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mrleinad | 2 years ago

> And given the alternative is sugar

No, the alternative is to learn to enjoy bitter beverages. We don't need sweeteners.

discuss

order

serf|2 years ago

>the alternative is to learn to enjoy bitter beverages.

people seek replacements when things they like become scarce, not alternatives.

asking the public-at-large to wholly change preference (especially when the preference is compounded by biological bias in the way we experience taste..) will never be effective without extenuating circumstance or market control of some sort.

I sympathize with your point -- people should try to enjoy things without a lot of excess sweetness -- but it doesn't align with reality.

xorbax|2 years ago

People should think what I want them to think! After the FDA tells me how to tell them what I want them to think

zer8k|2 years ago

You do realize you can sweeten more than beverages right? What if a diabetic wants a cookie? Or ice cream?

This is why hazard ratios are important.

mrleinad|2 years ago

> What if a diabetic wants a cookie? Or ice cream?

Diabetics can eat cookies and ice cream, they just need to shoot themselves with insulin afterwards. It's having too much of it the problem.

Besides, if something is bad for you, you avoid it. Period. There are infinite other flavors in life to make it all about that single one. "But I want it" is not a reasonable argument.

Clamchop|2 years ago

Aspartame and most sweeteners fall apart at high temperatures, limiting their usefulness for a lot of foodstuffs, like cookies.

Which is a shame in my opinion.

xen0|2 years ago

Like alcohol?

mrleinad|2 years ago

I don't understand your point, but alcohol is not safe either.