Eighty percent of the packaged foods on our grocers shelves are banned in other countries

Opmmur

Time Travel Professor
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Eighty percent of the packaged foods on our grocers shelves are banned in other countries
Sunday, July 07, 2013 by: Tony Isaacs

LLearn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/041098_groceries_banned_foods_American_diet.html#ixzz2YiOgrKBO

(NaturalNews) According to the new book Rich Food, Poor Food, ingredients commonly found in up to 80 percent of all pre-packaged foods on grocers shelves in the U.S. have been banned in other countries. As alarming as such information is, our food safety outlook becomes even bleaker when we consider other banned and toxic food items.

The toxic banned ingredients in our food

In the book, authors Mira and Jason Calton provide a list of banned ingredients which they term "Banned Bad Boys" as well as the countries which have banned them. Among the items is Olestra - commonly used in low/no-fat snack foods and known to cause serious gastrointestinal issues - which has been banned in the United Kingdom and Canada.

Worse is brominated vegetable oil, a substance found in Mountain Dew and Fresca which has been banned in more than 100 countries. As the authors state, brominated vegetable oil "has been linked to basically every form of thyroid disease - from cancer to autoimmune diseases - known to man."

Other dangerous items listed include food colorings - such as yellow #5 and yellow #6, dyes used to make mac & cheese dinners visually appealing. Those dyes are made from coal tar, an active ingredient in lice shampoo which has been linked to allergies, ADHD, and cancer in animals.

Other banned and toxic items in our foods

The toxic banned ingredients listed in the book, horrible as they are, are but part of the bad news when it comes to food items most Americans regularly consume. Here is a partial list of some other toxic ingredients and unsafe food items:

Bisphenol-A (BPA) is a synthetic chemical used to make plastic drinking bottles, baby bottles and storage containers as well as the lining of food and drink cans which can leech into foods from high heat and prolonged storage. Currently, it is found in virtually all canned goods and most baby bottles. It mimics estrogen and can offset the delicate hormonal balance in the developing child, and is blamed to be largely responsible for the age of puberty in young girls being lowered to as young as seven years old. In 2010, Canada became the first country to ban BPA.

Increasing number of countries are banning the sale and/or cultivation of GM crops. Some of the GM crops are engineered to produce their own pesticides and research has shown that the genes are passed on to humans and even down to several generations after consumption. Other crops are engineered to withstand heavy applications of the toxic pesticide Roundup.

Thanks in part to GM engineering, US produce contains serious levels of pesticides as well as herbicides such as Roundup and other glyphosphates. Researchers in Europe have found that the weed killer Roundup has serious toxic effects due to inert ingredients that amplify the toxicity of Roundup's active ingredient, glyphosate. As a result, Roundup is banned in nearly every European country.

Due to growth stimulators such as ractopine as well as antibiotics which are added to our meats, over 160 countries say "no" to U.S. meats.

Chemical fertilizers are yet another widespread problem. From 1990 to 1995, 600 different companies from 44 states sent a whopping 270,000,000 pounds of toxic waste to both fertilizer companies and farms. The waste was not treated to remove toxic substances including arsenic and dioxins.

Sadly, greed and cash are kings in the US and our government is too often for sale to the highest bidder. This explains why we have a Monsanto insider over our food safety, much like we have a Merck insider over our medicines.

Sources for this article include:

http://shine.yahoo.com

Thanks to BPA and other chemicals the new age of puberty for girls is 10

Bisphenol A: Officially Declared a Toxic Substance in Canada

Why 160 Countries Say "No" to US Meat

What countries have banned GMO crops? - Mankato Green Culture | Examiner.com

http://www.offthegridnews.comm

About the author:
"See more articles by Tony Isaacs"

Tony Isaacs, is a natural health author, advocate and researcher who hosts The Best Years in Life website for those who wish to avoid prescription drugs and mainstream managed illness and live longer, healthier and happier lives naturally. Mr. Isaacs is the author of books and articles about natural health, longevity and beating cancer including "Cancer's Natural Enemy" and is working on a major book project due to be published later this year.
 

Opmmur

Time Travel Professor
Messages
5,049
Find out which foods we eat in America are banned in other countries - the facts will scare you
Monday, July 01, 2013 by: PF Louis

Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/041020_GMO_food_arsenic_toxic_ingredients.html#ixzz2YiQbLM00

(NaturalNews) Most of us know that GMOs are required to be labeled or even completely banned in some other nations. Some nations have even outlawed certain pesticides and insecticides from agricultural use that are heavily promoted in the United States.

Those items are not surprising for most of us. But you will be surprised at how many toxic food processing agents and additives used in our foods are completely banned in many other nations.

Hopefully, this list will encourage you to avoid processed foods even more. Many of these items are even in processed foods sold from health foods.

Some sneaky toxic items allowed on USA grocery shelves

Synthetic food colorings are banned in the UK, Austria, France, Finland, and Norway. Just about all American candies and most cereals, especially cereals marketed to children, contain food colorings. They're also used in sports drinks and packaged macaroni and cheese products, cakes, and pastries.

These dyes are petroleum based. They have been linked to hyperactivity and ADD among young children. Despite efforts to ban them in the USA, the FDA has decided to let them continue, even overruling their own scientists.

There are some naturally based dyes that are made toxic from the way they're processed, and there are some wholesome natural dyes also. Find out more here (Hidden sources of food coloring chemicals in your diet).

Brominated vegetable oil (BVO) is so bad it's banned in 100 countries. It's used to keep synthetic dies from separating from sports drinks and some popular sodas. Without it, that lovely homogenized color would vanish as the dyes separate and collect at the bottom.

Bromine is a fire retardant, considered an environmental toxin even when it's used in clothing, furniture, or carpeting (Gatorade to remove flame retardant chemical from its drinks (yeah, you've been drinking this for years)).

Potassium bromate is derived from the same source as BVO. It's banned in Canada, Europe, and China. Brominated or bromated flour is used to expedite commercial baking and make more stuff faster of course. Brominated flour has been linked to neurological disorders, kidney problems, and cancer.

Dairy hormones rBGH and rBST are GMO-derived synthetic growth hormones, first introduced by the biotech corporate monster Monsanto as recombinant bovine growth hormone and now as recombinant bovine somatrophin.

Monsanto owns the FDA so of course it was approved and even enforced here in the USA (Monsanto Defeated on rBGH Animal Drug After 14 Year Battle).

This growth hormone forces milking cows to produce more milk faster while causing gross udder infections. It's also bad for humans, having been linked to various cancers while passing cow puss and more antibiotics through dairy products.

These synthetic growth hormones for dairy cows have been banned in Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Israel and 27 European countries.

Olestra or olean is a substitute cooking oil created by Proctor and Gamble and used for fat free processed fried foods, including chips of several types. It blocks mineral and vitamin absorption and can cause cramps and leaky bowels. So far it's banned in the UK and Canada.

Azodicarbonamide is used to bleach flour and foamed plastic. It's ubiquitous in white flour baked breads, cakes, and pastries. White flour in France and other nations are bleached from the sun. Most EU countries, the UK, and Australia have banned this bleaching agent. It has been linked to asthma and other health issues.

Arsenic is used in chicken feed to help make chicken meat look pink and fresh. Its use in chicken feed is banned by the European Union because some arsenic does wind up in meat sold from poultry fed arsenic (FDA finally admits chicken meat contains cancer-causing arsenic (but keep eating it, yo!)).

Do you feel comforted when you hear or see the phrase FDA approved or USDA sanctioned? Don't. They're not here for you. These federal agencies are infiltrated and corrupted by large corporate interests, and corrupt politicians keep enabling them.

They protect Big Food, Big Ag, and Big Pharma, not us.

Sources for this article include:

http://www.buzzfeed.com

http://www.naturalnews.com

Bovine somatotropin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

Khaos

where the wild things are
Messages
1,101
Yes I know the food I eat is poison. And the food you eat is poison. What is the meaning behind posting these kinds of links to articles?

See I don't plan on living forever. I'll be surprised if I reach 70. But I don't plan on living to be 100. Have you seen what people look like after 80?

This health crap is just like the emphasis on the smoking debacle, yes, its a dirty addiction and habit, yes it can kill. But why so much emphasis on these two subjects? I think you got a better chance of dying by walking into oncoming traffic than you do eating a piece of candy with artificial food coloring, though if you are allergic to the food coloring, then yeah, you have a higher chance of dying than walking into oncoming traffic.
 

TnWatchdog

Senior Member
Messages
7,099
Yes I know the food I eat is poison. And the food you eat is poison. What is the meaning behind posting these kinds of links to articles?

See I don't plan on living forever. I'll be surprised if I reach 70. But I don't plan on living to be 100. Have you seen what people look like after 80?

This health crap is just like the emphasis on the smoking debacle, yes, its a dirty addiction and habit, yes it can kill. But why so much emphasis on these two subjects? I think you got a better chance of dying by walking into oncoming traffic than you do eating a piece of candy with artificial food coloring, though if you are allergic to the food coloring, then yeah, you have a higher chance of dying than walking into oncoming traffic.
I agree that most everything we eat, drink, or breath is not exactly what nature had in mind for us and is poison. Your quote reminded me of a clip about crossing the freeway. Blame my response reaction on eating too much food coloring...but I just couldn't resist. We might as well laugh while we die.

 

Khaos

where the wild things are
Messages
1,101
Thanks for responding in a much less prudent and straight edge nature than a few others did elsewhere when a subject like this came up... I'm glad to know people here wont try to force me to drink from my local river and eating fish pills... And I'd rather not drink from my river... the puddle in front of my apartment is probably cleaner than the river, truth be told.

But still my point stands. We are all going to die from something, that is a given. You could have a heart attack right now, or a vessel in your brain could burst, or your car could blow up.

Yet all the emphasis on unhealthy food, yeah what goes into is unhealthy, but look at it from this point of view. Life is unhealthy. ;)

You can die from being struck by lighting
You can die from being bitten by an animal or even mauled
You can die from a tree branch falling on you
You can die from choking on a piece of meat or even a bone from chicken
You can die from drinking too much water
You can die from drinking too little water
You can die from just about anything, period.
 

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