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Artificial sweeteners: Keeping foods fake since 1879
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Of the four tastes — well, five if you include what the Japanese call umami (“savoriness”), but that’s another column entirely — sweetness is clearly humankind’s favorite. A preference for sweet foods is the only culinary preference with which people are born. Our love of sweets even shows up in our language; it would seem odd to refer to one’s lover as a “sourheart” or to call a gift-lavishing significant other a “salt daddy” or “salt momma.” And the “land of milk and Chef Paul Prudhomme’s Blackened Fish Spice Blend” just doesn’t have the paradisiacal ring to it that “land of milk and honey” does.
Unfortunately, as doctors warn us, the results of our passion for sugar can be more bitter than sweet. Sugar eaten in moderate amounts has no adverse effects on human health, but eating too much of it can cause weight gain, which can result in type II diabetes, hypertension, heart disease and a host of other complications. Furthermore, eating too much sugar can feed acid-producing bacteria in the mouth, turning one’s sweet teeth into a cavity-ridden smile only a British mother could love.
For better or worse, however, people do not like to be told to eat less sugar, so scientists have devoted a significant portion of their psychic energy to developing low-calorie alternatives for the sweet stuff. What they have found are a number of intensely sweet molecules. Some of these contain no calories, and others are so intensely sweet that they can be used in sufficiently small quantities to add sweetness while also adding effectively no calories.
The world’s first artificial sweetener, saccharin (aka Sweet ‘n Low), was discovered in 1879, but artificial sweeteners did not really take off in the United States until 1952. It was then that a company called Kirsch Beverages produced No-cal, the first diet soda in the country. The drink was originally aimed at diabetics in a New York City hospital, but its popularity with the patients quickly led Kirsch to bring No-cal to the diet-conscious masses. The soda was a success, and soon the American consumer could choose from a variety of artificially sweetened sodas.
The key to diet soda’s success was a recently discovered artificial sweetener called cyclamate. With all of the sweetness of sugar but without the metallic aftertaste of saccharin, cyclamate seemed to be a godsend. However, some research in the late ’60s suggested it caused bladder cancer, so the nation’s burgeoning love affair with diet beverages was cut short. Food producers wanting to use artificial sweeteners had to switch back to saccharin, which was thought to be a safer alternative to cyclamate at the time.
The new saccharin-sweetened sodas were not as popular as their cyclamate-containing forbearers. Sure, Tab gained a cult-like following of “Tab addicts,” but sugar substitutes did not reach their golden age until the 1981 introduction of aspartame, an artificial sweetener marketed under the brand names NutraSweet and Equal. In spite of the fact that it has come under criticism as potentially carcinogenic, the National Institutes of Health and the FDA consider aspartame safe, and it is present in many artificially sweetened foods in the United States.
Other sweeteners, like acesulfame potassium (nicknamed ace-K) and neotame, have come into existence since aspartame’s debut, but neither has gained the popularity of aspartame. Ace-K, however, has become popular as an addition to aspartame in some calorie-free beverages, as a combination of artificial sweeteners often results in a more sugar-like taste than one artificial sweetener alone.
The most recent addition to the happy family of artificial sweeteners is sucralose, a strikingly sugar-like molecule sold under the brand name Splenda. The sucralose molecule is very similar to that of sucrose, or normal table sugar. The only difference is that three chlorine molecules replace three of the hydroxyl groups on the sucrose molecule. Its producers used to say it was “made from sugar, so it tastes like sugar,” but they have since stopped using that claim after being sued by the manufacturers of Equal last April.
Currently, saccharin, aspartame, ace-K, neotame and sucralose are all FDA-approved food additives. They have passed a rigorous battery of tests, and every person who drinks a bottle of diet soda or tosses some grains from a red, yellow or blue packet into his or her coffee is another human trial. Thus, they are probably perfectly safe if consumed in moderation. Furthermore, they are triumphs of science that allow humans to enjoy one of life’s pleasures without making dietary sacrifices.
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IP hash: 764a94e0
This article says it all: http://www.rense.com/general78/dying.htm called “Dying for a Diet Coke”
Being FDA approved does not mean something is safe. Aspartame Disease is a global plague and even has a medical text, “Aspartame Disease: An Ignored Epidemic”, www.sunsentpress by H. J. Roberts, M.D. There is even a documentary, Sweet Misery: A Poisoned World, www.soundandfurytv.com
Sucralose is a chlorocarbon poison liberating free chlorine. James Turner, Atty and Citizens for Health have petitioned the FDA for ban. Neotame is made by the manufacturers of aspartame. The FDA itself has a list of 92 documented symptoms from four types of seizures to coma and death.
Please see these web site for more information, www.mpwhi.com, www.dorway.com, www.wnho.net, www.aspartamekills.com and the Aspartame Toxicity Center, www.holisticmed.com/aspartame
Betty Martini, D.Hum, Founder Mission Possible International 9270 River Club Parkway Duluth, Georgia 30097 770 242-2599 Aspartame Information List, www.mpwhi.com
IP hash: 486b1d6e
This is a rather shallow story. Here is the Truth: Aspartame is the Thalidomide of the 1990’s.
Jason Engelhart: you need to talk personally with 1. Dr. H.J. Roberts, M.D., author Aspartame Disease: an FDA Ignored Epidemic West Palm Beach, Florida
Dr. Russell Blaylock, M.D., author Excitotoxins: the Taste that Kills, recently retired from University of Mississippi Medical Center
Dr. Betty Martini, D.Hum., Founder, Mission Possible International, of Duluth, Georgia
Please talk with them only AFTER you have googled then read at least ONE of their scholarly articles. I would also recommend that you google “Rumsfeld’s Bioweapon Legacy,” and study it carefully because your sanguine statement praising aspartame are absurd.
Your article’s sanguine endorsementS artificial sweeteners are scientifically inaccurate, and, indeed, totally deluded; when you say they are “triumphs of science that allow humans to enjoy one of life's pleasures without making dietary sacrifices”: this is ludicrously mistaken, even though it will for sure get you a job working for one of the many PR-and-apologist spin doctor and dissembler Firms working for Coca Cola and the world’s largest Aspartame and MSG manufacturer: Ajinomoto.
Did they pay you to write this article?
If not, you need to write another article, after you have at least spoken with some of the finer minds in the departments of Biochemistry, Preventive Medicine, and Nutrition, right there at the University of Wisconsin.
Otherwise, your article will do a world of neurodegenerative harm to the huge numbers of people duped into thinking aspartame is anything than a genocidal FDA-sanctioned neurotoxin.
Sincerely,
Stephen Fox Managing Editor, Santa Fe Sun News Founder, New Millennium Fine Art
IP hash: 27010dfa
I agree, I think the author is a clandestine tool of BIG SODA! Either that or Stephan Fox is a tool of BIG SUGAR! Sugar is the new oil you know!