Thanks for your response! Soft drinks companies do not actually state much information in what they put in their contents, how would a consumer know the amount of impurities within the “zero sugar” drinks? And how do we advice those who indulge in them, since they claim that those are as good as drinking water - since there’s “zero sugar”?
It's more about what those artificial sweeteners can do, biochemically. How they can signal other alternative pathways in the body. Like I said, the jury's still out on those.
But why people would want to pump themselves full of it is beyond me.
Maybe they're just addicted to the sugar in the first place?
Well… The jury’s still out on what artificial sweeteners can do, no? Plain water would still be better… But we’d also have to consider how much impurities there are inside there.
Thanks for your response! Soft drinks companies do not actually state much information in what they put in their contents, how would a consumer know the amount of impurities within the “zero sugar” drinks? And how do we advice those who indulge in them, since they claim that those are as good as drinking water - since there’s “zero sugar”?
It's more about what those artificial sweeteners can do, biochemically. How they can signal other alternative pathways in the body. Like I said, the jury's still out on those.
But why people would want to pump themselves full of it is beyond me.
Maybe they're just addicted to the sugar in the first place?
How about zero sugar soft drinks?
Well… The jury’s still out on what artificial sweeteners can do, no? Plain water would still be better… But we’d also have to consider how much impurities there are inside there.