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Noted Quack The Food Babe, her critics and the war on Chemicals in our foodstuffs

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ReAxion

Member
The reasons used to justify adding these things to food has mostly to do with increasing their shelve-life or decrease the production cost, thereby increasing the bottom life for food corporations. But my priority is different from that.

Increasing shelf-life makes food safer for longer, you don't have to buy food as often, so that's the opposite of increasing the bottom line.
 
Or increasing the overall food supply. A lot of "artificial" techniques -- not the least of which is GMOs -- can be directly attributed to feeding millions of people who would have otherwise starved.

I don't mean to suggest it can't also create profits for some companies; it certainly can. I just want to point out that preservatives and GMOs and other artificial enhancements aren't just lining food producer's pockets. They have upsides -- big, "save millions of live" sized upsides.

Africans aren't people, Opiate, the EU already decided on that one when they decided that they needed real food without any chemicals. Get it through that skull of yours.
 
Without these "chemicals", food prices will increase exponentially, and good luck buying an avocado out of season. If we really want to talk about the way our human society is set up, that's a different conversation.
 

AnAnole

Member
The following paper should give pause to the idea that anything that has been approved is OK:

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3237642/

"Many foods contain preservatives, emulsifiers, flavor enhancers, food coloring, and other fillers that have not been previously consumed in significant quantities. Virtually none of these nonfood compounds have been carefully assessed for a potential impact on obesity or diabetes."

"The ability of mono-oleoylglycerol (MOG) to stimulate insulin secretion at basal glucose was concentration dependent and significant at a concentration as low as 25 μmol/L (Fig. 4B). The physiological relevance of monoglycerides is not established because there appear to be few measurements (25,26) and no standard for the level of circulating or tissue monoglycerides."
 
#EatBugs2015, live how real men used to live.
#EatBugs2015 #TheREALpaleoDiet

And a lot of those medicines have to be taken in very exact doses. And can have tremendous side effects so you don't take them unless you really have to.

I don't have to eat food with a lot of additives. I can eat food that is closer to what the human body evolved to eat. And I tend to do so.

The reasons used to justify adding these things to food has mostly to do with increasing their shelve-life or decrease the production cost, thereby increasing the bottom life for food corporations. But my priority is different from that.
Sorry if that seemed rude or something, but it actually was (and still sort of is) an honest question. I'm mostly curious where you draw the lines. I see your point about the medicine (though I was thinking more something like Ibuprofen which doesn't generally have deadly side effects), though it was meant more to be an illustrative question.

For instance, carbonated water isn't really "natural". Nor is cheese or even butter. I mean, they're made from natural ingredients but still processed.

Since I've been growing my own produce I admit to being very picky about certain things, tomatoes especially. I generally avoid buying grocery store produce, but more because it doesn't taste like it should than because of chemical ripening agents that are used.
 

Aureon

Please do not let me serve on a jury. I am actually a crazy person.
Both have similar result of making us believe in something that is incorrect. The difference is that she's louder and is easier to follow for the mainstream thus have larger and quicker effect.



As I said above, and I understand why you guys are calling it false equivalency. However the end result is the same, feeding me false information. So from my point of view, it's equivalent. I'm not implying that her and scientific researches have the same credibility.

The thing is:
SOME research MAY be flawed.

Literally everything this lady is spewing has no sound base.

Seeing the difference yet?
 

Dennis

Banned
The following paper should give pause to the idea that anything that has been approved is OK:

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3237642/

"Many foods contain preservatives, emulsifiers, flavor enhancers, food coloring, and other fillers that have not been previously consumed in significant quantities. Virtually none of these nonfood compounds have been carefully assessed for a potential impact on obesity or diabetes."

"The ability of mono-oleoylglycerol (MOG) to stimulate insulin secretion at basal glucose was concentration dependent and significant at a concentration as low as 25 μmol/L (Fig. 4B). The physiological relevance of monoglycerides is not established because there appear to be few measurements (25,26) and no standard for the level of circulating or tissue monoglycerides."

Here is another recent example.

http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v519/n7541/full/nature14232.html
 

nomster

Member
Increasing shelf-life makes food safer for longer, you don't have to buy food as often, so that's the opposite of increasing the bottom line.
Grocery stores wouldn't be paying for expired products, it's absolutely helpful to the food producers bottom line. (Not that I mind the preservatives or that I don't see the consumer benefit as well)
 

Robotguy

Member
I'm sure everybody who took multivariable calc has nothing but fond memories of the course
I actually preferred multivarible calc to the other calculus courses I took. But in general I didn't care for the math courses that much. The physics courses on the other hand I actually enjoyed.
 

entremet

Member
trans fats are good example of food made in lab that wreaks havoc on blood lipid profiles. But we didn't know this for decades after their introduction.

Now they are banned in many jurisdictions and the science against them is solid.

I think that's what Dennis is talking about. food babe is still a quack tho.
 

Dennis

Banned
#EatBugs2015 #TheREALpaleoDiet


Sorry if that seemed rude or something, but it actually was (and still sort of is) an honest question. I'm mostly curious where you draw the lines. I see your point about the medicine (though I was thinking more something like Ibuprofen which doesn't generally have deadly side effects), though it was meant more to be an illustrative question.

For instance, carbonated water isn't really "natural". Nor is cheese or even butter. I mean, they're made from natural ingredients but still processed.

Since I've been growing my own produce I admit to being very picky about certain things, tomatoes especially. I generally avoid buying grocery store produce, but more because it doesn't taste like it should than because of chemical ripening agents that are used.

There is no hard and firm rules for me. It is not like I try to control all the food I eat. I eat out and you know that ain't going to without a lot of added stuff. But I try to minimize things that seem unnecessary to me when I can.
 

Suikoguy

I whinny my fervor lowly, for his length is not as great as those of the Hylian war stallions
Or increasing the overall food supply. A lot of "artificial" techniques -- not the least of which are GMOs -- can be directly attributed to feeding millions of people who would have otherwise starved.

I don't mean to suggest it can't also create profits for some companies; it certainly can. I just want to point out that preservatives and GMOs and other artificial enhancements aren't just lining food producer's pockets. They have upsides -- big, "save millions of lives" sized upsides.

True, but we do need to look at cases where we genetically modify plants to withstand pesticides and herbicides. After which they can bathe the plants in the substances, substances which when consumed in large enough quantities are harmful.

On the other hand, modifying plants to be resistant to pests or block weeds, I'm all for.
 

AnAnole

Member

Ah, yeah. I saw that a few weeks ago. The relevance of the gut microbiome has only just started to be recognized within the past several years, well after many of these food additives have been approved. Just how all of these novel food additives interact with the countless arrays of microbiota that inhabit our guts probably won't be well understood for a while.
 

Kinitari

Black Canada Mafia
The following paper should give pause to the idea that anything that has been approved is OK:

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3237642/

"Many foods contain preservatives, emulsifiers, flavor enhancers, food coloring, and other fillers that have not been previously consumed in significant quantities. Virtually none of these nonfood compounds have been carefully assessed for a potential impact on obesity or diabetes."

"The ability of mono-oleoylglycerol (MOG) to stimulate insulin secretion at basal glucose was concentration dependent and significant at a concentration as low as 25 μmol/L (Fig. 4B). The physiological relevance of monoglycerides is not established because there appear to be few measurements (25,26) and no standard for the level of circulating or tissue monoglycerides."
So, no snark here, but don't you think this is a bit silly? If we dig very hard, we might find that some of the additives we put in food may (very tenuously) have a negative effect on our bodies. Like obesity.

With that in mind, there things that are very very strongly linked to obesity, and these are found entirely in natural foods. Sugar, basically. Does that mean people shouldn't eat Apple's, for example?

My question is basically, where is the line? If someone shows that eating a lot of fruits, vegetables and grains can lead to a host of negative health effects (I'll save you the trouble, it's been shown) - does that mean you shouldn't consume these things?

Almost everything we eat, if we look hard (or not even that hard) can be linked to things like obesity, poor cardiovascular health or other problems. So where is the line?
 

Opiate

Member
I definitely agree that more research to confirm the safety of the things we eat is a good thing. The issue is where we draw the line. For instance, some newer preservatives haven't had their long term effects tested because... they haven't been around for 50 years, let alone 100. The only way to actually test how new products affect people 100 years from now is to let people eat them and find out.

Or rather, it's not the only way. You could also run century long tests that check everything you could possibly think of -- all types of cancers, heart disease, hypertension, colitis, and so forth -- on every new compound we create.

That would certainly increase safety, but it would simultaneously prevent anyone from ever making a product ever again. No company has the money to test every food product for every possible malady, and run that test for 100 years, before they're allowed to sell that product to consumers. They would just stop making new things in that case.

I think we can have a reasonable discussion about how much testing should be done on new preservatives and additives and enhancements and so forth, but I find that many people seem to feel that there is never enough study. Did you show that GMOs are safe when eaten for 10 years? Fine, but what about 20 years? Okay, now what about 30 years? How about 40? Again, I'm not saying we shouldn't do long term studies -- obviously we should -- but if you insist that nothing be sold until we have a century of data that examines every possible malady a new product might cause, then new products will cease to be made.

And millions of people will starve in the meantime.
 

poppabk

Cheeks Spread for Digital Only Future
I want synthetic chemical crap out of my food so I am OK with this.

So sometimes maybe a harmless additive gets unfairly targeted sometimes?

Boohoo, err on the side of caution not on the side food corporations.

I don't care if it hurts their bottom line. Their whole endeavor is to make people eat food that is as crap as possible.
You are gonna have to define synthetic chemical crap.
 

Ceres

Banned
I basically tell my coworkers I won't eat subway because they put rubber in their bread (the real reason - their subs are awful). This woman started that because of a chemical used in one form is a common food chemical but in another is used to make rubber. She takes small associations and then writes sensational headlines to get website hits which just about all sites do these days. Sadly it seems to work with her.

Subway has now removed it because of her campaign.
Lol - I see this has already been brought up several times.
 
So, no snark here, but don't you think this is a bit silly? If we dig very hard, we might find that some of the additives we put in food may (very tenuously) have a negative effect on our bodies. Like obesity.

With that in mind, there things that are very very strongly linked to obesity, and these are found entirely in natural foods. Sugar, basically. Does that mean people shouldn't eat Apple's, for example?

My question is basically, where is the line? If someone shows that eating a lot of fruits, vegetables and grains can lead to a host of negative health effects (I'll save you the trouble, it's been shown) - does that mean you shouldn't consume these things?

Almost everything we eat, if we look hard (or not even that hard) can be linked to things like obesity, poor cardiovascular health or other problems. So where is the line?

Apple's what? All of their products? Are iPhones OK even if iPads are ruled out? The new MacBook is fine, right? I mean, it's so light and thin that it shouldn't kill my diet. How do the Apple Watch models compare nutritionally?

But seriously, I both agree and disagree with you. I agree in the sense that natural stuff, even if it has been consumed by humans for a long time, may not be the best for us either and "synthetic" stuff can certainly be fine. That said, we also shouldn't dismiss actual research in to "unnatural" materials if it show areas for concern.
 

Opiate

Member
As another example, bringing a new medication to the consumer market takes years of testing. On average, from the conception of a new drug to the release on the marketplace, it takes 5-10 years. During that time, they first do preliminary studies, then (if successful) start doing studies on rats, then (if successful) start doing phase 1 trials on humans, with very limited sample sizes, then (if successful) they start doing phase 2 trials with a large data set and more aggressive dosage, then (if successful) they start doing phase 3 trials, which is practical clinical use.

Now, we could add more to this. Maybe they could study the effects in pigs before they move from rats to humans. Sometimes they do this already, but they don't have to. Maybe we could add a fourth phase that does more robust study on some particular maladies.

But the point is that we have to draw the line somewhere. Yes, if drug companies had to do 20 years of testing instead of 5-10, there would probably be fewer medications that get through and only later are discovered to cause things like heart disease due to long term use. 30 years would be even safer than that. And so forth.

The goal here isn't to stay that longer, more thorough testing = automatically worse, it's only to show that there is a cost. Fewer drugs will be created if we insist on a 20 year test cycle; further, some people who could have benefited from the drug would have gotten it if it were available 10 years earlier. If you want 100% absolutely certainty that a new drug, or food, or preservative, cannot possibly cause any harm, then you will never let anything out of the trial phase, because there is always something else to check for, or a new time horizon to consider.
 

marrec

Banned
First off, not all trans fats are "synthetic" as there are some that exist completely "naturally". Second, this doesn't really answer up previously mentioned questions about where the line on "natural".

Lastly, and more in tune with reality, trans fats have proven to be less and less the apocalyptic food additive that they were originally thought of as and more as a normalized food additive that is better avoided in high quantities.
 

entremet

Member
Lastly, and more in tune with reality, trans fats have proven to be less and less the apocalyptic food additive that they were originally thought of as and more as a normalized food additive that is better avoided in high quantities.
Well the issue is that trans fats were in everything. So overconsumption is not uncommon.
 
Did you know that hydrogen--found in the supposedly clean and processed water that we drink every day--is also found in thermonuclear weapons?

That's right, you're drinking bombs every day.

Cancer cells are full of Dihydrogen Monoxide. And Hitler drank it everyday because he believed it sustained him. The bastard even bathed in the stuff! Sicko.
 

jimi_dini

Member
I definitely agree that more research to confirm the safety of the things we eat is a good thing. The issue is where we draw the line. For instance, some newer preservatives haven't had their long term effects tested because... they haven't been around for 50 years, let alone 100. The only way to actually test how new products affect people 100 years from now is to let people eat them and find out.

Agreed.

As I already mentioned quite a few times: Some so called immune system diseases happen to younger and younger humans.

For example Ulcerative Colitis + Crohn's Disease. Noone knows what's exactly causing them and they are not curable, which means some kind of medication is needed for the rest of the patient's lives. For UC the cause of the inflammations is known (and no, it's not the immune system going berserk), but it's still not known what's causing that cause.

Those diseases happened to 25-35 year olds 10 to 15 years ago. That was the common age. Nowadays those happen to 1 or 2 year olds (yeah, no typo. 1 or 2 year olds, where some cases are so severe, that they require chemo-therapy). They also happened in western countries only (no Asia including Japan and especially no third world countries - strangely). Nowadays they happen there as well (I think 3rd world countries not included).

Which means it's pretty obvious that some speciality in western countries causes them. And this cause seems to have gotten worse otherwise the age of the patients wouldn't have changed so badly.
 

AnAnole

Member
Lastly, and more in tune with reality, trans fats have proven to be less and less the apocalyptic food additive that they were originally thought of as and more as a normalized food additive that is better avoided in high quantities.

What research are you referring to? All that research I've read has demonstrated that partially hydrogenated vegetables oils / elaidic acid, the kind that was found in stick margarine and many baked goods, dramatically increases heart attack risk. From what I remember, increased daily consumption of partially hydrogenated vegetable oils by 1% can increase the risk of having a heart attack by ~20%. There is a reson PHVOs are essentially being phased out of the food supply.
 

Flo_Evans

Member
I feel like you can have a reasonable position between

dihydrogen monoxide lol!

and

there is rubber in my subway bread omg!
 

vityaz

Member
Everything I've read has lead me to believe the Food Babe is a hack with some wacked out agenda who is doing more harm than good.

Like most woo advocates, spreading misinformation and fear. Just seeing the topic title made me feel depressed, I've already heard and read too much about this ignorant terrible human being but I couldn't look away. :(
 

Kinitari

Black Canada Mafia
Apple's what? All of their products? Are iPhones OK even if iPads are ruled out? The new MacBook is fine, right? I mean, it's so light and thin that it shouldn't kill my diet. How do the Apple Watch models compare nutritionally?

But seriously, I both agree and disagree with you. I agree in the sense that natural stuff, even if it has been consumed by humans for a long time, may not be the best for us either and "synthetic" stuff can certainly be fine. That said, we also shouldn't dismiss actual research in to "unnatural" materials if it show areas for concern.

I actually don't disagree with you, being reactive to new information is as important I think to thoroughly testing foodstuffs before we put them on the market.

I just wonder what we should react to. Let's say we make some compound that increases food shelf life by 3x, which we've already discussed why is great in this thread. It seems safe, passes preliminary tests and makes it to market. Years down the line, it's a defacto preservative, and it's helped reduce the prices of food around the world. However, new research shows that if consumed in very high quantities, it can give you the runs. There doesn't seem to be any other side effects. What should be done?
 
Lastly, and more in tune with reality, trans fats have proven to be less and less the apocalyptic food additive that they were originally thought of as and more as a normalized food additive that is better avoided in high quantities.

Can you provide sources on this? As far as I am aware the science against trans fats has gotten stronger rather than weaker, although there may still be some questions about certain natural trans fats.

I actually don't disagree with you, being reactive to new information is as important I think to thoroughly testing foodstuffs before we put them on the market.

I just wonder what we should react to. Let's say we make some compound that increases food shelf life by 3x, which we've already discussed why is great in this thread. It seems safe, passes preliminary tests and makes it to market. Years down the line, it's a defacto preservative, and it's helped reduce the prices of food around the world. However, new research shows that if consumed in very high quantities, it can give you the runs. There doesn't seem to be any other side effects. What should be done?

It will always be a risk/cost-benefit situation in my mind that really doesn't have a general answer, although when it comes to food for normal consumption the acceptable risks and costs will generally be much lower than, for example, a last resort antibiotic.
 

marrec

Banned
Can you provide sources on this? As far as I am aware the science against trans fats has gotten stronger rather than weaker, although there may still be some questions about certain natural trans fats.

Sorry, still looking for a free source on this. Keep in mind, what I've read doesn't obviate the want for a global ban on trans fats, it was just a study that wanted to re-evaluate some of the more apocalyptic studies done in the 90s and early 00s. An example of science continuing the due diligence that is required for making sweeping statements on chemical intake and health, something that most "natural is better" food slingers don't do.
 

xsarien

daedsiluap
This is basically her following:
buD2huW.gif
 

way more

Member
She's an idiot but plenty of gaffers exhibit her philosophy of chemicals.

http://www.slate.com/articles/healt...beaver_ass_coal_tar_and_yoga_mat_in_your.html

She wants Yellow Dye removed from Kraft Mac and Cheese because they are colloquially known as coal tar.
The dyes that Hari was so eager to have removed from Kraft products, Yellow No. 5 and Yellow No. 6, are really called coal tar dyes—not because they contain coal tar, but because a century ago similar dyes were made from chemicals extracted from coal tar.

In her book and on her blog, Hari plays this game of malicious metonymy again and again, leveraging common motifs of disgust, such as excrement and body parts, all the while deliberately confusing the source and uses of material with the molecules themselves. She wants you to be aghast that the same chemical used to stabilize the foam in yoga mats, azodicarbonamide, is used to stabilize bread dough, also a foam. Or to be horrified that L-cysteine, added to bread dough to make it easier to handle, is extracted from chicken feathers, or worse yet, human hair. I admit this last example sounds incredibly gross. But L-cysteine is a common, naturally occurring amino acid, and it’s already present in the flour and in the human body.


It's pure framing.
 

Trojita

Rapid Response Threadmaker
So, no snark here, but don't you think this is a bit silly? If we dig very hard, we might find that some of the additives we put in food may (very tenuously) have a negative effect on our bodies. Like obesity.

With that in mind, there things that are very very strongly linked to obesity, and these are found entirely in natural foods. Sugar, basically. Does that mean people shouldn't eat Apple's, for example?

My question is basically, where is the line? If someone shows that eating a lot of fruits, vegetables and grains can lead to a host of negative health effects (I'll save you the trouble, it's been shown) - does that mean you shouldn't consume these things?

Almost everything we eat, if we look hard (or not even that hard) can be linked to things like obesity, poor cardiovascular health or other problems. So where is the line?

It's still kind of different. We understand how sugar works, derived from Sugar Cane and Honey (technically honey is processed lol). We know how the body works, if the sugar is not burned off it will turn to fat.

Research is starting to show that a lot of our modern food messes with the insulin in our body possibly having a direct influence on our bodies storing fat. Instead of either burning off the food that's coming in or just pooping it out, the body is now being instructed to store all energy coming in.
 

Lumination

'enry 'ollins
After reading the OP, I read up on this woman a bit. I couldn't keep going. It's like if Jenny McCarthy and Dr. Oz had a kid.
 
J

Jpop

Unconfirmed Member
People like this are the worst. Anti-Vaccer as well? GTFO.

Flu-Shot as a genocide tool? What am I even...
 
People like this are the worst. Anti-Vaccer as well? GTFO.

Flu-Shot as a genocide tool? What am I even...

In my experience the rhetoric, logic, and tactics of the anti-GMO movement mirror those of the anti-vaxxer movement so closely it's almost like they stole the playbook.

Sadly the gap between what the public believes versus scientists on GMOs is HUGE, there is much work to be done educating people...

k0o9YHu.png
 

Kinitari

Black Canada Mafia
It's still kind of different. We understand how sugar works, derived from Sugar Cane and Honey (technically honey is processed lol). We know how the body works, if the sugar is not burned off it will turn to fat.

Research is starting to show that a lot of our modern food messes with the insulin in our body possibly having a direct influence on our bodies storing fat. Instead of either burning off the food that's coming in or just pooping it out, the body is now being instructed to store all energy coming in.

Quite a bit of food interacts with the insulin in our body. Old food and new, that isn't necessarily a bad thing, or something we should inherently fear.
 

Fury451

Banned
People like this are the worst. Anti-Vaccer as well? GTFO.

Flu-Shot as a genocide tool? What am I even...

Yeah, the great flu-shot genocide of 1979. It was a method for thinning the intelligent people of the population so big pharma could enslave the rest of us. [citation needed]
 

Demon Ice

Banned
She's literally Jenny McCarthy II. The fact that hacks like her get such a following really highlights how hopelessly clueless the average American is when it comes to science in general. Just mindlessly believe shit if it sounds remotely plausible.
 
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