Banned foods in your plate?
Every day, Americans eat tons of dangerous banned ingredients, and chances are youâre one of them.
I donât mean to scare you, but to simply tell you the truth.
Iâve spent the last 7+ years researching how our food is made, and discovered dark secrets I have to tell the world â" even if it makes me the most HATED expert by the big companies.
Hereâs my top 5 banned ingredients that end up in most plates:
1) Ractopamine (in pork)
Itâs banned in the European Union, China, and Taiwan â" but Consumer Reports found this dangerous drug in 20% of all pork products.
Oh, and as a side note â" recent studies also found that 81% of all supermarket meats in the US are contaminated with antibiotic-resistant bacteria which damage your gut flora and slow down your weight loss.
2) rBGH (in milk)
While Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Israel and all European Union countries banned the use of rBGH, this hormone used to increase cowsâ milk product is still used in all 50 states.
The use of rBGH increases the levels of IGF-1 hormone in the milk by at least 6 folds, increasing risks of various cancers.
3) GMOs (in almost everything)
Over 50 countries require labeling of GMO foods, and many of them banned GMOs altogether.
In the US, GMO foods are NOT labeled â" even if 91% of the population feels like they should be. And because 90% of all soy,corn, canola and sugar (sugar beet) in the US is now GMO, Americans eat their weight in GMO foods each year.
The first-ever lifetime feeding study on the potential health risks of GMOs was published in September 2012. The results of feeding rats GMO corn for two years were very scary:
⢠Some rats developed massive tumors that represent 25% of their body weight
⢠Liver damage was up to 5 times higher in the GMO group than in the non-GMO group
⢠Female rats that ate GMOs had a 3X higher risk of premature death
4) Potassium Bromate (in bread)
Called a cancer threat by the CSPI since 1999, banned from dozens of countries, this ingredient is still used in bread these days.
5) Chloramphenicol (in honey)
This antibiotic used on honey bees has been banned in the US for
years, but can still be found in cheap supermarket honey (along with heavy metals) that comes from China.
The concerning thing is that a recent study found that 75% or more of all the honey in the U.S. may be Chinese honey sold as American honey.
In the meantime, if you'd like to learn more SHOCKING truths about âhealthyâ foods in your pantry, my buddy Nick Pineault gives you some awesome tips here:
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