- cross-posted to:
- world@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- world@lemmy.world
the comments on this post right here is highlighting what I love about this community, and why I’m perfectly okay not going back to reddit. everyone is talking about risk as a percentage, the inherent risk of doing anything (or nothing), the way that dosage determines toxicity, and all sorts of other sane and reasonable things to say in the face of something like this. No calls to ban aspartame or jail the manufacturers, no one is trying to say that artificial sweeteners are a joint UN-alien collaborative effort to establish mind control, no tribalism, no name calling, no vague fear-mongering about “chemicals” in the generic case, just reasonable discussion acknowledging that we live in a world where we make constant risk-reward decisions and that everyone has to die of something eventually.
9 to 14 cans of diet soda per day? I could see how safe those limits are but I could also easily think of a lot of people nowadays who could easily surpass those. By then there would be a lot of other stuff they’re already consuming that could also be detrimental to their health.
That’s daily, like every day drinking that much.
And that’s just when it starts to be a health risk. As in non-zero, but still low.
And that’s if you are 158 lbs.
Depending on their weight, the average adult would have to drink nine to 14 cans of aspartame-containing soda daily to exceed the limit and potentially face health risks.
I really wish the headlines would lead with this information because I’m already tired of people telling me about the link to cancer every time I crack open a diet pepsi
Ah yes, just like the safe levels of lead.
Heavy metals are a pretty special case, which is why they have always been categorized as their own thing.
The only reason we have “safe levels” of lead is because it’s a naturally occurring metal that’s found in trace amounts literally everywhere.
Also fun fact radon decays into lead, often lint traps and clothing have (barely) detectable levels of lead above what you’d expect since dryers are often in basements which all have some level of radon.
You could drive yourself up a wall trying to completely eliminate your exposure to lead.
The dose makes the poison after all!