Didn't they claim that in the 80's, actually? But it was determined from pumping rats full of the stuff or something. Maybe the media "fact check" campaign at the time was funded by Coke.
California caused us all to pass that point, and made cancer warnings the world over absolutely meaningless. Ironic, in that everything out of California is cancerous
I never understood how one fucking state can dictate the packaging of product labels for the rest of the country. You'd think some red state would've wised up and do the same thing but something ridiculous like if the product contains soy there should be a warning says this product contains phytoestrogen isoflavone which may feminize men, leading to soy boys. Or something equally stupid and force companies to stick that on their products.
4+ liters is the average Pepsi drinker in Norway. It's fucking weird how addicted people get, there were news reports of people hoarding shopping carts full when there were rumors of possible shortages.
I wouldn't put the blame solely on sugar. People also stopped fat shaming resulting in these "body positivity" movements. Just bring back fat shaming should solve a large chunk of it
Didn't they claim that in the 80's, actually? But it was determined from pumping rats full of the stuff or something. Maybe the media "fact check" campaign at the time was funded by Coke.
At some point the words "might cause cancer" become utterly meaningless.
California caused us all to pass that point, and made cancer warnings the world over absolutely meaningless. Ironic, in that everything out of California is cancerous
I never understood how one fucking state can dictate the packaging of product labels for the rest of the country. You'd think some red state would've wised up and do the same thing but something ridiculous like if the product contains soy there should be a warning says this product contains phytoestrogen isoflavone which may feminize men, leading to soy boys. Or something equally stupid and force companies to stick that on their products.
4+ liters is the average Pepsi drinker in Norway. It's fucking weird how addicted people get, there were news reports of people hoarding shopping carts full when there were rumors of possible shortages.
I wouldn't put the blame solely on sugar. People also stopped fat shaming resulting in these "body positivity" movements. Just bring back fat shaming should solve a large chunk of it