Why 'natural' food products aren't nutritious
Food for thought...
The term 'natural' is often far from nutritious.
Animal tissues, insect larvae and beavers anal and urine secretions are just a small selection of the sickening substances pumped into the food products that are promoted as containing 'natural' properties, yet despite this 'diet friendly' facade, manipulative manufacturers continue to convince the health conscious that they're about to consume a sensible food source by using clever terms to tempt them into purchasing their products.
Before your brain is bombarded by a carefully constructed advertising campaign that has been created to con you into parting with your pennies, remember that tobacco, alcohol, cocaine and marijuana are also 'natural', but none are necessarily 'good' or 'healthy' additions to anyone's daily diet, or lifestyle...
Top tip: instead of instantly assuming that the ingredients in your chosen food or drink source are innocent because they claim to be natural, low fat or bursting with vital vitamins and minerals, take a moment to question what makes them natural, what has been added in order to compensate for their low fat content (an abundance of added salt and/or sugar) and why the product's manufacturers have felt it necessary to pump 'added vitamins and minerals' into a 'nutritious' product that should already be bursting with beneficial nutrients - real, nutritious food does not require anything to be 'added' to it if its a healthy food source.
The term 'natural' is often far from nutritious.
Animal tissues, insect larvae and beavers anal and urine secretions are just a small selection of the sickening substances pumped into the food products that are promoted as containing 'natural' properties, yet despite this 'diet friendly' facade, manipulative manufacturers continue to convince the health conscious that they're about to consume a sensible food source by using clever terms to tempt them into purchasing their products.
Before your brain is bombarded by a carefully constructed advertising campaign that has been created to con you into parting with your pennies, remember that tobacco, alcohol, cocaine and marijuana are also 'natural', but none are necessarily 'good' or 'healthy' additions to anyone's daily diet, or lifestyle...
Top tip: instead of instantly assuming that the ingredients in your chosen food or drink source are innocent because they claim to be natural, low fat or bursting with vital vitamins and minerals, take a moment to question what makes them natural, what has been added in order to compensate for their low fat content (an abundance of added salt and/or sugar) and why the product's manufacturers have felt it necessary to pump 'added vitamins and minerals' into a 'nutritious' product that should already be bursting with beneficial nutrients - real, nutritious food does not require anything to be 'added' to it if its a healthy food source.
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