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Artificial Sweetner Explodes
Internally - Avoid It In 2007
Shane Ellison M. Sc.
NewsWithViews.com
Thursday, January 4, 2007 - If there were a contest for the best example of total disregard
for human life the victor would be McNeil Nutritionals makers
of Splenda™. Manufacturers of Vioxx™ and Lipitor™
would tie for a very distant second. McNeil Nutritionals is the undisputed drug-pushing champion for
disguising their drug Splenda™ as a sweetener. Regardless
of its drug qualities and potential for side-effects, McNeil is
dead set on putting it on every kitchen table in America. Apparently,
Vioxx™ and Lipitor™ makers can’t stoop so low
as to deceptively masquerade their drug as a candy of sort. There
is no question that their products are drugs and by definition
come with negative side-effects. Rather than sell directly to
the consumer, these losers have to go through the painful process
of using doctors to prescribe their dangerous goods. A keen student in corporate drug dealing, McNeil learned from
aspartame and saccharine pushers that if a drug tastes sweet then
let the masses eat it in their cake. First though, you have to
create a facade of natural health. They did this using a cute
trade name that kind of sounds like splendid and packaged it in
pretty colors. Hypnotized, the masses were duped instantly. As
unquestionably as a dog humps your leg, millions of diabetics
(and non-diabetics) blindly eat sucralose under the trade name
Splenda™ in place of real sugar (sucrose). Splenda™ was strategically released on April fools day
in 1998. This day is reserved worldwide for hoaxes and practical
jokes on friends and family, the aim of which is to embarrass
the gullible. McNeil certainly succeeded...........
Splenda™ contains the drug sucralose. This chemical is 600 times sweeter than sugar. To make sucralose, chlorine is used. Chlorine has a split personality. It can be harmless or it can be life threatening.
In combo with sodium, chlorine forms a harmless “ionic bond” to yield table salt. Sucralose makers often highlight this worthless fact to defend its’ safety. Apparently, they missed the second day of Chemistry 101 the day they teach “covalent” bonds.
When used with carbon, the chlorine atom in sucralose forms a “covalent” bond. The end result is the historically deadly “organochlorine” or simply: a Really-Nasty Form of Chlorine (RNFOC).
Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (1)
at 05:14 on January 5th, 2007
Not another one of these cut and paste anti- artificial sweetner stories - these stories have been circulating via email for years. What's next the anti-microwave stories?