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New Tax on Pepsi and Coke?
Message
De
28/07/2009 18:40:07
 
 
À
28/07/2009 18:25:40
Information générale
Forum:
Politics
Catégorie:
Taxes
Divers
Thread ID:
01415185
Message ID:
01415210
Vues:
60
>I don't care for soda period. :o) Diet sodas are even worse because they have that terrible aftertaste...
>
>That's not the point <s>. The point is that the tax on sodas is supposed to help fight obesity. A zero calorie drink does not promote obesity.

Actually, in the CBS and CNN news they suggested the same. In the discussions it was brought out about diet zero calorie drinks and how to enforce a tax on non-diet but not diet drinks, etc.

Also, people who drink diet drinks are still likely to gain weight:
http://www.webmd.com/diet/news/20050613/drink-more-diet-soda-gain-more-weight

However, regardless of the no calorie, I've read articles where it is believed that diet drinks actually do cause you to gain weight and it is not the calories:

http://www.oprah.com/article/omagazine/200902_omag_katz_diet_drinks

I believe they can, but the science is not decisive. The studies suggesting diet sodas, or anything containing sugar substitutes, can contribute to weight gain are based almost entirely on animal research. What scientists have found is that a rodent's brain relies on the link between taste and calories to keep track of just how much eating has occurred. Sugar substitutes—saccharin, sucralose, aspartame, neotame, and acesulfame-K—unbundle the taste of sweetness from calories: The taste buds tell the brain that food is coming in, but the body doesn't get the energy it's expecting. This, apparently, undermines the ability of rats to judge how much they've consumed, and, over time, they begin to overeat and gain weight

The same mechanism may occur in people, too, but we don't yet know for sure. Though some human studies indicate sugar substitutes help with short-term weight loss, an equal number suggest they don't. My particular concern is that artificial sweeteners are 200 to 13,000 times as sweet as sugar, and that is a potent stimulus for turning a sweet tooth into a fang. Other research suggests that the taste of sweetness is mildly addictive—the more you eat, the more you need to feel fully satisfied. If artificially sweetened sodas increase your cravings, the calories they take out of your diet are apt to sneak back in later when you, for instance, need a larger or sweeter dessert to feel satisfied.


I read another study that suggested that for some people the chemicals and artificial sweeteners in diet sodas negatively impact the body's metabolism which evolves into weight gain. I'll look for that too.
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.·`TCH
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