Topic: Foods in America Are Banned in Other Countries | |
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80% of Pre-Packaged Foods in America Are Banned in Other Countries
If you or your kids enjoy pre-packaged convenience foods commonly found in grocery stores across the U.S. such as Froot Loops, Swanson dinners, Mountain Dew, and frozen potato and bread products, you may think twice before purchasing them after hearing what they contain: dangerous chemicals that other countries around the globe have deemed toxic to the point that they're illegal, and companies are fined hundreds of thousands of dollars for including them in food products. In a new book Rich Food, Poor Food, authors Mira and Jason Calton provide a list of what they term "Banned Bad Boys" - ingredients commonly used in up to 80% of all American convenience food that have been banned by other countries, with information about which countries banned each substance and why. And though it might not surprise you to hear that Olestra - commonly used in low/no-fat snack foods and known to cause serious gastrointestinal issues for those who consume it (understatement) - is on that list, having been banned in both the United Kingdom and Canada, you may be shocked to hear that Mountain Dew, Fresca and Squirt all contain brominated vegetable oil, a substance that has been banned in more than 100 countries "because it has been linked to basically every form of thyroid disease - from cancer to autoimmune diseases - known to man." You might also be upset to hear that the food coloring used to make your kid's delicious Mac & Cheese dinner visually appealing - yellow #5 and yellow #6, namely - is made from coal tar, which among other things is an active ingredient in lice shampoo and has been linked to allergies, ADHD, and cancer in animals. And gaaaaah. Then there's azodicarbonamide - commonly found in frozen dinners and frozen potato and bread products - which is used make things like bleach and foamed plastics like those found in yoga mats (tasty!). Azodicarbonamide has been banned in most European countries because it's known to induce asthma, and is in fact deemed so dangerous that in Singapore its use carries a hefty $500,00 fine and up to 15 years in prison. Yet, according to the FDA, it's SO TOTALLY FINE for us to keep shoveling it into our kid's faceholes: "[Azodicarbonamide] is approved to be a bleaching agent in cereal flour and is permitted for direct addition to food for human consumption." Finally, there's butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA) and butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT) - found in Post, Kelloggs and Quaker brand cereals - which is made from petroleum and is a known cancer-causing agent. It's been banned in England and Japan, but those of us in the U.S. can keep right on serving up to our children for breakfast, because AMMURICA. And FREEDOMZ. |
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we have the 'freedom' to do our own research and make up our own mind about what to consume or not consume,,,,
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Yes, I guess we should be happy for that.
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A lot of countries won't accept GMO foods which we have here.
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we have the 'freedom' to do our own research and make up our own mind about what to consume or not consume,,,, |
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we have the 'freedom' to do our own research and make up our own mind about what to consume or not consume,,,, Very good point. If they label the food products the may be liable. HaVING said that , Monsanto I think have it written into law that they cannot be sued. |
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Edited by
Toodygirl5
on
Mon 06/24/13 03:13 PM
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US has the most overweight people, because they eat things that are really unhealthy. US has so many choices of food, people don't know what to eat and some people are lazy and don't read labels.
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we have the 'freedom' to do our own research and make up our own mind about what to consume or not consume,,,, Very good point. If they label the food products the may be liable. HaVING said that , Monsanto I think have it written into law that they cannot be sued. |
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US has the most overweight people, because they eat things that are really unhealthy. US has so many choices of food, people don't know what to eat and some people are lazy and don't read labels. OREOS! |
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If you put a label on genetically engineered food you might as well put a skull and crossbones on it." -- Norman Braksick, president of Asgrow Seed Co., a subsidiary of Monsanto, quoted in the Kansas City Star, March 7, 1994
"Monsanto should not have to vouchsafe the safety of biotech food. Our interest is in selling as much of it as possible. Assuring its safety is the FDA's job." -- Phil Angell, Monsanto's director of corporate communications, quoted in the New York Times, October 25, 1998 http://www.alternet.org/story/154951/millions_against_monsanto:_the_food_fight_of_our_lives |
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