Qballer wrote:cyanide wrote:If your mom buys pop for you
"catsup" and "pop"... I still don't know why I find that so amusing
I'm starting to think you're high when you're on the forums.
Qballer wrote:cyanide wrote:If your mom buys pop for you
"catsup" and "pop"... I still don't know why I find that so amusing
Axel wrote: You can buy the crystal lite singles, which are drink mixes for a single bottle. Just pour it in and shake. There's so many different flavors, I don't think you could ever run out of different drinks (raspberry lemonade is my current fav).
I mean isn't it as bad as something like Fruit Punch (which has also a decent amount of sugar plus has quite some artificial flavouring)? Though I do recall someone I knew that drank this and were diabetic. Is the artificial sweetener stuff they put in the same as that artificial sweetener stuff that diabetic people put in their coffee or whatever?
Anything that says 'drink' instead of 'juice' is crap
Mofo wrote:On a side note, I want to ask is Crystal Lite actually a good supplement though? I mean isn't it as bad as something like Fruit Punch (which has also a decent amount of sugar plus has quite some artificial flavouring)? Though I do recall someone I knew that drank this and were diabetic. Is the artificial sweetener stuff they put in the same as that artificial sweetener stuff that diabetic people put in their coffee or whatever?
Wikipedia wrote:Some experts/scientists believe that the metabolism of aspartame does not damage the body because: (a) the quantity of methanol produced is too small to disrupt normal physiologic processes;methanol and formaldehyde are natural by-products of human metabolism and are safely processed by various enzymes; and (c) there is more methanol in some natural fruit juices and alcoholic beverages than is derived from aspartame ingestion.[15][16]
Other experts/scientists believe that (a) fruit juices and alcoholic beverages contain protective chemicals such as ethanol that block conversion of methanol into formaldehyde, while beverages with aspartame contain no "protective factors";exposure to very low levels of methanol and formaldehyde have been proven to cause chronic toxicity in humans; and (c) the low levels of methanol and formaldehyde in natural human metabolism are tightly-controlled and small increases above these levels can contribute to chronic poisoning.[17][18]
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