So maybe the huge worry people had after the news that WHO would classify it as cancerous was a little too much. I think the media could have reported on it in a bit more responsible way.

  • @Kinglink
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    1 year ago

    Not a shock.

    Food scares are almost always over blown (except obviously tide pods).

    People thought MSG was going to kill everyone. People thought Cholesterol was the key to good health. Even fat in moderation is perfectly fine.

    But Fish will kill you with mercury, uncooked pork will kill you with everything (which is unlikely to happen in the first place, but also most pork you get is already cooked, at least sausage and hams). Salmonella is definitely going to kill you. Your kitchen is going to burn down, Fried food will end your life, and all processed food is bad.

    Remember Supersize me? Remember the guy who ate two big macs a day for multiple years. That SINGLE guy should have been the end of the entire documentary, because he basically showed “Yes you can eat McDonalds in moderation and have a healthy life.” But instead “McDonalds is going to kill you with super sized food.”

    The fact is you’re probably more likely to get Ebola than most of these things actually contributing to your death… though speaking of disease myths…

    These things rush in, kill a business or a company, and then are forgotten, and then 10 years later new science comes out and goes “Btw it wasn’t as bad as people thought… try it out”

    • Woland
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      331 year ago

      About the MSG hysteria, it’s not even rooted in actual medical data, just run-of-the-mill xenophobia, which in itself is absolutely wild to me. It’s like a whole chunk of the population collectively decided to develop the palate of a toddler, turning up their nose to “foreign” food.

      https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monosodium_glutamate “Researchers, doctors, and activists have tied the controversy about MSG to xenophobia and racism against Chinese culture,[62][63][64][65][66] saying that East Asian cuisine is being targeted while the widespread use of MSG in other processed food hasn’t been stigmatized.[67] These activists have claimed that the perpetuation of the negative image of MSG through the Chinese restaurant syndrome was caused by “xenophobic” or “racist” biases.[68][69]”

      • @Kinglink
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        51 year ago

        I didn’t dive deep on MSG just to not sound like I’m ranting about that specifically but you nailed it. It was more about Chinese restaurants (at least that’s how I heard it) and I remember my parents saying we don’t go to Chinese restaurants during the hysteria.

        Sucks because I love Chinese food, and Thai, Korean, Japanese and more.

      • @gundog48
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        21 year ago

        Not exclusively though. For many the fact that there a scary sounding chemical called MSG in their food is enough. Lots of people are obsessive about ‘additives’ and assume they are all bad.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        Perhaps, but I’ve seen prejudice against MSG in many Asian American families including those of Chinese descent. Anecdotally, it’s more than xenophobia at play for its reputation.

    • DreamySweet
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      61 year ago

      Even the tide pod thing was over blown. No one was actually eating them, it was just a meme.

      • be_excellent_to_each_other
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        51 year ago

        I mean, unless this article is a fabrication, I think that’s enough deaths for concern.

        Not suggesting in any way that it was the fault of the mfr, but to me that’s plenty to justify folks wanting something done to curb it.

        And I curse those folks every single time I have to smash through the lid of my Persil laundry discs with brute strength because the lids are actually people-proof. 🙂

      • @dangblingus
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        31 year ago

        Some people literally were tho.

        • DreamySweet
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          31 year ago

          A few, yeah. Most people using the meme were joking about it. The media saw a few memes, wrote some clickbait articles, and boomers who don’t understand memes freaked out.

      • @Kinglink
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        01 year ago

        I agree, but the “Tide pods are bad don’t eat them” is true… (Though almost all media hysteria is over blown, it’s a constant.)

    • @dangblingus
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      31 year ago

      As a side note, i don’t think the skinny guy from Super Size Me who eats 2 Big macs a day is a picture of exemplary health. Dude is either a genetic outlier or he will drop dead of a coronary one day.

      • @Kinglink
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        1 year ago

        All of those could be explanations. Here’s another one.

        Big macs are 583 calories… two big macs are about 1100 calories… aka perfectly reasonable in a healthy diet. I forget if he ate two a day or two in some meals, but a nutritionist would ok that Calorie count.

        Morgan Spurlock pushed “no one can eat here and be healthy” but he constantly pushed for combo meals ate in one sitting, and supersized every time they asked. That’s like someone going into a bar and saying yes every time the bartender goes “Want another one” and then going “OMG I’m so wasted and got alcohol poisoning” he set the rules up to make sure he failed, because no one is saying eat a combo meal at Mcdonalds for three meals a day.

        The thing is it WOULD be interesting if he looked into why he can maintain a reasonable weight while eating it… but of course they didn’t because that would prove Mcdonalds isn’t the worst thing ever. Morgan had two goals. Prove Mcdonalds is unhealthy (And ignore contrary evidence) and make an entertaining documentary. He did the later, but I feel like he never even came close to the former because his methodology was shit.

      • @[email protected]
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        -11 year ago

        He’s not all that special or unhealthy. 2 big macs is about 1k calories, if you get them as two meals with coke it’s about 2k calories. If that’s your food for the day it’s perfectly fine for a moderately active person. The sodium is probably the most dangerous part and just drinking more water would likely keep that in check as well.

        • @Coreidan
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          41 year ago

          People seem to not understand that not everything is about calories. There’s a fuck ton of grease and fat in that food. You might not exactly gain a ton of weight but you’ll be coating your arteries with all of that fat. A little fat is good. We all need fat. But the amount of fat that is in fried and red meat is very high. Too high to be eating everyday even if you’re within calorie limits

          • @[email protected]
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            01 year ago

            McDonald’s isn’t actually super fatty or greasey. Fats are overly demonized, they don’t make you fat.

            • @Coreidan
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              1 year ago

              It’s ground beef. Of course it’s super fatty.

              High fat is bad for you. Eating any thing high in fat will coat your arteries in fat if you’re eating it all of the time as every meal every day. Never once did I say it would make you fat. It will clog your arteries leading to congestive heart failure if it gets bad enough.

              I’m not saying eat LOW fat. I’m not saying to cut out fat. But eating a very high fat content diet is terrible for you. Ask any doctor. You’d have to have absolutely zero health sense to think eating burgers every day with fries isn’t terrible for your health.

              • @[email protected]
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                31 year ago

                Clogging arteries is also about cholesterol, which is increasingly determined to be mostly genetic and dietary is secondary.

                You can find nutrition studies to support or attack anything, it’s one of the worst sectors of science. The US is still recovering from the awful food pyramid paid for by grain farmers. Many cultural cuisines are loaded with fats, olive oil is in everything around the Mediterranean, France uses creams and butters, inuits live on almost exclusively protein and fat.

              • @havokdj
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                11 year ago

                As long as you get around 25-50 grams in a day you should be fine, it will keep your hormones in check.

            • @Saneless
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              21 year ago

              Being the same word confuses people and you can tell they have no idea how things work. They think the fat from food literally just passes right into your body parts and fat stores without being processed

              Growing up in the 80s when everything went fat free was a nightmare and made everyone, ironically, get fat

              • @havokdj
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                11 year ago

                I mean, they are the same word because they are the same thing: lipids.

                However, the relation of fats to eachother inside a body as storage and outside as calorie intake ARE two different things.

        • @havokdj
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          11 year ago

          Sodium isn’t even dangerous unless you are taking in an absolutely abhorrant excess of it. Everyone should be getting 5 grams a day, and a couple grams more will not cause any harm except for the extreme saltiness when you next sweat.

      • @Kinglink
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        11 year ago

        And even then, small amounts will make you immune. No seriously, I saw it in a documentary called the Princess Bride.

        • @[email protected]
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          31 year ago

          It depends on what substance it is. I wouldn’t try and test this theory on plutonium, but some allergenic stuff can have vaccines made for them.

          • @gundog48
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            01 year ago

            I’ve started shooting myself with BBs, I’m working my way up to pellets, then. .22, probably going to stop before 50BMG, but before long, I will be unstoppable!

    • @clearleaf
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      21 year ago

      The constant stupidity around food makes science look really really bad and I bet it’s the biggest contributor to people not trusting doctors and climate scientists. Personally I’ve become something like an antivaxer but with food. If people have been eating it for hundreds of years I trust it regardless of what studies say, and if it’s newfangled processed food I don’t trust it, also ignoring any study. I can easily see why some people wouldn’t differentiate between these alarmist food studies and the much more legitimate areas of science. It’s wrong but I understand exactly where they’re coming from.

      • @gundog48
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        11 year ago

        Plus the reporting on it.

        At a certain point, people start saying things like “X is supposed to be bad now, but give it 5 years and it’ll probably be healthy again!” or “they say you’re not supposed to do Y anymore…”.

        Because, of course, most people get their information from news sources who are always trying to find the next superfood or poison that we’ve all been consuming for hundreds of years. And often, many of the things were taught when we’re younger are no longer considered correct, or at least fully correct, anymore.

        So at a point people just get tired, ignore all of it, and just do whatever they were going to do anyway, because from their perspective, scientists can’t make their mind up anyway.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      I think it’s incumbent upon adults to see media blitzes as probably exaggerated and studded with misinfo.

      If you don’t buy the initial wave, the accuracy of news goes way up.

      • @Kinglink
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        11 year ago

        The problem is most people aren’t doing that, and even those who do get second hand/rumors/stories from other people and eventually succumb to misinformation.

        I’ve heard many times that X is cancer causings. I wish it was one wave that you could ignore but this shit gets repeated entirely too often, and even if it’s not, the misinformations operates outside of the individual, because downstream products (diet coke) moved away from this because of bad PR.

    • @sandmesomesand
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      1 year ago

      Supersize Me: “Wow, if I eat garbage at a 3000+ calorie rate a day, I’m gonna feel like shit! Please give me awards and adoration and play me in every high school health class!”

      • @Kinglink
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        21 year ago

        Don’t forget TV shows, more documentaries and more.

        Morgan Spurlock did VERY well for himself based on that completely bias “Study”. Sadly that became the style of documentary for a while (and potentially still is). Fuck the facts, let’s make entertainment!

      • @dangblingus
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        -11 year ago

        Everyone knew McDicks is bad for you. It was an entertaining doc. That’s why people loved it. Also, most Americans are 100% ignorant to nutrition. Count your blessings it’s a no brainer for you.

  • @assassin_aragorn
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    251 year ago

    Something being carcinogenic is not the same as it being likely to cause cancer. I wish this was a better understood distinction in the public. It comes down to how carcinogenic it is and how much you’re exposed to/consume. It is technically true that aspartame is carcinogenic – it’s a scientific fact. But like they say here, normal human consumption amounts makes the likelihood of getting cancer from it negligible.

    It’s important though to recognize that carcinogens come in varying levels of strength. I’m fine with drinking two cans of diet soda, but I would never wash my hands in benzene. Benzene and aspartame are both carcinogenic, but benzene is WAY more potent. We’ve limited the amount of benzene that can be in gasoline for this reason – but again note, it’s limited, not eliminated.

    I took an environmental engineering class in college, and our professor had a very cute but apt tagline. Dilution is the solution to pollution. You’ll never get rid of 100% of something. But reducing its concentration can make it safe regardless. Same idea goes here.

    Thanks for coming to my completely unsolicited Ted Talk.

    • @crypticthree
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      21 year ago

      At the same time a lot of people are constantly main lining diet coke

    • @havokdj
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      11 year ago

      I remember an independent study being done a few years back that basically came to the conclusion that to actually have a chance of getting cancer from aspertame, you’d have to drink like 52 cans of diet coke a day for 50 years.

  • @Dnn
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    151 year ago

    Up to 14 cans is technically limited but I don’t think that limit is relevant for the average person. Or what do the Americans say?

    • ZILtoid1991
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      81 year ago

      14 cans is like 4.62 liters, which is more than what an average person needs in water per day.

      • @Dnn
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        deleted by creator

        • ZILtoid1991
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          51 year ago

          In that case, even caffeine, food colorants, etc could been a factor.

      • Sabata11792
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        11 year ago

        If your drinking 4.5 liters of pop a day, cancer is not on the radar. Plenty of stuff that will kill you first.

    • GONADS125
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      61 year ago

      I’m in the US. I’ve never know anyone to drink that much soda, aside from some clients with severe mental illness. One of my clients damaged her kidneys to the brink of failure from drinking such absurd amounts of soda every day… It’s not just the sugar to worry about, but all that carbonation… It’s bad for the kidneys.

      I’m not trying to imply that people drinking that much soda are mentally ill, but rather that it is a dysfunctional behavior.

        • GONADS125
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          11 year ago

          Most my clients had dentures. Self-care and severe mental illness are often in conflict… While most of my clients were aged between mid 20s to early 50s, most had dentures or failing teeth in need of dentures.

  • deus_deceptor
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    131 year ago

    Cancer is one thing, what about other health aspects? Does it affect your gut microbiota like earlier studies have suggested?

    • @havokdj
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      21 year ago

      I’d think that to be more hereditary, I’m a diet soda enjoyer and my microbiome is very strong, but I also always handled it really well and I do also enjoy eating certain foods like Greek yogurt.

      For instance, tolerance to sugar alcohols is a hereditary thing for the most part. A tsp of erithrytol is a serving that would be trivial to some, but send others straight to the toilet.

  • SuiXi3D
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    91 year ago

    Anyone with functioning kidneys is fine. Anyone with kidney problems probably isn’t drinking much soda anyway, and if they are that’s their choice. The occasional diet soda won’t kill you any faster than, say, standing outside would.

    Nobody’s drinking 5 LITERS of soda in a day. If they are? More power to ‘em.

    This isn’t a big deal in the slightest. A lot of diet sodas aren’t even using aspartame anymore, so it’s nearly a moot point.

  • Gramatikal
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    81 year ago

    Won’t effect the US, even if it causes cancer. EU has prohibited food additives which are carcinogenic, but we don’t because the poor, poor food producers might have to pay farmers more and pay a couple pennies to make food that doesn’t kill people.

    • @Zanz
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      The US should ban it just like it does saccharine. It takes less aspartame for that study than it takes for saccharine to cause issues I mice.

      The US is fairly strict about food additives that cause cancer, but not general chemicals that cause cancer. There’s also a difference between causes cancer and link to cancer.

  • @[email protected]
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    71 year ago

    What a surprise, the claims were overblown. Glad to hear I can stock up on my Pepsi Zero again, since 1-2 cans a day won’t kill me

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  • @blacklizardplanet
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    61 year ago

    Who tf is drinking more than 14 cans of anything in a day. That’s way too much liquid. My guts would be sloshing around all day if I did that. I love soda and I drink like 1 every few days. Can’t give it up but at least I don’t drink crazy amount of it.

    • fearout
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      Idk, I drink like 3L of liquid a day, especially during the summer. Doesn’t seem that infeasible.

      • @blacklizardplanet
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        21 year ago

        I mean it’s almost 5L. Maybe I don’t drink enough but seems like a ton. Usually have 1.5-2L of water, 2 espresso and maybe a can of soda/carbonated water.

      • livus
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        11 year ago

        When you say liquid, do you mean water or something else?

          • livus
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            11 year ago

            What is dawn? Google isn’t getting me anywhere. I want to fully appreciate your concoction.

        • fearout
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          11 year ago

          A mix between water, cold-press/fresh juices, tea and soda. Whatever I feel like at the time.

          • livus
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            oh ok, that sounds reasonable. I was wondering if you were on some kind of special diet that involved 3l of one thing.

  • @SuperSoftAbby
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    61 year ago

    I’m still not eating it. It tastes terrible or makes my mouth go numb depending on the type. There is a serious hole in the market to be filled by quick low calorie snack foods that are shelf stable and don’t involve sugar alternatives. Most stuff is just too sweet any way.

        • @SuperSoftAbby
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          11 year ago

          I’ve definitely been hoodwinked enough times into eating it that it is starting to feel like a pretty non-consensual thing.

          • @gundog48
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            11 year ago

            Who’s trying to trick you into eating a sugar substitute?

            • @SuperSoftAbby
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              11 year ago

              Not everything with it is labeled sugarfree or zero sugar or even low calorie. You wouldn’t expect it in juice boxes and yet they are pretty hit or miss. Unless I read every label on everything I purchase it wanders into my house now and again…

  • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️
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    14 cans of soda a day, even diet soda, can’t possibly be safe or good for you. Especially since aspartame is also linked to kidney and liver failure and is even worse for you than ibuprofen in that regard; and you wouldn’t normally take 14 ibuprofen in a single day.

    How much did Coca-Cola pay for this PR? I swear, ever since the first news that aspartame is linked to cancer, there have been way more articles trying to convince people it ain’t that bad. It’s a corporate smokescreen.

    • @ianis
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      121 year ago

      Im 90% sure they mean that digesting the Aspartame found in 14 cans per day is safe. Not the drinking 14 cans of coke lol

      • @gundog48
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        51 year ago

        I’ve used this for distilling too, when people start talking about methanol. Even with the worst distiller in the world, you’d have to drink something crazy like 10L before it would kill you.

        Obviously by that point you’d be dead with alcohol poisoning. But saying “you can safely drink 14 cans of coke a day before the carcinogenic effects of aspartame become an issue” is completely valid, and not the same as saying “drinking 14 cans of coke a day is a healthy way to live”.

    • @LaunchesKayaks
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      31 year ago

      I’ve been on a low sugar diet for 3 years, to try to curb my binge eating disorder. Sugar was a huge trigger. I recently looked into how many low and zero sugar products use aspartame and every thing I buy to adhere to my diet has it in it. I’m introducing a bit more regular sugar into my diet so I stop consuming so much aspartame. It’s going well. I haven’t binged since the start of this, and hopefully it stays that way.

  • @havokdj
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    51 year ago

    I have always heard the 52 can argument but the thing is, who in the hell is drinking 14 cans a day? I’m a physique competitor, I need an exorbitant amount of water and 14 12 fl oz/355 ml cans is a shit ton of fluid.

  • ForestOrca
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    51 year ago

    I’m all for removing toxics from my diet, sure. The thing is, afaik, there is no nutritional function nor benefit to consuming aspartame or for that matter any non-nutritive sweetener. So if it isn’t doing anything I need, I’ll just skip it. As Michael Pollan said, “Eat Food. Not too much. Mostly Plants.”

    • @[email protected]
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      91 year ago

      Nobody drinks diet sodas for the nutrition value. They drink it for the taste.

      And there is a benefit in not having sugar. Sugar is far worse. If artificial sweeteners mean you can enjoy the taste of something without sugar, that’s healthier. Not nutritious, but healthier. I mean, they’re saying up to 14 cans of diet coke a day is fine. But 14 cans of regular coke is 490 freaking grams of sugar and nearly 2000 calories (a pretty typical amount that many folks should have for the entire day). Obesity is a far bigger risk factor for most people.

      The anti aspartame thing is just a combination of crackpots, people who have fallen for the “appeal to nature” fallacy, and people who really want everyone to know that they’re better than you because they don’t drink soda.

      • ForestOrca
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        -11 year ago

        You claim to have some clear ideas about why people drink diet sodas. Great. And wish to label me in your own way, not so cool. I was just talking about me, and why this is a non-issue for me. I have a significant educational background in diet and nutrition, and have chosen based on that education to avoid things that are not shown to be helpful, i.e. artificial sweeteners. Personally I happen to like tea, and tisanes, without sweeteners - caloric or non. Turns out tea is the most commonly consumed drink in the world.

        https://www.nationalgeographic.com/culture/article/the-worlds-top-drink

        It’s all good friend. We’re all wired a little differently. I’ll do me, and you’ll do you. Where we meet, is where things get interesting.

      • no banana
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        21 year ago

        For me it’s the fact that when I drink sugar I get energy spikes and mood issues, when I drink sugar free this doesn’t happen.

        • @[email protected]
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          31 year ago

          Sugar is basically the purest from of energy you can put in your body, of course it gives you energy spikes.

          • no banana
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            11 year ago

            Yeah, I’m just saying that I’m not choosing sugar free because of calories.

  • @dangblingus
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    41 year ago

    Hydro homies where you at? Soda is trash, diet soda is trash, tiktok water is trash. Aspartame aint a problem in our lives.

  • @MrMcMisterson
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    31 year ago

    Honestly, aspartame is terrible for me. I have a weird allergic reaction to it when all the sudden my sinuses go crazy and I feel like I have a cold. Lasts for 15 minutes or so if I have a sip of aspartame containing beverages. I’ll just stick to drinking sparkling water.