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 You Are What You Eat -- Processed Foods page 1    
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Paul Chek

 

You Are What You Eat

 

Certain Processed Foods Are Harmful to Your Health

By: Paul Chek

Editors Note:

In the last 20 years health clubs have raised the consciousness level on the importance of fitness, but fitness is really is only half the equation. Your grandmother was right; you are what you eat. As a holistic practitioner, Paul Chek advises that it's not only what you put into your body in the way of good nutrients, but to also be wary of what harmful ingredients may be sneaking into your system without your knowledge. It's not only good food, but also the removal of bad food that will keep you at the peak of wellness, Paul shows us how…

"The FDA lists approximately 2,800 international food additives and about 3,000 chemicals, which are deliberately added to our food supply."
Do me a favor before you read the next paragraph - go to your cupboards and refrigerator, and take a look at how many packaged food items you have in your kitchen. While you are there, pull out a desert item (i.e. ice cream), a boxed item (i.e. breakfast cereal) and any other item you have that is flavored (i.e. salad dressing) and take a look at the labels. After reading the ingredients list, ask yourself:

  1. How many words am I unable to pronounce?

     

  2. Which of these ingredients have I never heard of and/or have no idea what it is?

Go take a look at those labels and, when you come back to finish this article, I will tell you why you may be having such a hard time flattening your abs, and why, even if they are flat, you may feel so dull every day!

If you did this little exercise, you may be surprised at the number of multi-syllable words that look more like they should be the ingredients of super glue than of something you're eating. It is time to enlighten you with regard to what some of these ingredients are and what they can do to you.

The gigantic and often strange words listed as "ingredients" (where food items are supposed to be!) are various concoctions used to color, stabilize, emulsify, bleach, texturize, soften, preserve, sweeten, add or cover smells, and flavor!


We Consume Between 10,000 and 15,000 Chemicals a Day

In case you were wondering just how many of these little chemicals were sneaking into your mouth each year, current statistics say that the FDA lists approximately 2800 international food additives and about 3,000 chemicals, which are deliberately added toFood Chemicals our food supply. When considering the number of chemicals used in the process of growing and processing food, by the food to the time it reaches our stomach we have consumed between 10,000 and 15,000 chemicals a day! (1)

While some of you may be thinking, "I don't eat that many food additives," I have news for you. The FDA doesn't require food additives considered to be Generally Regarded as Safe (GRAS) to be put on an ingredients label. Instead, all that is required are the words "artificial flavor" or "artificial coloring" or "natural". The fact is, the average American eats approximately his/her body weight in food additives each year, or approximately 150 pounds; this statistic is roughly the same for most English speaking countries.


"Having the chemical manufacturers provide their own research showing a given chemical is safe is like asking a cigarette manufacturer do their own research showing cigarettes are safe!"
Of this amount, 15 pounds or more will be used as flavoring agents, preservatives and dyes, many of which are considered GRAS by the FDA. Before you get comfortable with chemicals considered to be GRAS, you should realize that to save time and money, the FDA allows the food and additive manufacturers to notify them of the GRAS status of their additives and they are allowed to provide their own evidence to support their claim!

Think about that for a moment. Having the chemical manufacturers provide their own research showing a given chemical is safe is like asking a cigarette manufacturer do their own research showing cigarettes are safe! It's no wonder that this takes place when billions of dollars are at stake and the health of the average person is unimportant.

The fact of the matter is food and additive manufacturers, like drug manufacturers, are running the largest study ever run in history - and you are the guinea pigs! That's right. It is only when they get enough reports about the damaging effects of a given additive that they remove it from the GRAS list. With that in mind, what are the chances of some doctor reporting to the FDA that their patient suffered adverse reactions to acetaldehyde, acetic acid, or agar-agar when they were merely on the label as "food additives" and not listed individually because they are on the GRAS list? Consider the side effects of these chemicals:

  • Acetaldehyde is known to be an irritant to mucous membranes, which line your entire digestive tract, is a central nervous system depressant and large doses may cause death.

     

  • Acetic acid may cause gastrointestinal distress, skin rashes and eye irritation.

     

  • Agar-agar may cause flatulence, bloating (good bye abs!) and may have a laxative effect (2).

"…don't be fooled by the use of the term "natural". Insects, insect larvae, monkey guts, and even mercury are all 'natural'…"
Please realize, I just pulled these GRAS food additives out of a book entitled Food Additives, A Shopper's Guide To What's Safe & What's Not by Christine Hoza Farlow, D.C., and there are hundreds more GRAS additives whose side-effects look more like something Saddam Hussein would be interested in purchasing to use against Americans than it does something to be put in food. Yet millions of people are eating these chemicals every day!

By the way, don't be fooled by the use of the term "natural". Insects, insect larvae, monkey guts, and even mercury are all "natural" and are just a few of the natural items that end up in your food! Eric Schlosser, in his book "Fast Food Nation", sums it up nicely by quoting Terry Acree, a professor of food science technology at Cornell University who says, "A natural flavor is a flavor that's been derived with an out-of-date technology".

Food manufacturers play with your perception of what given words mean and they know that if they can label an additive as "natural", the health conscious label reading consumer is much more likely to purchase it, yet just because something is natural, doesn't mean it's better for you. After all, alcohol, tobacco, marijuana, and cocaine are all natural, but none of them are good for you!

A Typical Example of Hidden Chemicals

To show what is being hidden from us and is right under our nose (literally!), consider these ingredients used in a Burger King strawberry milk shake, but are not disclosed because they are GRAS:

Amyl acetate, amyl butyrate, amyl valerate, anethol, anisyl formate, benzyl acetate, benzyl isobutyrate, butyric acid, cinnamyl isobutyrate, cinnamyl valerate, cognac essential oil, diacetyl, dipropyl ketone, ethyl butyrate, ethyl cinnamate, ethyl heptanoate, ethyl lactate, ethyl methylphenylglycidate, ethyl Nitrate, ethyl propionate, ethyl valerbate, heliotropin, hydroxyphrenyl-2butanone (10% solution in alcohol), a-ionone, isobutyl anthranilate, isobutyl butrate, lemon essential oil, maltol, 4-methylacetophenone, methyl anthranilate, methyl benzoate, methyl cinnamate, methyl heptine carbonate, methyl naphthyl ketone, methyl salicylate, mint essential oil, neroli essential oil, nerolin, neryl isobutyrate, orris butter, phenethyl alcohol, rose, rum ether, g-undecalactone, vanillin, and solvent (3)!


To make this even more alarming, the ingredients listed here are only for the "strawberry flavoring" in a Burger King milk shake, this doesn't include the ice cream or anything else in the shake! Can you imagine what the ingredient list for Neapolitan ice cream would look? Our liver must process all of this, and when our liver becomes overworked, these chemicals can end up in our blood stream, with almost unlimited access to the cells of our bodies, as well as placing strain on our detoxification systems!


"Can't Just Eat One" Syndrome

Addicting Food Have you ever reached for a bag of chips while thinking, "I really don't need these, but I'll just eat a few," only to end up reaching back in the bag over and over until you reach the bottom? Or how about a tub of ice cream - ever started out nibbling away thinking "I'll just have a few bites," and next thing you know you're scraping the bottom of the carton? Don't feel bad if you do because, unless you were eating 100% certified organic chips or ice cream, you most likely fell prey to the chemical tricks food manufacturers are playing on your body and your wallet!

Scientists Have Figured Out How to Trigger Food Cravings

It turns out that food scientists have determined how to manipulate the part of your brain that controls food cravings called the appestat. The appestat constantly monitors the nutrient content of you blood and only when fifty-one specific nutrients are present at their proper levels will an individual feel entirely full and satisfied. Food scientists have found that by adding or subtracting some of these nutrients, they can manipulate your sense of hunger and satiety.

While the research is still incomplete, it's believed that that adding excess fat, sugar and salt to a food tends to make people overeat (4). This is why both sugar and salt show up in some of the strangest places. For example, would you have expected to find sugar in sandwich meats? Have a look at the ingredients on the package in your refrigerator and look for words ending with "ose". Anything ending with this suffix is a sugar. While you're at it, look at your catsup bottle, your canned soups, medicines and even cigarettes! How sweet of them to play such tricks on your appetite centers. If you are overweight, you are more than likely one of millions of victims of chemical manipulation!

So how effective have the food manufacturers been with their chemical games? Currently, approximately 90% of the money that Americans spend on food is used to buy processed foods (3). When you follow the advances in food science, there is loose parallel in how much fast food Americans are purchasing and the amount of chemical-trickery scientists do to our food.


"Fast Food Sales Soared from $6 Billion in 1970 to $110 Billion in 2000"
Consider that in 1970, when the food sciences were comparatively undeveloped, Americans spent approximately $6 billion a year on fast foods. By the year 2000, scientists had added thousands of new chemical tricks to their arsenal and, with more attractive packaging and advertising campaigns, fast food sales soured to $110 billion! This combination of advertising and chemistry used by fast food manufacturers is so successful that American fast food business tycoons can't resist the opportunity to make billions by poisoning almost every corner of the globe.

As of mid-2000, McDonald's planed on opening 650 restaurants in Asia, 550 in Europe, 350 in Latin America, 200 in the US and another 250 in the rest of the world - a total of 1,500 new restaurants in Asia were planned by 2002! (5). Their strategic combination of marketing and scientific trickery has been so successful that half of Australian children ages 9 and 10 thought that Ronald McDonald knew what kids should be eating; McDonald's has become the favorite food eaten by children in China! (6)

Diagram of country expenditures on health

Table 1:America ranks among the lowest of all the major industrial nations in terms of life expectancy, yet spends significantly more money on health care than any country in the world.



Human beings, armed with some 10,000 taste buds, are thought to have a fairly comprehensive sense of taste (7). While you would think that we would be capable of using this arsenal of taste buds to sniff-out foods of superior nutritional quality to eat, it would appear that chemical science has put up an effective smoke screen. Approximately 50% of the American population have eaten themselves into some degree of obesity and semi-starvation by consuming nutritionally inadequate foods!

If that's not enough, the US spends more money on health care than any other nation with each person averaging over $4,000 per year in medical expenses. Yet the US ranks last for life expectancy among all industrialized nations, is far from being the healthiest nation (Table 1). This is not hard to believe when you consider that in the year 2000, retail pharmacies in the US filled 3 billion prescriptions - that's hardly what I would consider a healthy nation (8)! Then when you take into account that there were 281 million people living in the US in 2000, with 3 billion prescriptions being filled, that's almost 11 prescriptions per person. This means, for every person who doesn't buy a prescription, there is someone else getting 22 filled each year!

With prescription drug sales amounting to $145 billion in the year 2000 alone (9), and an additional $20.8 billion coming from over the counter retail sales (10), it would appear that the chemicals used in commercial farming, fast food restaurants and processed food are contributing a great deal of money to the medical and drug industry - all one big happy family of multi-billionaires!


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