I saw a commercial yesterday for this New Diet Pepsi Max.
Call me pathetic, call me a pessimist call me whatever you like but the fact remains that this sugary goodness no matter what the label or ingredients say is just plain aweful for you as well as your body. Now I know that I have a little weight that I could stand to lose but my wife and I have completely stopped buying soda for our home. Unless we go out to eat and try the water and it is nasty will we ever consider purchasing a sugar laden drink such as this.
Supposedly this soda has something to make you even more pumped up when you drink it. It contains Ginseng and other things because I know that so many of you people drink Pepsi for its health qualities.
I challenge anyone who is having trouble with their weight to cut out the soda and you will be amazed how soon you will not only feel better but also how much quicker you will drop the pounds.
Here are a few health facts that I wanted to share about soda for those of you who are interested.
1.) The main sweetener in soda — high-fructose corn syrup — can increase fats in the blood called triglycerides, which raises the risk of heart problems, diabetes and other health woes.
2.) Over the long term the effects of Sodas are devastating to the body. Acidity, sugars and artificial sweeteners can shorten your life. In fact, it takes 32 glasses of alkaline water at a pH of 9 to neutralize the acid from one 12 oz. cola or soda.
3.)
With obesity reaching near epidemic proportions and life expectancy decreasing, solutions are being desperately sought to improve an alarming trend. While the lack of exercise and heredity is easily blamed, one item is consistently overlooked – America's carbonated beverage consumption.
The Average American consumes over 53 gallons per year of carbonated beverages. With a 32 oz soda (the 'large' size in most restaurants) being 320 calories, this means each year an American will guzzle approximately 67,840 calories per year in carbonated beverages. Based on a 2000 calorie diet, this would mean that the number of recommended calories for an entire month would be filled by just carbonated beverages, and provide near nil nutritional value.
With current nutritional information suggesting each person drink 8 glasses of water a day, it becomes increasingly concerning when, according to a Beverage Marketing Press Release, one in every four beverages consumed in America today is a soft drink. In fact Americans drink more soda than they do water on a daily basis.
(Now as with anything else I talk about please understand that it is your freedom of choice whether or not to take this post for what it's worth. I just have never heard of any diet or health book recommending drinking soda as a good source of nutrients)


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