Huffington Post In April, the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition published a study linking diet soda consumption to an increased risk of diabetes and heart disease. Nobody blinked or cared because this research was just going to be thrown on the pile of allegedly conflicting studies about the safety of artificial sweeteners, particularly aspartame. This pile is referred to as the “aspartame controversy.”
Aspartame is the artificial sweetener sold under the brand names of Equal and NutraSweet. It is used commonly in diet sodas because it tastes the most like sugar, or at least that is what the people selling it say. Despite all the hype about controversy, there is no aspartame controversy. All of the aspartame-industry-sponsored research consistently concludes aspartame is safe, while the independent studies overwhelmingly find side effects and problems. There is no gray area between the two sides. Every study connected to those who sell it says aspartame is safe while the independent studies find concerns. The controversy is really over whether research funded by special interest groups is valid.
Mere mortals, like myself, might be tempted to ignore inconvenient facts if my livelihood or survival were threatened. When I was a teenager, I worked at a family restaurant famous for its generous portions of homemade pies and cheesecake. As a newbie waitress, I was surprised when customers would order dessert while insisting I bring artificial sweetener (saccharine, at that time) with their coffee.
How could any one believe forgoing the 16 calories in a sugar packet (I looked it up) would balance out the 500-plus calories in the coconut cream pie? Since these customers were kindly funding my college education through generous tips and the base salary at the time was $1.15 an hour, I wisely held my tongue. Instead, I asked them if they wanted whipped cream with their Heath bar cheesecake. (“Just a little,” was the usual response.)
At the time, I did not understand why people were counting calories. I grew up in a rural area in the 70s. Everybody I knew guzzled whole milk, and in my family, ice cream was a food group; yet few people were obese. I remember our amazing high school girls’ basketball team. My friend, Nina, was the only one who did not look like she could bench press a Holstein. The girls were tall, fit and strong but there was not a calorie counter among them.
Now, 30-something years later, the average 9-year-old understands calorie-counting, yet a near obsession level with the content of food only seems to be feeding the weight gain epidemic. Despite easy availability of reduced calorie and artificially sweetened food/beverages we are expanding by the minute so that 68 percent of Americans are now overweight.
Caloric sweeteners like sugar and corn syrup certainly deserve some of the blame. Their consumption increased almost 40 percent between the 50s and 1999, when peak consumption levels reached a pancreas-busting 155 pounds per person per year — or 52 teaspoons of sugar a day. Or one of those rain-barrel-sized drinks they sell with your hexane-laced burger at the drive-through. But that is another story. Since 2000, sugar intake has reduced slightly due to a minor decrease in corn-syrup sweetened soda-slurping.
But the diet drink industry is booming.
The primary non-caloric sweetener used in diet sodas and teas is aspartame. Obviously, aspartame (introduced in 1974) and its buddies are not helping people lose weight because as a society, the more diet soda we consume, the heavier we seem to get. The reason for this phenomenon has been consistently found in independent research. That is, the taste for sweets, whether delivered by sugar or artificial sweeteners, enhances appetite. The only people who seem to think diet sodas help with weight loss are the manufacturers and some registered dietitians (RDs).
A majority of RDs recommend artificial sweeteners to their clients. The American Dietetic Association has consistently supported the use of aspartame and in an “evidence-based study” attempted to bust lingering concerns about aspartame. The study reportedly concluded aspartame does not cause side effects, including weight gain. The dietitians claimed to be working independently even though some of the funding for the study came from the aspartame industry. And they want you to know the fact that the aspartame industry has generously supported the ADA through the years has no bearing on their recommendations or research. Pie, anyone?
But Bloomberg says Diet Drinks are OK. “They’re healthy.” Let’s see how long it takes him to ammend his Sugary Drink Law to Water Only.
Funny, I just mentioned this cr@p yesterday. (Angel?)
Interesting fact: they did a study in prisons across the country on the most violent criminal offenders. Came to find out that without exception, they all had one thing in common: every one of them had diets that were high in Aspertame and MSG.
Don’t you all feel safer now, knowing this?
Yes, I’ve too have been reading about the various studies for a few years now. That’s one of the things that infuriated me about Bloomie’s stupid law. I’ve been wondering when someone (other than us) was going to bring it up again to the general public.
Yea and doesn`t Aspartame turn to wood alchohol in your system. Drink just 3 sodas with that stuf in it and tell me how well your vision is. Aspartame is the related factor. Go ahead and drink 3 or 4 aspartamine contained drinks – fast as you can – and see what happens, bet you loose your vision for a while because of wood alchohol poisoning. brought on by aspartame.
Hey everyone, check out the Google logo on Mozilla Firefox. It’s got the Olympic flame burning now.
It’s downright spooky.
There’s a very good article on the Olympics at BIN titled “Beware – Blood Thirsty Zionists Final Set Trap Iran.”
I highly recommend it. ( I actually posted a comment on that one )
Splenda is basically chlorinated sugar…..ick! No thanks! Saccharine I like to call Sweet-n-SixFeetBelow, and the most toxic of them all is Aspartame! I don’t know why people insist on ingesting that poison. While stevia based products are still being researched, there is plenty of evidence that Aspartame is not good for anyone’s health.
The title of this article is hilarious… Sadly, it is also true. I have read many health articles published on studies relating to Splenda and Aspartame which said that these “substances” cause people to actually crave sweets. Oh the irony.
Stevia is a plant so it is an all-natural no-calorie sweetener… however, it is important to research the “knockoffs” like Stevia in the Raw, Truvia, etc. as some of them can be deceptive.
If you haven’t already watch the following documentary
and learn how Donald Rumsfeld was able to get aspartame
into the food chain