sell-jelly-with-six-fruits-or-more-as-food-are-criminals/
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