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Some foods commonly consumed in the US contain ingredients that are banned in other countries. The European Union has banned artificial colors like yellow 5, yellow 6, and red 40 due to potential health risks, especially for children. GMOs are allowed in the US but not in most of Europe. Trans fats found in products like Ritz crackers and Pillsbury biscuits are banned in several European countries. BHT, a chemical found in wheat thins and frosted flakes, is banned in the UK, Japan, and parts of Europe. The FDA has strict guidelines and regularly reviews food additives. It is recommended to choose foods that are closer to their natural state and consider whether they come from a farm or a factory.

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Speaker 0: You trust Costco with your family's dinner, but their meat undergoes a controversial process that's banned in several countries. Speaker 1: Everyone loves Costco chicken or even that rotisserie chicken from Walmart or your favorite grocery store. But what if that label on that rotisserie bird isn't telling you the whole story? What you're about to learn could change the way that you buy protein forever. Costco chicken is beloved and seen as a great deal. I know this. But recent discussions about preservatives, labeling accuracy, and contamination has put that belief at risk. Guys, look. Speaker 2: Costco is facing a lawsuit over its popular rotisserie chickens. A group of shareholders filed the lawsuit against the company over its treatment in raising chickens. Speaker 0: You trust Costco with your family's dinner, but their meat undergoes a controversial process that's banned in several countries. Most shoppers have no idea this is happening right under their noses. The real question isn't what they're doing. It's why they're allowed to do it. You know that famous $5 rotisserie chicken at Costco? The one that's been the same price since Obama was president? Well, there's a juicy secret they don't want you knowing about. Speaker 1: They label it as no preservatives, guys. And this goes hand in hand with Walmart and your probably your favorite grocery store. This is what I would call a huge scandal. There's a reason why those chickens have been four ninety nine since 2009. It's to get you in the store. It's to get you to spend a ton of money, and they've cut a lot of corners to make sure that it's cheap and easy to produce for you. Welcome, guys. My name's Cohen from Riverside Homestead. What I do is I give you guys value. I do the digging so you don't have to do it. So if you appreciate that, hit the thumbs up right now. Let the community know where you're chiming in from, what state, and let me crush your dreams on rotisserie chicken like ugh. Trust me. I know. So watch. This chicken is labeled as no preservatives, guys. And this goes hand in hand with Walmart and your probably your favorite grocery store. This is what I would call a huge scandal. There's a reason why those chickens have been four ninety nine since 2009. It's to get you in the store. It's to get you to spend a ton of money, and they've cut a lot of corners to make sure that it's cheap and easy to produce for you. Welcome, guys. My name's Cohen from Riverside Homestead. What I do is I give you guys value. I do the digging so you don't have to do it. So if you appreciate that, hit the thumbs up right now. Let the community know where you're chiming in from, what state, and let me crush your dreams on rotisserie chicken like ugh. Trust me. I know. So watch. This chicken is labeled as no preservatives, organic, healthy as it gets. We've talked about this before on this channel. Loopholes. Speaker 0: Costco injects every single rotisserie chicken with a phosphate solution before it hits those warming lights. Think you're buying pure chicken? Think again. You're paying for water with a side of poultry. This liquid injection makes each bird weigh significantly more, So you're essentially buying a sponge that's been soaked in chemical juice. Speaker 1: Did you guys know that these chickens are only about six weeks old because of everything that they pump into them? It's a marketing ploy to get you through the door for the cheap chicken and buy everything else. And there's active lawsuits right now. This is especially bred chicken in horrible conditions. Speaker 3: Grown and fattened on likely corn and soy that's GMO to create this chicken in six weeks that you're eating. They take it to a mass slaughter house where they dip it in chlorine and other toxins to make it safe, and it's leaving those residues on the chicken. And this bird isn't just seasoned with normal herbs and spices. They have preservatives in here like sodium phosphate that's linked to liver and kidney damage and carrageenan, which can degrade into polygenin, which is a known inflammatory agent and possible carcinogen. Speaker 1: Yeah. I found information on that from another doctor. Speaker 4: Doctor Tanya, what's one thing you never buy from the grocery store? Rotisserie chicken. Why? The bag the chicken is stored in is plastic, and it leaches chemicals that get into the food when it's sitting under the heat. Most stores inject the chickens with additives so that they can last on the shelf longer. Chickens are often marinated in a preservative solution. We opt for preservative free cosmetics, and then we're eating preservative infested chicken. And carrageenan. This is a chemical that precooked poultry is injected with to make it tender and juicy, but guess what? It can also inflame the gut. Carrageenan is banned in Europe, but not in The United States. Speaker 1: Yet again, another ingredient item banned in other countries, but allowed in The US. I know we love it because it's such a good deal. It's cheap. It's easy. It's taste great. I'm on the struggle bus with you guys on this one, but I'm reading countless articles, discussion about preservatives, labeling accuracy and contamination that has put all this belief at risk. Now I recently was at a Costco filming this right here. I was there. I saw it. It says no added hormones or steroids in a chicken that is fully developed in six weeks. Right there at the bottom, you can see it says no added preservatives. And have you ever wondered why it's in a plastic bag that you can put in your microwave? Microwave safe, plastic bag, put the two and two together. Speaker 3: Right out of the oven stored in a plastic bag. Nobody really knows what type of plastic bag this is, but it's likely a mix of polyethylene terephthalate. Remember that word phthalate? It's a known hormone disruptor, and this is microwave safe. So you're putting hot food into a plastic bag that can leach these hormone disrupting chemicals, and a 117,000,000 of these are eaten each year in The US. So share this video with your friends. Speaker 1: This is what I'm talking about. Hundreds of thousand millions of these chickens are sold in The US a year. This is why you need to share this out. Sorry folks, but they're just cutting too many corners these days. And it comes down to us. And who's gonna suffer? Us. They're gonna make a ton of money. So if you dive into the legal term no preservatives, they found loopholes to where they can actually put this legally. This is where the class action lawsuit or the lawsuit from a couple people in California are like, hold up. Wait a minute, you guys are using this stuff and this is preservatives, but you guys are saying it's no preservatives. In short, the processing agents that they're using can be deemed not to be called preservatives. Oh yeah, you're getting something with no preservatives, organic as it gets. Yet at the end of the day, you and I would look at that cross eyed and be like, Yeah, what they're using works the same way. It's not what you think it is. That's just what it is. I'm not sure if you guys have seen what these large scale poultry processing facilities look like, but it's not happy chickens walking around a field eating green grass and bugs. Think about the cross contamination that occurs and what safeguards exist and where they fail. For certain that these huge plants they fail. Great thing for Costco is they can scale. They can pump out millions of birds in six weeks and give it to us for a low price even with them losing money. That's right. Like I said, scammedemic kind of they will take a loss on this because they're producing at such a large scale and cutting corners just to get you through the door for that $4 and 99 rotisserie chicken so that you put hundreds of dollars of their stuff in your cart and check out. Other stores, Walmart, other grocery stores, they have caught on to this. They know what Costco found out. They're all doing the same thing. This is information that you need to consider. Speaker 5: Alright, guys. Here are three scary facts about Costco chicken that'll hopefully make you never buy this shit ever again. Alright. So I had to move on over to Lowe's to show you part two of this video. So they start by bathing the chicken in chlorine. They actually put it in a chlorine bath, and it soaks in this chlorine for about thirty minutes. Why does that and should that matter to you? I'm gonna tell you. Next thing they do is they inject the chicken with a chemical compound called TSP. It's trisodium phosphate. Guys, I'm just at Lowe's pulling this stuff off the shelves. This is crazy. I mean, this is the shit that you're allowing into your body. Read the warning label on this and tell me that this is a good idea to ingest in the human body. And then the last thing, which is I don't know if it's scarier than the other two things. They're all really bad. But they they let the chicken sit in these plastic bags, and they sit there for days on end, hours, days, whatever. It's sitting in your fridge for probably a long time. There are microplastics being released into the chicken from the plastic bags that are getting into your body, and it is unbelievably bad for you. Mean, there's microplastics showing up in human hearts, in in in men's testicles. Like, it's really, really bad, guys. So here's the deal. Everyone's gonna ask me, what do I do? Buy your chickens local. Go to your local farmer's market. Go to your local farms. They are a little bit more expensive, so just eat less or go or or just be resourceful and find deals. But stop buying this shit because it's literally killing you. Speaker 1: When I go to Home Depot and I pull TSP off the shelves, what kind of chemical is that? Speaker 6: So when you grab TSP at Home Depot, you're holding trisodium phosphate. It's a heavy duty cleaner, often used to degrease and prep surfaces before painting. Powerful stuff. Just use it with care. Speaker 1: What's the caution label say? Speaker 6: The caution label on TSP usually warns about skin and eye irritation. So gloves and goggles are a must. It'll also say not to inhale the dust and to keep it away from kids. Basically, respect the power and you'll be good. Speaker 1: What if you eat it? Speaker 6: If you ingest TSP, it's no joke. It can cause serious irritation. Think burns in your mouth, throat and stomach. The label will tell you to seek medical help immediately. No waiting. Speaker 1: So yeah, definitely not a seasoning. Speaker 1: But if you go down the rabbit hole on that one, it's gonna say that it's a different type and it's the safe version and the FDA would never allow that specific one in your food. Just a different one. So when they put it in like rotisserie chicken, they're probably just putting safe amounts of it. Speaker 6: Oh no, don't worry. They're not putting TSP in your rotisserie chicken. That'd be a disaster. Some food safe phosphates might be used in processing, totally different and regulated, but the cleaning product TSP strictly for walls, not wings. Speaker 1: Are you sure it's not the same thing? Because a lot of reels say it's the same thing. Speaker 6: Yeah. I get why those reels pop up, but trust me, food grade phosphates and TSP cleaner are not the same. The food versions are heavily regulated for safety. If they try tossing the Home Depot stuff in your chicken, the FDA would have a feel day. So no worries. Speaker 1: I'm telling you guys, it's a deep dive in half. Make informed decisions. Realize that these big companies are all about making the money, not about bringing you the safest product. And trust me, it's a little bit of a stab to me too because I like easy, I like tasty and we need that sometimes. But in this case, they may have jumped through too many hoops too many times, and it's putting Us consumers possibly in a bad position. Speaker 1: I've got two other great videos. If you guys didn't see these videos, you gotta watch these. These will blow your mind equally as much. Please let me know what you think down in the comments. Thumbs up. Share this out and subscribe because I've got a lot more coming down the pipe. Keep prepping, keep learning, keep doing. We'll see you guys on the next one.

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Speaker 0 argues that the food supply is treated with a chemical called folic acid, which is not a natural vitamin and did not exist until the 1980s. According to the speaker, folic acid is not found anywhere on the surface of the earth, whereas folate does exist in nature. The speaker notes that during pregnancy, women are told to take high doses of folic acid, and questions why a man-made chemical that didn’t exist until the eighties is deemed absolutely necessary for a healthy pregnancy. The comparison is made between folate and methylfolate, implying a distinction between natural forms and synthetic forms. The speaker also states that in the United States, the entire grain supply—flour, rice, bread, pasta, grains of any kind, and cereals—is required to be sprayed with folic acid, although this is not openly labeled as such. Instead, it is described as fortified or enriched foods. The speaker claims that these fortified or enriched nutrients are fed to children, and asserts that half of the population has a gene mutation that prevents them from processing folic acid effectively. The consequence, according to the speaker, is that when a person cannot process a high amount of something introduced into the body, it becomes dysfunctional. The speaker then connects this to a broader societal issue, describing a common scenario: a child goes to school, comes home with a phone call reporting inattention and poor ability to follow directions, and the ensuing medical response is the prescription of stimulants such as Adderall or Ritalin. The speaker characterizes this as a solution that uses amphetamines to accelerate the central nervous system to match the pace of a racing mind, rather than addressing underlying factors. Ultimately, the speaker presents a proposed solution: remove folic acid, fortified, and enriched nutrients from the diet, and observe changes in behavior. The underlying claim is that eliminating these synthetic nutrients would calm behavior and improve function, implying that the current approach relies on artificial chemistry rather than natural nutrition.

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Organic oats are recommended due to glyphosate use in US crops. Glyphosate is described as a class one carcinogen linked to kidney problems, brain disorders, and autism. The speaker states that glyphosate is sprayed on a lot of things and that the food supply has been ruined by harsh pesticides like glyphosate.

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United States food additives have been banned across Europe. Professor Eric Milstone claims there is evidence that these additives may be toxic to human consumers and may initiate or promote the development of tumors. Many other scientists are claiming that there is overwhelming evidence that many processed food items in The United States Of America are causing all kinds of sicknesses across the country every single year. The question is, do you trust these processed foods?

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Walmart's milk is derived from cows treated with rBST, a synthetic growth hormone. This may be a contributing factor to children entering puberty at increasingly younger ages. Therefore, consumers should avoid purchasing this milk.

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Monsanto found bacteria surviving Roundup in a waste dump, leading to Roundup-ready soybeans. Glyphosate in Roundup depletes nutrients in plants, weakens them, and promotes disease. Livestock eat Roundup-ready crops, leading to nutrient deficiency. FDA memos reveal GMO dangers in animal feed, with toxins bioaccumulating in animals and milk. 95% of genetic modifications aim to withstand more chemicals and drugs, altering genes in plants, animals, and humans permanently. Translation: Monsanto discovered bacteria resistant to Roundup in a waste dump, resulting in Roundup-ready soybeans. Glyphosate in Roundup depletes plant nutrients, weakens them, and promotes disease. Livestock consuming Roundup-ready crops face nutrient deficiencies. FDA memos expose GMO risks in animal feed, with toxins accumulating in animals and milk. 95% of genetic modifications aim to withstand more chemicals and drugs, altering genes in plants, animals, and humans permanently.

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Zen from Moms Across America states that Panera Bread had the highest level of glyphosate among all of the top 20 fast food restaurants tested. They acknowledge Panera’s public claim of “clean ingredients,” and emphasize that glyphosate is not clean. Glyphosate, known widely as Roundup, is described as the most widely used herbicide in the world. It is called a carcinogen and an endocrine disruptor, and is said to cause liver and kidney disease. It is described as a neurotoxin and a nervous system damager, and is said to kill sperm and to androgenize baby girls. The speaker notes that these effects are from animal studies. Zen mentions that there are many human studies as well showing a connection to increased miscarriages and prenatal births and birth defects. The message is that Panera Bread needs to do better, and they should put glyphosate on their no-no list and require that their suppliers only provide wheat and grains that have not been sprayed with glyphosate. The speaker states that they are asking Panera to do that, and that thousands of signatures are needed. The speaker urges viewers to visit momsacrossamerica.org, click on action, and find the fast food petitions page under action. The goal is to help get Panera to put glyphosate on the no-no list, describing this as a huge win for the food industry because Panera is one of the biggest purchasers of wheat products, using it for sandwich breads across the country. The appeal is for petition signatures to press Panera to adopt a glyphosate-free standard for their ingredients.

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Today, we'll discuss why avoiding flavoring is crucial. The problem lies in the uncertainty surrounding the origin of flavoring. It could be labeled as natural, artificial, or organic, but it's actually a proprietary blend containing up to 13,000 chemicals. These additives are designed to manipulate our minds and make us addicted to products like Pepsi, Coca Cola, fast food, and candy bars. One specific flavoring, Hek293, is derived from fetal cells. It's used by various companies including Kraft, Pepsi, Nestle, Cadbury, and others. It's essential to be mindful of this when supporting these companies. Always read the ingredients and avoid products that contain the term "flavor."

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Checklist for summary approach: - Identify and preserve the core claims about GMO technology, safety concerns, and corporate motives as presented. - Highlight explicit examples and mechanisms (insertion of genes, Bt toxin, built-in pesticides, herbicide tolerance, seed patents). - Note the portrayed regulatory and legal dynamics (lobbying, revolving door, labeling, litigation, seed saving restrictions). - Emphasize unique or provocative elements (codfish gene for frost resistance, Indian BT cotton suicides link, cross-pollination as “not our problem”). - Exclude repetitive or filler content; avoid adding new judgments or opinions. - Translate or retain English phrasing of key statements exactly as needed. - Keep the summary within 388–486 words. Genetically modified organisms (GMO) are presented as a comprehensive, almost omnipotent solution to modern nutrition and farming, combining inserted insect and fish genes, irradiation, and pesticides embedded in crops. The narrative asserts: “Our GM scientists are putting the pesticide right inside the crops,” so the food itself will “kill those pesky critters stone cold dead.” It claims Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) toxin, produced by the inserted gene, destroys insects’ stomachs but not humans, adding, “We have absolutely no testing results to prove that these are safe, but they are. Trust us.” It argues that pesticides in crops enable plants to withstand more weed killer than organic crops, promising “No weeds, no bugs. More food, more profit.” The transcript lists staple crops: corn, rice, soybeans, cotton, alfalfa, papaya, oilseed rape, and adds that “GM is the gift that keeps on giving,” with ambitions including frost-resistant traits such as codfish genes in strawberries for the icy North Atlantic environment: “insert a gene from a codfish… Result, frost resistant strawberries.” It frames the looming challenge of population growth and food security as justification for rapid GMO adoption. Testing anecdotes are cited: “tests on rats eating genetically modified potatoes showed them growing slower after two or three generations and developing fertility problems, some organ development issues.” The speakers disparage critics as “goody two shoes scientists” and “whiny campaigners,” insisting they will wait to see human effects while biotech profits fund further GMO experiments. A central strategy is to persuade farmers to abandon organic farming in favor of GM, accompanied by aggressive seed patenting: “Whenever we change the natural gene sequence of any plant, we get a patent ASAP. It’s our invention after all. … total control of the seed.” Seed saving would be prohibited: “If you save seeds for next year’s crop, we’ll know. We’ll tie up farmers for years in the courts.” Farmers must buy new seeds and pesticides yearly; cross-pollination is dismissed as not their problem, and “your crops belong to us” once genes migrate. Regulatory capture and lobbying are described as routine: a “revolving door” between industry and judges, former GM lawyers in regulation bodies, and efforts to keep GMO labeling off products. The piece notes India’s BT cotton saga, claiming “hundreds of thousands of farmers have been organically recycled to dodge debts that they owe us,” with debts supposedly dying with farmers under Indian law and Bt cotton’s yields and bollworm resistance threatening revenue, as the strategy envisions becoming the sole cotton-seed supplier. European concerns about GMO pig feet—sterilization and growth issues—are acknowledged, with plans to work around them. The closing pitch invites consumption: “Eat up your veggies… there’ll be plenty for everyone for the right price.”

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90% of US cheese contains genetically modified rennet from Pfizer, speeding up production and increasing profits. This GMO rennet is not labeled as such due to being deemed safe, raising concerns about its effects on health. Research suggests potential toxicity and allergenicity. Look for cheeses made with traditional rennet or vegetable rennet to avoid genetically modified options.

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American cheese is mostly made with genetically modified rennet, specifically fermentation produced rennet (FPC). FPC is created by inserting genes from a cow and camel into a genetically modified black mold, then fermenting and purifying it. This process is used by companies like Christian Hansen, which received generally recognized as safe status. FPC rennet is used in around 90% of American cheese, labeled as vegetable rennet. While the final product does not contain GMO microbes, concerns remain about its safety. The decision to consume FPC rennet cheese is personal, as more research is needed. Companies like Tillamook use FPC rennet, leading to debates about its health implications.

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Genetically modified food is not labeled in the US due to FDA regulations, as it's considered equivalent to unmodified food. Consumers are kept in the dark about GMO ingredients to prevent confusion. The FDA relies on safety assessments from the patent-holding companies like Monsanto, Pfizer, or Syngenta, without conducting independent studies. FDA scientists have expressed concerns about this practice, urging against allowing GMO foods on the market due to unknown consequences.

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Speaker 1 discusses Kerrygold and grass-fed butter, saying Kerrygold is facing heat after admitting their grass-fed cows are fed genetically modified corn and soy for weeks at a time. Speaker 2 adds that one Kerrygold block carries months of industrial residue, and asserts that the grass-fed label is not 100% accurate. The claim continues that for months, these cows are also fed lab-engineered rations, driving inflammatory omega-6s straight into the spread. Speaker 0 notes that when people look at healthy foods like grass-fed butter, they pay more believing it’s better, less inflammatory, with fewer omega-6s. The belief is challenged by the claim that one of the largest suppliers of grass-fed butter is not feeding their cows grass but GMO corn and GMO soy. The discussion labels this as consumer fraud at the highest levels and expresses a wish that the government would take action. Speaker 2 specifies that in 2023 Kerrygold was pulled from shelves for leaching PFA chemicals from the packaging, adding another layer to the controversy. Overall, the speakers allege that Kerrygold’s grass-fed butter involves cows fed GMO corn and soy for extended periods, with cows receiving lab-engineered rations that increase omega-6 inflammatory content, and that the product was retracted in 2023 due to PFA chemicals in the packaging. They frame the situation as consumer fraud tied to premium pricing for grass-fed butter, and call for governmental intervention.

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Speaker 0 posits that every time you consume natural flavorings, you could be eating something developed by human fetal cells. They claim that major food companies, including Pepsi, Nestle, and Kraft, have used a biotech company called Cinomics to create flavor enhancers. The disturbing part, they say, is that these artificial flavors were originally tested using HEK293, a cell line derived from aborted fetal tissue, and that due to legal loopholes they don’t have to tell consumers. They insist: natural flavors don’t necessarily come from nature; they can be chemically engineered in a lab using biotech derived from human cells. The explanation provided is that the food industry knows processed food loses its flavor, so instead of relying on real ingredients, they turn to biotech companies to develop flavor enhancers. Ceramics reportedly found that HEK293 cells, originally from fetal tissue, react to flavors like human taste buds, and by testing these flavors on cells, additives were created to make processed food better, allegedly addicting millions of people worldwide. These chemical compounds were then rebranded as natural flavors. Speaker 0 asserts the why behind it: the food industry is described as one giant deceptive machine that uses loopholes to keep consumers in the dark. They claim that today, even natural flavors can contain over 100 synthetic compounds developed using biotech processes that consumers aren’t told about. The overarching claim is that the motive is profit, not health, and that people are the experiment. If this has been hidden for decades, then they ask what else might be hidden, urging listeners to wake up, check labels, and demand transparency. They warn not to trust food giants that profit from deception, arguing that if manipulation of what people eat is possible, it could extend to manipulating how they think and feel. They conclude by stating that the truth is out and invite viewers to share whether they’ve been fooled by natural flavors in the comments.

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American cheese is often made with a genetically modified version of animal rennet called FPC, produced by Pfizer. FPC is labeled as GRAS (generally recognized as safe), which allows manufacturers to avoid GMO labeling. FPC may contain biotoxins from the genetically modified hosts (mold or fungus) used in its production. These toxins can end up in the final cheese product, potentially causing allergic reactions or digestive and respiratory issues. The speaker suggests that these issues may be due to microorganism residue rather than the dairy itself. The speaker recommends avoiding cheeses made with genetically modified rennet.

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During the Vietnam War, the American government compelled seven chemical companies, including Monsanto, to create Agent Orange. The same companies then sold patented seeds to farmers, which now cover 80% of American farmland. These seeds, including corn, soybeans, alfalfa, and wheat, were created to be resistant to Roundup, which is also owned by Monsanto. Roundup contains glyphosate, which is claimed to be a neurotoxin. These crops are subsidized by the government and are largely used to make ultra-processed food, which makes up 60-90% of the standard American diet. The speaker claims that the majority of American families are eating this food because the government deems it safe.

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The transcript discusses a bioengineered ingredient used in most U.S. cheese, claimed to have been invented by Pfizer and approved by the FDA in 1990. It states that the enzyme, called chymosin, is a synthetic version of renin, an enzyme found in a calf’s stomach that turns milk into cheese. According to the speaker, this version was created in a lab using petri dishes where bacteria and fungi are used to mass-produce the enzyme, enabling cheesemakers to produce cheese faster, in larger batches. The speaker asserts that this ingredient is not labeled as GMO. They list cheeses that supposedly contain it, including Kirkland sharp cheddar, fresh mozzarella, Philadelphia cream cheese, Tillamook sharp cheddar, Babybel, essentially all Sargento cheese, and most Kraft products. They claim there are many more cheeses with the ingredient, and provide a top 30 list, implying widespread use. The speaker also notes that you cannot avoid this ingredient by buying imported cheeses, explaining that many European cheeses imported and sold in the United States also use it, giving President Brie as an example. They offer alternatives for those wanting cheeses without this ingredient: buy USDA organic or European cheeses that have the PDO stamp. A connection is suggested between the ingredient’s approval and an uptick in dairy allergies, proposing a potential link to a condition that might need treatment. The speaker questions whether the invention prioritized quantity over quality and ends with a reflective prompt, asking the audience what they think and inviting comments. Key points emphasized: - In 1990, the FDA approved a bioengineered enzyme called chymosin, a synthetic version of calf stomach renin, produced in a lab with bacteria and fungi to mass-produce cheese-enabling enzymes. - The claim that 90% of U.S. cheese uses this ingredient, and that it is not labeled as GMO. - Specific cheeses named as containing the ingredient: Kirkland sharp cheddar, fresh mozzarella, Philadelphia cream cheese, Tillamook sharp cheddar, Babybel, essentially all Sargento cheese, Kraft products; a top 30 list is referenced. - Imported European cheeses also use the ingredient, with President Brie given as an example. - Ways to avoid the ingredient: choose USDA organic or European cheeses with the PDO stamp. - Suggested link between the ingredient’s approval and a rise in dairy allergies; a claim that the invention prioritized quantity over quality. - The speaker invites viewer engagement with a question about whether it was worth it.

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A speaker discusses genetically modified organisms (GMOs) and the debate surrounding their safety, mentioning a petition signed by 17 Nobel laureates asserting their safety. The speaker says that while millions have consumed GMOs without apparent harm, the context is important. The speaker explains that GMOs are often engineered to resist glyphosate, and glyphosate is used heavily. Glyphosate is described as an antibiotic, patented for antibiotic use, that kills microbiota around plants. The speaker claims that glyphosate is the most prescribed antibiotic on Earth, especially in rice farming, and that the consequences of its widespread use are unknown.

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Milk produced in the US is banned in Australia, New Zealand, Japan, and the EU due to the growth hormone RBGH given to cows. This hormone is deemed harmful to health, leading to its ban in these countries. Despite Europe banning RBGH years ago, US regulatory authorities still approve its use annually.

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The speaker claims the U.S. has 10,000 food ingredients due to the FDA's GRAS standard, which presumes chemicals are safe until proven guilty. Europe, in contrast, has only 400. Kellogg's Froot Loops in the U.S. contain red, blue, and yellow dyes, unlike the version sold in Canada, which uses vegetable dyes. A U.S. McDonald's French fry has 11 ingredients, while the same product in Europe has three. The speaker believes companies are mass poisoning American children due to their influence over regulatory agencies and asserts they are the only one who can stop it.

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90% of US cheese is allegedly infiltrated with GMOs from Pfizer. Traditionally, cheese contains milk, salt, starter culture, and animal rennet. Now, the most common rennet is a genetically modified version called FPC (fermentation produced chymosin) made by Pfizer, which is cheaper and speeds up aging. FPC rennet is labeled as GRAS (generally recognized as safe), exempting companies from GMO labeling. Researchers are concerned about toxicity, biotoxins from GMOs, and digestive issues, as these rennet alternatives can be allergens. The only safety study was a 90-day trial in rats. Consumers should look for the kind of rennet or enzyme used in the cheese. Animal or traditional rennets are preferable, followed by vegetable rennet, while microbial or genetically modified rennets should be avoided.

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Traditional cheese has few ingredients: milk, salt, starter culture, and animal rennet. Today, 90% of cheese contains FPC, a genetically modified version of animal rennet made by Pfizer. FPC rennet is labeled as generally recognized as safe, so Pfizer doesn't have to label these products as genetically modified. FPCs contain biotoxins from the genetically modified hosts, like mold or fungus cultured in the lab. A small amount of these toxins end up in the final cheese product, causing allergic reactions, digestive issues, or respiratory problems. People may think they can't digest cheese, but it could be the microorganism residue causing the allergic response and irritating your gut. Avoid these cheeses and look for genetically modified rennet. Get them out of your diet, and share this information.

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Chick Fil A mac and cheese contains banned ingredients like hydrogenated soybean oil, which is illegal in Europe and the US. Fast food companies use a margarine blend to include it. Eating high-quality, unprocessed foods is crucial for good health. Making better dietary choices can help heal and reverse many diseases. Doctors may not emphasize this, but diet plays a significant role in health. It's important to be aware of harmful ingredients in food and make informed choices.

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90% of US cheese is allegedly infiltrated with GMOs from Pfizer. Traditionally, cheese contains milk, salt, starter culture, and animal rennet. Now, the most common rennet is a genetically modified version called FPC (fermentation produced chymosin) made by Pfizer. These alternative rennets are reportedly cheaper and speed up aging, increasing profits. Because FPC rennet is labeled GRAS (generally recognized as safe), companies like Pfizer are exempt from GMO labeling. Researchers are concerned about toxicity, biotoxins, and digestive issues, as these rennet alternatives can allegedly serve as allergens. The only unbiased safety study was a short 90-day trial in rats. To avoid GMOs, consumers should seek out animal or traditional rennets, then vegetable rennets, and avoid cheeses containing any microbial or genetically modified rennets.
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