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Is sugar bad for you?
The white crystalline substance we know of as
sugar is an unnatural substance produced by
industrial processes (mostly from sugar cane
or sugar beets) by refining it down to pure
sucrose, after stripping away all the vitamins,
minerals, proteins, enzymes and other beneficial
nutrients.
What is left is a concentrated unnatural substance
which the human body is not able to handle,
at least not in anywhere near the quantities
that is now ingested in today's accepted lifestyle.
Sugar is addictive. The average American now
consumes approximately 115 lbs. of sugar per
year. This is per man, woman and child.
The biggest reason sugar does more damage than
any other poison, drug or narcotic is twofold:
(a) It is considered a "food" and ingested in
such massive quantities, and
(b) The damaging effects begin early, from the
day a baby is born and is fed sugar in its formula.
Even mothers milk is contaminated with it if
the mother eats sugar, and
(c) Practically 95% of people are addicted to
it to some degree or other.
Sugar is eaten to excess
It has been said that the criteria as to whether
a substance (any substance) is harmful or medically
beneficial is the quantity in which it is used
in the human body. To point to a dramatic illustration:
we all know that the venom of a rattlesnake,
a cobra, water moccasin, coral, and other venomous
snakes is deadly to the human system. There
are some snakes whose bite is so deadly it can
cause death within a matter of seconds. Nevertheless,
even snake venom, deadly as it is, has been
used for therapeutic, medical purposes when
used in minute quantities.
Sugar is an unnatural chemical
Why is sugar so devastating to our health? One
reason is it is pure chemical and (like heroin)
through refining has been stripped of all the
natural food nutrition that it originally had
in the plant itself.
Heroin and sugar are arrived at by very similar
processes of refinement. In producing heroin,
the opium is first extracted from the poppy:
The opium is then refined into morphine. The
chemists then went to work on morphine and further
refined it into heroin, proclaiming they had
"discovered" a wonderful new pain-killer that
was non-addictive. So they said.
Similarly, sugar is first pressed as a juice
from the cane (or beet) and refined into molasses.
Then it is refined into brown sugar, and finally
into strange white crystals C12H22O, that are
an alien chemical to the human system.
Sugar is addictive A second reason that
sugar is so harmful is that like heroin it is
addictive, and being delectable and seductive
to the taste, it is also habit forming. Starting
with sugar in the baby's formula, people not
only develop a strong taste for sugar but an
insatiable craving for it so that they never
seem to get enough of this poison.
Slow but insidious A third reason is
that the damage sugar does is slow and insidious.
It takes years before it ruins your pancreas,
your adrenal glands, throws your whole endocrine
system out of kilter and produces a huge list
of damage.
Foods are loaded with sugar A fourth
reason is the outrageous amounts of sugar civilized
nations consume. Americans in particular are
told how they are the best fed and best nourished
people on the face of the earth. If we are talking
about processed junk food - this is true.
If you examine the "foods" in any supermarket
more closely and start reading labels, you will
find just about everything contains sugar. Most
of the foods are loaded with it - from cereals,
to soups, to ketchup, to hotdogs. Even flue-cured
tobacco can contain as much as 20% sugar by
weight. Some cereals are as much as 50% sugar.
List of Damages We have stated that sugar
is deleterious to your health: that it is more
damaging than all other narcotics combined;
that it is a long term chemical poison. Just
what damage does sugar do to the human body?
The list is endless.
When we talk about sugar, we are including bad
nutrition as a whole, since anyone who indulges
in sugar has bad dietary habits per se.
1. Sugar is by far the leading cause of dental
deterioration - cavities in teeth, bleeding
gums, failure of bone structure, and loss of
teeth.
2. Sugar is the main cause of diabetes, hyperglycemia
and hypoglycemia.
3. It is either a significant or contributory
cause of heart disease, arteriosclerosis, mental
illness, depression, senility, hypertension,
cancer.
4. It has an extremely harmful effect in unbalancing
the endocrine system and injuring its component
glands such as the adrenal glands, pancreas
and liver, causing the blood sugar level to
fluctuate widely. It has a number of other extremely
damaging effects on the human body.
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