I also recall, without having a hard cite close at hand that legislation was
passed that did not require Aspartame to be listed if it is below some
arbitrary amount.

They are really serious about Aspartame and Fluoride in the water. 

Those substances...poisons..are  an important part of the mind-control
agenda. 

A friend who got serious about trying to stop Aspartame in one community
began getting really scary anonymous death threats. 

Re: calling the manufacturer.  I called the makers of Wolf's Chili to
inquire if they had MSG or any related substances in their product.  The
said they would get right back with me on that.  That was 5 years ago. 

-----Original Message-----
From: sol [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, December 14, 2005 10:49 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: CS>Re: CS/h2o2/Gatorade mixture

Actually, it is perfectly legal for at least some classes of products to 
have inaccurate, incomplete labels. A company can change their 
ingredients at any time, and continue using the old labels or packaging 
until they are used up. With food products this can be a very long time, 
6 months to a year at least. And it is perfectly legal.

Whether the above would apply to a product like Pedialyte or not I don't 
know. But as a person with some bad allergies, I found out the hard way 
that labels do not necessarily reflect the actual ingredients, and it is 
perfectly legal. Gee, I am SO glad the FDA makes sure labels are 
accurate. NOT! This doesn't mean the FDA should do this, only that if it 
claims to do so, and doesn't, that is where serious problems can arise 
for the consumer. Between the USDA and the FDA we are supposed to have 
accurate labelling, but the laws don't really insist on any such thing. 
One can of course contact mfrs directly, but I have found at least of of 
those to lie about ingredients. Caveat Emptor, isn't it?
sol


Marshall Dudley wrote:

>jrowland wrote:
>
>  
>
>>>Unless they have recently modified the formula, Pedialyte contains
>>>Aspartame.
>>>      
>>>
>>There's this new-fangled tool for the Web: www.google.com , quite helpful
>>in dismissing 'rumors'.
>>jr
>>    
>>
>
>I don't think the ingredients on the label of a product could be construed
as
>a rumor.  If it is inaccurate then the FTC and FDA could both prosecute the
>company.
>
>Marshall
>
>
>
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-- 
Whenever you find you are on the side of the majority, it is time to pause
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