Not trying to be too much of a smartass, but
300 million Americans, 187 million annually
=623 thousand per an American annually

That's a little off somewhere. 
Logan Vilas
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of D. Mindock
Sent: Friday, January 12, 2007 11:34 PM
To: Undisclosed-Recipient:;
Subject: [Biofuel] Splenda "Explodes Internally," Says Chemist

Splenda "Explodes Internally," Says Chemist

By Shane Ellison, M.Sc.

Copyright 2006C _www.healthmyths.net <http://www.healthmyths.net/
<http://www.healthmyths.net/> >_

NewsWithViews.com

1-11-7

If there were a contest for the best example of total disregard for 
human life, the victor would be McNeil Nutritionals---makers of 
Splenda^(TM). Manufacturers of Vioxx^(TM) and Lipitor^(TM) would tie for 
a very distant second.

McNeil Nutritionals is the undisputed drug-pushing champion for 
disguising their drug Splenda as a sweetener.

Regardless of its drug qualities and potential for side effects, McNeil 
is dead set on putting it on every kitchen table in America. Apparently, 
Vioxx and Lipitor makers can't stoop so low as to deceptively masquerade 
their drug as a candy of sort. There is no question that their products 
are drugs and by definition come with negative side effects. Rather than 
sell directly to the consumer, these losers have to go through the 
painful process of using doctors to prescribe their dangerous goods.

A keen student in corporate drug dealing, McNeil learned from aspartame 
and saccharine pushers that if a drug tastes sweet, then let the masses 
eat it in their cake. First though, you have to create a facade of 
natural health. They did this using a cute trade name that kind of 
sounds like "splendid" and packaged it in pretty colors. Hypnotized, the 
masses were duped instantly. As unquestionably as a dog humps your leg, 
millions of diabetics (and non-diabetics) blindly eat sucralose under 
the trade name Splenda in place of real sugar (sucrose).

Splenda was strategically released on April fool's day in 1998. This day 
is reserved worldwide for hoaxes and practical jokes on friends and 
family, the aim of which is to embarrass the gullible. McNeil certainly 
succeeded.

The splendid Splenda hoax is costing gullible Americans $187 million 
annually*^1 *. While many people "wonder" about the safety of Splenda, 
they rarely question it. Despite its many "unknowns" and inherent 
dangers, Splenda demand has grown faster than its supply. No longer do I 
have to question my faith in fellow Man. He is not a total idiot, just a 
gullible one. McNeil jokesters are laughing all the way to the bank.

Splenda is not as harmless as McNeil wants you to believe. A mixture of 
sucralose, maltodextrine, and dextrose (a detrimental simple sugar), 
each of the not-so-splendid Splenda ingredients has downfalls. Aside 
from the fact that it really isn't "sugar and calorie free," here is one 
big reason to avoid the deceitful mix . . . think April fool's day:

Splenda contains a potential poison---the drug sucralose. This chemical 
is 600 times sweeter than sugar. To make sucralose, chlorine is used. 
Chlorine has a split personality. It can be harmless or it can be life 
threatening.

In combo with sodium, chlorine forms a harmless "ionic bond" to yield 
table salt. Sucralose makers often highlight this worthless fact to 
defend its safety. Apparently, they missed the second day of Chemistry 
101---the day they teach "covalent" bonds.

When used with carbon, the chlorine atom in sucralose forms a "covalent" 
bond. The end result is the historically deadly "organochlorine" or 
simply: a Really-Nasty Form of Chlorine (RNFOC).

Unlike ionic bonds, covalently bound chlorines are a big no-no for the 
human body. They yield insecticides, pesticides, and herbicides---not 
something you want in the lunch box of your precious child. It's 
therefore no surprise that the originators of sucralose, chemists Hough 
and Phadnis, were attempting to design new insecticides when they 
discovered it! It wasn't until the young Phadnis accidentally tasted his 
new "insecticide" that he learned it was sweet. And because sugars are 
more profitable than insecticides, the whole insecticide idea got canned 
and a new sweetener called Splenda got packaged.

To hide its origin, Splenda pushers assert that sucralose is "made from 
sugar so it tastes like sugar." Sucralose is as close to sugar as 
Windex^(TM) is to ocean water.

The RNFOC poses a real and present danger to all Splenda users. It is 
risky because the RNFOC confers a molecule with a set of super powers 
that wreak havoc on the human body. For example, Agent Orange, used in 
the U.S. Army's herbicidal warfare program, is a RNFOC. Exposure can 
lead to Hodgkin's lymphoma and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, as well as 
diabetes and various forms of cancer! Other shocking examples are the 
war gas phosgene, chlordane, and lindane*^2 *. The RNFOC is lethal 
because it allows poisons to be fat soluble while rendering the natural 
defense mechanisms of the body helpless.

A poison that is fat-soluble is akin to a bomb exploding internally. It 
invades every nook and cranny of the body. Cell walls and DNA---the 
genetic map of human life---become nothing more than potential 
casualties of war when exposed. Sucralose is only 25% water-soluble*^3 
*, which means a vast majority of it may explode internally. In general, 
this results in weakened immune function, irregular heart beat, 
agitation, shortness of breath, skin rashes, headaches, liver and kidney 
damage, birth defects, cancer, cancer and more cancer---for 
generations!*^1 *

McNeil asserts that their studies prove it to be safe for everyone, 
even children. That's little assurance. Learning from the Vioxx debacle 
(and many others highlighted in my book, /Health Myths Exposed/), which 
killed tens of thousands, we know that studies can be bought and results 
fabricated.

Some things are worth dying for. Splenda is not one of them. What people 
think of as a food is a drug or slow poison---little distinction there. 
It wouldn't be wise to bet your health on it. If safe, sucralose would 
be the first molecule in human history that contained a RNFOC fit for 
human consumption. This fact alone makes sucralose questionable for use 
as a sweetener, if not instantly detrimental to our health. Only time 
will tell. Until then, I'll stick to the safe and naturally occurring 
stevia plant to satisfy my occasional sweet tooth in 2007.

Be forewarned though, as long as drugs can be legally disguised as 
sweeteners, watch out for drugs being disguised as vitamins . . . oh 
wait, they are already doing that---think Lipitor.

/*About the Author*/

/Shane Ellison holds a master's degree in organic chemistry and has 
first-hand experience in drug design. After abandoning his career as a 
medical chemist, he dedicated himself to stopping prescription-drug 
hype. He is an internationally recognized authority on therapeutic 
nutrition and author of Health Myths Exposed, The Hidden Truth about 
Cholesterol-Lowering Drugs, and The AM-PM Fat Loss Discovery. His books 
and FREE Life-Saving Health Briefs can be found at /_www.healthmyths.net 
<http://www.healthmyths.net/ <http://www.healthmyths.net/> >_/./

/References/

1.

/Joseph Mercola, Kendra Pearsall. Sweet Deception. Nelson Books.
ISBN: 0785221794. Copyright 2006./

2.

_http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agent_orange_
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agent_orange_> 

3.

/Caroline W. Sham. Splenda - A Safe and Sweet Alternative to
Sugar. Nutrition Bytes. 2005. Vol. 10. Issue 2. Article 5./


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