Soda and sugary beverages make up 15 to 25 percent of the daily recommended caloric intake for children aged 2 to 19. That’s almost 300 calories a day and 7 trillion calories a year of sugar, one of cancer’s favorite substances.
Keeping Soda from Kids
Dr. Steven Gortmaker, Director of the Harvard School of Public Health Prevention Research Center, recently presented these statistics at the Obesity Society’s Annual Scientific Meeting in San Antonio.
Amidst protests from consumer rights die-hards and the beverage lobby, Gortmaker is urging the government to keep away sodas and sugary drinks from children, in the vein of Boston’s 2004 ban of selling sodas at public schools.
According to Gortmaker, the kids’ calorie consumption has gone down by 45 calories,
Beverage Lobby Doesn’t Care
Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s ban on the sale of sugary drinks in containers bigger than 16 ounces in New York City is still fresh on the public’s mind.
The beverage lobby - with the $24 billion in sales made to children fresh on their mind - expressed its displeasure thusly:
Soda and Sugary Drinks Linked to Diseases
The beverage lobby is not wrong in stating that not one single source of calories is responsible, but they must be part of the dialogue in helping Americans regain healthy weights.
Sodas are often sweetened in the United States with GMO corn-derived and mercury-containing high-fructose corn syrup - a sugar that a UCLA study recently pegged as feeding pancreatic cancer cells more rapidly than glucose or sucrose.
Soda may also harnesses another cancer-causing chemical called caramel food coloring, which could be causing lung, liver, and thyroid cancer. What’s more, soda and sugary drinks are linked to obesity on a genetic level.
Parents might think about cutting back, too.
And in the midst of all this trash-talk on soda, people are wondering: Is diet soda bad for you?
Unfortunately, going sugar-free doesn’t help either, since artificial sweeteners feed cancer cells as much as other sugars. Additionally, these artificial sweeteners like aspartame are linked to kidney health decline, heart attack and stroke, obesity, and damaged DNA.
The bottom line? We owe our future generations more than our own instant gratification.
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