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http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.co...-coca-cola-frosted-flakes-as-poison-for-kids/
Tom Brady calls out Coca-Cola, Frosted Flakes as “poison for kids”
Posted by Mike Florio on October 12, 2015
Recently, Tom Brady’s personal exercise and diet guru, Alex Guerrero, has come under fire for being, as Boston Magazine dubbed Guerrero, a “glorified snake-oil salesman.” On Monday, Brady defended Guerrero — while also taking aim at a pair of American institutions.
“I disagree with a lot of things that people tell you to do,” Brady said on WEEI. “You’ll probably go out and drink Coca-Cola and think, ‘Oh yeah, that’s no problem.’ Why? Because they pay lots of money for advertisements to think that you should drink Coca-Cola for a living? No, I totally disagree with that. And when people do that, I think that’s quackery. And the fact that they can sell that to kids? I mean, that’s poison for kids. But they keep doing it. And obviously you guys may not have a comment on that because maybe that’s what your belief system is. So you do whatever you want, you live the life you want. . . .
“I think we’ve been lied to by a lot of food companies over the years, by a lot of beverage companies over the years. But we still do it. That’s just America, and that’s what we’ve been conditioned to. We believe that Frosted Flakes is a food. . . . You just keep eating those things, and you keep wondering why we have just incredible rates of disease in our country. No one thinks it has anything to do with what we put in our body.”
Brady’s assault on Coke and Tony the Tiger was sparked by the attack on Guerrero, who once got on the wrong side of the Federal Trade Commission by claiming that a drink called NeuroSafe could help athletes recover from concussions faster. (Russell Wilson approves of this message.)
Brady and Guerrero are now in business together, preaching the power of prevention. It’s quite likely that, after Brady retires from the NFL, he’ll focus on growing that business, persuading athletes and/or their parents to spend a bunch of money for avocado ice cream and other stuff aimed at making the body not break or crack or fray when facing the normal physical forces that come from playing football.
Regardless of whether their methods are effective, plenty of people will fork over plenty of cash in the hopes that there’s a way to counter the realities of basic Newtonian physics, as applied to human bones, tendons, muscles, and ligaments.
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Frosted Flakes are bad…
… cheating is GRRRRRREAT ! ! !
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The cereal is still good as long as you pour Tom Brady’s concussion water on it.
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The problem on both sides of this sort of argument is extremism. Of course what you put into your body affects your health. Food does more than supply calories. On the other hand, no food that we’re legally sold in the USA is either a miracle cure or the devil’s poisonous tool. The FDA and the department of Agriculture aren’t 100% shills for “big food” and aren’t going to allow the public to be poisoned on a massive scale that the scare-mongers would have us believe. On the other hand, there is a wealthy and powerful lobby working the system so that less-than-ideal crap can be put on the shelves of our stores.
So what are we to do? Relax. More water, less soda. More fiber, less fat and sugar. More fruit and veggies, less meat and dairy. It’s not rocket science, and the fuel for the extremism on both sides seems not to be health, but money.
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Maybe if Tom wants to hire a personal chef for every household, we would be healthier.
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Just because he’s starting to sound like Gary Busey doesn’t mean he’s wrong.
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Brady is a FROSTED FAKE
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I was always suspicious of Snap, Crackle and Pop, they were a little too close.
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Beer and pizza, however, is A-OK.
Tom Brady calls out Coca-Cola, Frosted Flakes as “poison for kids”
Posted by Mike Florio on October 12, 2015
Recently, Tom Brady’s personal exercise and diet guru, Alex Guerrero, has come under fire for being, as Boston Magazine dubbed Guerrero, a “glorified snake-oil salesman.” On Monday, Brady defended Guerrero — while also taking aim at a pair of American institutions.
“I disagree with a lot of things that people tell you to do,” Brady said on WEEI. “You’ll probably go out and drink Coca-Cola and think, ‘Oh yeah, that’s no problem.’ Why? Because they pay lots of money for advertisements to think that you should drink Coca-Cola for a living? No, I totally disagree with that. And when people do that, I think that’s quackery. And the fact that they can sell that to kids? I mean, that’s poison for kids. But they keep doing it. And obviously you guys may not have a comment on that because maybe that’s what your belief system is. So you do whatever you want, you live the life you want. . . .
“I think we’ve been lied to by a lot of food companies over the years, by a lot of beverage companies over the years. But we still do it. That’s just America, and that’s what we’ve been conditioned to. We believe that Frosted Flakes is a food. . . . You just keep eating those things, and you keep wondering why we have just incredible rates of disease in our country. No one thinks it has anything to do with what we put in our body.”
Brady’s assault on Coke and Tony the Tiger was sparked by the attack on Guerrero, who once got on the wrong side of the Federal Trade Commission by claiming that a drink called NeuroSafe could help athletes recover from concussions faster. (Russell Wilson approves of this message.)
Brady and Guerrero are now in business together, preaching the power of prevention. It’s quite likely that, after Brady retires from the NFL, he’ll focus on growing that business, persuading athletes and/or their parents to spend a bunch of money for avocado ice cream and other stuff aimed at making the body not break or crack or fray when facing the normal physical forces that come from playing football.
Regardless of whether their methods are effective, plenty of people will fork over plenty of cash in the hopes that there’s a way to counter the realities of basic Newtonian physics, as applied to human bones, tendons, muscles, and ligaments.
----------
Frosted Flakes are bad…
… cheating is GRRRRRREAT ! ! !
--------
The cereal is still good as long as you pour Tom Brady’s concussion water on it.
--------
The problem on both sides of this sort of argument is extremism. Of course what you put into your body affects your health. Food does more than supply calories. On the other hand, no food that we’re legally sold in the USA is either a miracle cure or the devil’s poisonous tool. The FDA and the department of Agriculture aren’t 100% shills for “big food” and aren’t going to allow the public to be poisoned on a massive scale that the scare-mongers would have us believe. On the other hand, there is a wealthy and powerful lobby working the system so that less-than-ideal crap can be put on the shelves of our stores.
So what are we to do? Relax. More water, less soda. More fiber, less fat and sugar. More fruit and veggies, less meat and dairy. It’s not rocket science, and the fuel for the extremism on both sides seems not to be health, but money.
-------
Maybe if Tom wants to hire a personal chef for every household, we would be healthier.
-------
Just because he’s starting to sound like Gary Busey doesn’t mean he’s wrong.
---------
Brady is a FROSTED FAKE
--------
I was always suspicious of Snap, Crackle and Pop, they were a little too close.
--------
Beer and pizza, however, is A-OK.