Soda and Diet Soda: Household Poisons

We all know soda and diet soda aren’t exactly good for us.  Pretty much in the same way that any sugar filled treat isn’t good for us right? Fatally wrong. Soda, yes, even diet soda, is one of the most harmful substances that you could possibly fill your form with, yet people still down the stuff like a dehydrated cactus lapping at a single drop of water. Even the cans that soda normally come in are incredibly harmful. The truth is that even a single gulp of soda is like a 120 mph head on collision with a brick wall for your organs.  Need an extra push to kick your soda habit? Do yourself a favor and read on.

 

Why do People Drink Soda?

If everyone knows soda is bad for them, why do millions of people still tilt their heads back and indulge?  The answer is simple: it’s easy.  Soda is tasty, cheap, convenient, and EVERYWHERE! No matter where you go you’re bound to see an advertisement for some type of can or bottle of sugary satisfaction.  There’s a reason advertisements exist, and it’s not for aesthetics:  Advertising works!

Your brain is constantly processing every minute detail of information that your senses even remotely capture.  Whether you remember it or not, all of this information is stored in your brain.  If a Mountain Dew advertisement steps into your peripheral vision for even a moment it seeps into the murky depths of your mind and the next time your friend even mentions the word ‘mountain’ or ‘dew’ – BAM!  Your synapses fire, a connection is made to the instantaneous glance of the Mountain Dew advertisement you saw earlier and your mouth begins to water.  Why does your mouth water?  Because you are addicted.

Related Article: Aspartame…Miracle Sweetner or Deathly Toxin

Soda is almost entirely water, sugar and caffeine, and sugar and caffeine happen to be two of the most addictive substances on the planet, nearly equal in their biological sway to heroin and meth.  Consumption of sugar and caffeine are associated with a whole slew of attractive words like ‘binge,’ ‘craving,’ and ‘withdrawal.’

But that’s okay, people can become addicted to anything, whether it be carrots, television, or sex, so what’s the big deal?

 

The Big Deal: Soda Vs. Diet Soda

Soda and diet soda each have their own disgusting face that the advertisements hide, but let’s start with good ol’ regular soda first.

Dr. Mercola explains what happens within an hour of drinking a soda:

Within the first 10 minutes,10 teaspoons of sugar hit your system. This is 100 percent of your

recommended daily intake, and the only reason you don’t vomit as a result of the overwhelming sweetness is because phosphoric acid cuts the flavor.

Within 20 minutes, your blood sugar spikes, and your liver responds to the resulting insulin burst by turning massive amounts of sugar into fat.

Within 40 minutes, caffeine absorption is complete; your pupils dilate, your blood pressure rises, and your livers dumps more sugar into your bloodstream.

Around 45 minutes, your body increases dopamine production, which stimulates the pleasure centers of your brain – a physically identical response to that of heroin, by the way.

After 60 minutesyou’ll start to have a sugar crash.

Drug goes in, pleasure comes out, then CRASH! So you drink some more. Compared to the physiological effects of a simple serving of soda, cannabis suddenly doesn’t sound so bad after all.

Related Article: Aluminum Cans, Not Just the Soda, Leading to Obesity

The long term effects are far more startling. Let’s take a look at the specifics and scare your desire for soda back into the pit of future diabetes where it came from!

 

Soda

1. What makes soda so deliciously sweet is a huge serving of high fructose corn syrup, a clever name for organ-destroyer.  HFCS has been linked to diabetes more than a few times.  Your chances of developing type 2 diabetes is practically guaranteed with a regular intake of soda.  On top of the whole diabetes fiasco, soda is absolutely useless biologically.  Which brings us to our next point.

2. Soda is useless.  There are absolutely no nutritionally beneficial components to soda, with the exception of a measly 4mg of potassium. Soda excels in one area: expanding your waistline.

3. Soda leads to obesity, a growing trend for the world at large. For each additional serving of soda that you consume you increase your risk for obesity by 1.6 times.  Enough said.

Related Article: The Obese Shall Inherit the Earth

4. Due to a lack of calcium in the diets of people who habitually consume soda, osteoporosis is a serious risk associated with soda consumption.  Even minor soda consumption can lead to bone loss as the large amounts of phosphoric acid found in soda hinders the body’s ability to effectively use calcium.

5. If Mountain Dew can dissolve a rat think about what it does to your body, especially the enamel of your teeth. Soda is about as good for your enamel as staring directly at the midday sun is good for your eyesight. It is even worse for your teeth and causes more tooth decay than traditional hard candy. Sure, soda is cheap, but when’s the last time you only spent a few dollars at the dentist?

6. Drinking soda leads to kidney disease.  All it takes is 2 servings of soda a day and you are automatically added to the long line of people more than likely to be diagnosed with chronic kidney disease. Soda also dramatically increases the rate of formation of kidney stones. It doesn’t take much either.  Just a slight amount of soda consumption is a sure path leading to pain worse than child labor. As a person who has passed a kidney stone before, listen to me and not your tongue; the soda isn’t worth it!

7. Consumption of soda leads to harmful effects on the liver similar to the effects that alcohol has on the liver. When it comes to the liver, soda junkies are no better than alcoholics.

Related Article: Aspartame in Diet Soda Responsible for Destroying Kidney Function

8. An additive in soda called sodium benzoate causes irreparable cell and DNA damage, leading to accelerated aging and age related diseases.

9. Finally, there is a high addiction potential when it comes to soda. As stated above, caffeine and sugar are insanely addictive.  Many researchers are suggesting that sugar to be as controlled as alcohol and tobacco due to its harmful effects on the body and incredibly addictive nature.

At this point you might be thinking “I’m no fool, I dropped soda years back and replaced it with diet soda, the healthy alternative to all my sugary-sweet woes.”  Think again, diet soda is even worse.

 

Diet Soda

A lot of what you read about soda still applies to diet soda.  A common misconception is that diet soda is better for you than regular soda due to being calorie free as it does not contain high fructose corn syrup.  Allow me to explain to you how diet soda is even worse!

1. Although diet soda doesn’t contain high fructose corn syrup, it does contain artificial sweeteners so that your tongue can still get excited.  The most common artificial sweetener used is aspartame, which is closer to a toxin than anything else.  People from all over the world have reported adverse reactions to aspartame and double blind studies verify the results. The toxicological dangers of aspartame are well documented and the general rule of thumb that you will hear from medical professionals regarding the substance is to treat aspartame like a desperate Louis Vuitton wielding female and, “stay far, far away!”

Related Article: Cannabis Cures Cancer and More: A Thorough History and Review of the Evidence

2. Just like regular soda, diet soda is nutritionally useless, containing carbonated water, caramel color (depending on the soda), aspartame, phosphoric acid, potassium citrate, natural flavors, citric acid, and caffeine. There is no conceivable benefit to consuming soda or diet soda besides the fraction of a second pleasure your tongue devilishly persuades your brain is worth the well documented risks.

3. Diet sodas actually make it even MORE likely than regular sodas that you will become obese. There are multiple theories for why this occurs, but the most likely reason is the cravings that diet soda leaves us with.

How could a zero-calorie drink raise your risk of obesity? Researchers have a few theories. Some people may feel that drinking diet soda gives them a “free pass” to eat more foods that may not be so low in calories, thereby leading to weight gain. Another theory posits that the sweet taste of diet pop alerts our digestive system that high-calorie foods are coming. When they don’t, our bodies are confused and our appetite increases in anticipation of the food it’s expecting.

4. Keep in mind that diet soda still contains phosphoric acid so the risk of bone loss is still ever present for diet soda drinkers.

5. Although the pH level (acidity) of diet soda is not as strong as regular soda, it is still extremely acidic, and leads to enamel loss in the same way that soda does.

6. Remember the kidney problems that were associated with regular sodas? Same applies to diet sodas.  Sorry ladies and gentleman, diet soda is not going to fix the kidney stone problem.

7. If you’re fond of dark sodas, I have bad news for you.  Researchers have found that the seemingly harmless caramel coloring found in dark sodas may lead to an increase risk of multiple forms of cancer.

8. Diet sodas even more commonly contain that wretched chemical sodium benzoate.  Again, sodium benzoate causes irreparable cell and DNA damage, leading to accelerated aging and age related diseases. If you’re part of the YOLO fad, maybe soda is for you, otherwise, stop burning your wick at both ends, put down the soda, and ‘live long and prosper.’

Related Article: Green Tea Power: Surprising Health Benefits 

9. To sum up, diet soda involves all the same risks as soda, and is also associated with a higher risk of obesity, greater toxicity due to aspartame, and even greater DNA damage.

 

So what should you drink?

Water, tea, and every so often 100% fruit juice, but not too much as fruit juice contains a hefty amount of sugars, even if they are natural.  Seem like a boring list?  Well guess what?  Doing a crossword puzzle in the comfort of your home might be boring but it beats dying of cancer as an obese diabetic 50 year old on a semi-sterile hospital bed.

Besides, tea is a world of variation regarding taste and physical effect.  I guarantee there are at minimum 100 diferent types of tea out there that you will discover and fall eternally in love with, if only you make a conscious effort and kick the soda habit. One of my favorite brands of tea is Yogi.

Make no mistake, soda is an addictive drug, and it will take time to wean yourself off of it.  Once you do though, you will wonder how you ever stomached the horrid junk in the first place.

 

Source List:

Wondergressive: Aluminum Cans Leading to Obesity

Forbes: What Makes a TV Commercial Memorable and Effective?

Princeton University: Sugar Can be Addictive

National Geographic: Caffeine Addiction is a Mental Disorder

PubMed.gov: Brain Mechanisms of Sweetness

Dr. Mercola: What Happens to Your Body After Drinking Coke

High Fructose Corn Syrup and Diabetes

PubMed.gov: Consumption of Sweetened Beverages and Intakes of Fructose and Glucose Predict Type 2 Diabetes Occurrence

Soda Nutrition Facts

Wondergressive: The Obese Shall Inherit the Earth

PubMed.gov: The Role of Sugar-sweetened Beverage Consumption in Adolescent Obesity

PubMed.gov: Short-term effects on bone turnover of replacing milk with cola beverages

WebMD: Soda and Osteoporosis

Scientific American: Can Mountain Dew Really Dissolve a Mouse Carcass?

The Journal of Contemporary Dental Practice

PubMed.gov: Carbonated soft drinks and dental caries in the primary dentition

PubMed.gov: Effect of cola consumption on urinary biochemical and physicochemical risk factors

PubMed.gov: Changes in urinary magnesium, citrate, and oxalate levels due to cola consumption

Kidney Stones and Uretral Stones

PubMed.gov: Long term nutritional intake and the risk for non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD)

PubMed.gov: The evaluation of the genotoxicity of two food preservatives: sodium benzoate and potassium benzoate

Wondergressive: Aging Process is Similar to Replicating CDs

Time: Should Sugar be Regulated Like Alcohol and Tobacco? 

PubMed.gov: Aspartame ingestion and headaches: a randomized crossover trial

PubMed.gov: Adverse reactions to aspartame

Reported Aspartame Toxicity Effects

Men’s Health New: Science Vs Soda

WebMD: Drinking More Diet Soda, Gain More Weight?

Health Side Effects of Diet Soda

Pop and Cavaties

PubMed.gov: The evaluation of the genotoxicity of two food preservatives: sodium benzoate and potassium benzoate

Wondergressive: Green Tea Power

Yogi Tea

The 5 R’s: Refuse, Reduce, Reuse, Recycle, Rot

 

Here’s something none of you probably figured out by now: I’m kind of a hippie (cue SarcMark). Not in the no-showers and Woodstock kind of way, more like the go-green, hate-chemicals and make-things-from-scratch way. I love recycling. I’m a huge believer. At my previous workplace, shocked that there were no recycling bins in an environment that used so much paper, I promptly implemented a couple. Can we pat me on the back for that one? Let’s pat me on the back.

Recently an associate whose intelligence I hold in high esteem told me he didn’t believe in recycling. “What?!” I demanded, aghast. In this day and age, who doesn’t believe in the practice? Did he want us all to drown in our own litter? Did he never see that episode of The Magic School Bus?! He explained that he’d done some research into the matter some time ago and discovered that all the trash is sifted through anyways, since there’s money to be made in the things we carelessly toss out. Somewhat mollified, I shrugged it off and determined to do some research myself.

My own findings lead me in a slightly different direction.

Modern day recycling is an ideology that was really pushed in the 80’s, with the voyage of the Mobro 4000, a garbage barge that sailed from New York to Belize with narry an empty landfill in sight to dump its load onto along the way:

Wandering all the way from New York to North Carolina, Alabama, Louisiana, Texas, Mexico, and Belize, no community wanted to let it unload.

This sparked the outcry for recycling and the fear that the earth couldn’t sustain all of our trash. As noble as the intention may have been, the numbers seem to tell a different story. In his methodical article, “Recycling and How It Scams American,” Darin Tripoli states:

Our biggest mistake is thinking that recycling saves energy. In actuality it increase energy use in transporting, sorting and cleaning. You cannot recycle without the latter mentioned uses of energy. It is a fact that it cost more to recycle a plastic water bottle than to produce a new one. So why do we recycle if it is at the cost our economy? Is feeling good enough of a reason to recycle? Being misinformed is one thing but I know that we do not justify doing heroin because it makes one feel good.

[…]

It cost our municipal system an average of fifty to sixty dollars a ton to pick up unsorted garbage and dump it in a landfill. It cost about one hundred twenty to one hundred eighty dollars a ton to pick up recycled garbage.

What bothered me more than the inflated costs with limited to no return on investment was thinking about how easily corporations ditched their responsibilities to the environment and foisted them onto consumers instead. Too often, we think of recycling as the greenest way to live and forget that before that should come reducing our mindless consumption and reusing what is already available. The romantic in me loves glass bottles and the practical side of me doesn’t fully understand why we stopped using them.

Heather Rogers’ excellent article in Trash (the book) titled, “Message in a Bottle” tells of how, in the 70s, corporations and bottlers convinced Americans that the onus was on us to Keep America Beautiful (KAB), rather than on them for implementing sustainable practices. The KAB campaign

downplayed industry’s role in despoiling the earth […and] was a pioneer in sowing confusion about the environmental impact of mass production and consumption.

Fun Fact: did you know the KAB campaign was

founded by the American Can Company, Owens-Illinois Glass, who invented the disposable bottle, along with more than 20 other companies who benefit from disposables? That the entire campaign was paid for by corporations shifting the responsibility for littering from the manufacturers who should be taking returns, to the public? (Lloyd Alter)

That rubs me the wrong way. I’d have no problem buying my liquids in reusable bottles and returning them when they’re empty. It’s a great practice that is not only sustainable, economical and expends less energy than the current methods, but it’s also great for building communities and instilling friendlier camaraderie among neighbors. I’d like a return to companies that understand where they fit into the circle of producer responsibility, where they can go back to creating packaging designed to be taken back (Recycling is Bullshit; Make Nov. 15 Zero Waste Day, not America Recycles Day).

Again, I’m not against the idea of recycling—in fact, I’m having a hard time raging against the dying of this light, but I believe in the words of Maya Angelou:

Do the best you can until you know better. Then, when you know better, do better.

Although it seems daunting at first, I think the Johnson family’s model is a great one to aspire to. I first saw this video about two years ago, and it has stuck with me ever since. It bears watching. I know, I know. The knee-jerk reaction to an embedded video is usually:

aintnobodygottimeforthat

…but I would highly encourage it. I’d never lie to you, readers. You trust me, right?

 

 

Sources:

The Magic School Bus (Recycling Episode)

Federal Reserve Bank of Boston: What a Waste

Recycling and How it Scams America

Trash (Alphabet City)

Trash: the Book

Recycling is Bullshit