Pepsi removing aspartame from their products. -

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A meeting in Geneva June 8 - 17, of the Joint FAQ/WHO Expert Committee on Food Additives was held to evaluate certain food additives, ingredients, and flavouring agents.

It was decided that Steviol glycosides be approved. and orders to England are no longer being confiscated. A study is pending to make sure it doesn't lower blood sugar in non-diabetics. Stevia has always been known to help in the metabolism of sugar, thus being beneficial to diabetics.

Diabetic specialist, H. J. Roberts, M.D., FACP, says aspartame (NutraSweet/Equal/Spoonful, E951, Canderel) can actually precipitate diabetes, aggravates and simulates diabetic retinopathy and neuropathy, causes diabetics to go into convulsions, and even interacts with insulin. No wonder we have an epidemic of diabetes. Read Larry Hagman's comments on www.dorway.com on how Stevia saved his life when he became diabetic after a liver transplant.

Many may remember that the reinvestigation of Stevia was an amendment to Parliament.

On September 15, 2004, filed in the US District Court for the Northern District of California, were racketeering (RICO) charges against NutraSweet, their spin doctor Dr. Robert Moser, the American Diabetes Association and Monsanto Chemical Company. For the whole story and complete lawsuit see the racketeering banner on http://www.wnho.net"> www.wnho.net Click to see Attorney James Turner, Washington, D.C. explaining how Donald Rumsfeld got aspartame approved when the FDA said NO! www.soundandfury.tv/Pages/Rumsfeld.html

The NutraSweet Titanic has hit the iceberg. Pepsi to remove aspartame

From the Atlanta Journal Constitution 9/21/2004

FOOD/BEVERAGES: Pepsi plans new products

Pepsico is reportedly planning a trio of new products next year. Pepsi One, which was introduced in 1998 using a blend of sweeteners ace-K and aspartame, will be reformulated with sucralose next year, Beverage Digest said, citing bottlers and unidentified sources. Sucralose is marketed by Johnson & Johnson's McNeil Nutritionals unit as Splenda. "Sucralose has become very popular with consumers, and having a diet cola sweetened with that sweetener could prove to have a great deal of consumer appeal," said Beverage Digest Editor John Sicher. Pepsi also is planning to introduce a sparkling Aquafina and a no-calorie or low-calorie flavored water, possibly called Splash, according to the industry publication.

While it is good news the deadly neurotoxic drug aspartame is being withdrawn, it should be of great concern to the public that Sucralose or Splenda is a chlorinated hydrocarbon. H. J. Roberts, M.D. says it can trigger autoimmune disease. He discusses this in his medical text, Aspartame Disease: An Ignored Epidemic, www.sunsentpress.com or 1 800 827 7991 There are several articles about sucralose or Splenda, and the original research on www.wnho.net click on aspartame.

Dr. Betty Martini, Founder, Mission Possible International, 9270 River Club Parkway, Duluth, Georgia 30097 770 242-2599 www.wnho.net and www.dorway.com Aspartame Toxicity Center, www.holisticmed.com/aspartame

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