I don’t think there is much in coca cola that is very addictive or immediately deadly. I think this story is just some people in Mexico like drinking coca cola.
Some people in Mexico don’t have access to water because of coca cola, so they pretty much don’t have an option. Also diabetes is very bad, I’d say “deadly.”
Fuck Coca Cola.
The original point I was making is that the use of the word ‘addiction’ was incorrect, firstly it throws the blame back onto the Mexicans which is a misdirection and secondly it makes the idea absurd by the comparison of the ill effects of Coca Cola with those of truly addictive hard drugs like heroin, thereby minimising the problem.
Sugar. Particularly HFCS. It’s addictive. And toxic. And Coke is chock full of the stuff. I think we’re only just beginning to understand how bad it is.
Just want to point out that coke in most countries outside the US use cane sugar, and not HFCS. Places here import Mexican Coke specifically because enough people want the “real sugar” version.
Just want to point that that Actually, it doesn’t.
Not interested enough in the topic to actually watch the video but from the first seconds and description: Sucrose is made up of 50% fructose and 50% glucose. You can split it apart, producing inverted sugar, with nothing but water and heat, you can help that along a lot by adding acid, of which there’s a decent amount in coke. Any bottle of coke, even if made with 100% straight sucrose, will contain detectable levels of separate fructose and glucose before it hits the shelves.
The issue with HFCS btw is the “high fructose” part, fructose goes straight to the liver and gets turned into fatty tissue: At equal sweetness, HFCS is metabolically more dangerous, especially if you never dig into your fat reserves, than sucrose. inverted sugar is equally as good or bad as sucrose. It’d get split apart in your stomach with acid, in your mouth with enzymes, you name it.
For you, right on cue:
Yes but harmful on the scale of foodstuffs where the headline was mimicking opiate level.
Diabetes is pretty expensive for a community