80% of Pre-Packaged Foods in America Are Banned in Other Countries
June
25th, 2013
If
you or your kids enjoy pre-packaged convenience foods commonly found
in grocery stores across the U.S. such as Froot Loops, Swanson
dinners, Mountain Dew, and frozen potato and bread products, you may
think twice before purchasing them after hearing what they contain:
dangerous chemicals that other countries around the globe have deemed
toxic to the point that they’re illegal, and companies are fined
hundreds of thousands of dollars for including them in food products.
In
a new book Rich Food, Poor Food, authors Mira and Jason Calton
provide a list of what they term “Banned Bad Boys” –
ingredients commonly used in up to 80% of all American convenience
food that have been banned by other countries, with information about
which countries banned each substance and why.
And
though it might not surprise you to hear that Olestra – commonly
used in low/no-fat snack foods and known to cause serious
gastrointestinal issues for those who consume it (understatement) –
is on that list, having been banned in both the United Kingdom and
Canada, you may be shocked to hear that Mountain Dew, Fresca and
Squirt all contain brominated vegetable oil, a substance that has
been banned in more than 100 countries “because it has been linked
to basically every form of thyroid disease – from cancer to
autoimmune diseases – known to man.”
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