(no title)
ryanmerket | 7 months ago
* It does not show human harm, only cellular disruption.
* It uses an unnatural exposure method.
* It builds on epidemiological correlations that may be reverse causality.
* It does not account for systemic factors, metabolism, or adaptive responses.
seec|7 months ago
As you say I believe the correlation is reverse causality. It's much more likely that people who consume stuff with "artificial" sweetener are already at risk for stroke than the other way around.
If you don't have weight/cardio problems it is weird to consume "sugar-free" stuff and associated because they are almost always worse tasting than the real deal.
To have any importance they would need a big population sample and correct for already existing risks for stroke and I believe they would find that this stuff has very little impact, if any.
But as always, it doesn't cost much to limit consumption, so why not?
amanaplanacanal|7 months ago
OutOfHere|7 months ago
IAmBroom|7 months ago
Lots of things kill cancer cells in petri dishes that have proven to be useless as medicines.
And your repeated ad hominim "rando on the internet" is counter to good dialectic.