Parents receive 'controversial' note urging them to stop giving their children HAM SANDWICHES for lunch: "This is just ridiculous"
- Replies 29
It seems that one of the children's lunch box favourites – the humble ham sandwich – has come under attack again, after previous allegations that they may cause food poisoning at school.
A directive distributed to parents of public school students asked them to avoid giving their children ham sandwiches as processed meat may increase the children's risks for bowel cancer. Instead, they should seek healthy alternatives like cheese, hummus, BBQ chicken, or leftover home-cooked meat.
"Ditch the ham sandwich," read the message from the Cancer Council in New South Wales, which was included in leaflets inserted in the children's school newsletters that are sent home to their parents.
The instruction has received massive backlash not only from parents but also from pork producers, butchers and even politicians slamming the recommendation and its "politically correct message".
A leaflet from the Cancer Council encouraged parents to "ditch the ham sandwich", resulting in backlash. Credit: Getty Images.
On Tuesday morning, Today host Karl Stefanovic hit out at the "un-Australian" proposal to ban ham sandwiches in school canteens, calling it "the woke brigade coming after butchers".
"I think this is just ridiculous. I don't know where they get off doing this," Karl said that morning while he, co-host Ally Langdon and newsreader Alex Cullen were all enjoying their ham sandwiches at the desk.
"The kids of Australia are making their choice anyway. There are some things you've just got to say no to and this is one of them," he added.
David Bligh, the owner of Bringelly Pork and Bacon, agreed and said the proposal from the Cancer Council was "political correctness getting off the rails" and they are making things blow out of proportion.
"How can you say ham sandwiches for kids aren't a good thing?" the butcher asked.
"People bring up all sorts of issues about food and chemicals and things like that, but a lot of the preservatives and things that are put in ham and bacon are actually naturally occurring chemicals and preservatives because these sorts of things are found in spinach and vegetables and all of those sorts of things," he later explained.
"It is just blown out of proportion. Ham has been eaten for the last 5,000 years without any side effects."
A spokesperson from the Cancer Council has already responded to the issue at hand, saying that the leaflets are just part of a bigger health campaign to encourage children to eat healthier.
"There is strong evidence that eating processed meats and too much red meat is associated with increased risk of bowel cancer," said the representative. "Our cancer prevention messages advise everyone to limit their processed meat consumption and cut down on red meat."
She also added that the schools were only advised to avoid processed meat as much as possible, but they were not forced or put under any obligation to strictly comply.
The NSW Department of Education eased the fears of hundreds of Aussie parents by confirming that no public school had banned children from bringing ham sandwiches.
What are your thoughts, folks? Do you agree that schools should limit children from eating processed meat? Or is this another case of political correctness gone too far?