I don’t think you can put “the” before WHO unless Roger Daltrey approves it.
I worry about a lot of the additives used today. Some products will say “no sugar added” but will include some artificial sweetener that you only see in the fine print.
I worry about the “natural” sugar alternatives. We all know that aspartame is safe, it’s been researched about as extensively as it can be. It only starts to be a concern when you’re drinking 2 dozen diets sodas daily.
I don’t think you can put “the” before WHO unless Roger Daltrey approves it.
I worry about a lot of the additives used today. Some products will say “no sugar added” but will include some artificial sweetener that you only see in the fine print.
I worry about the “natural” sugar alternatives. We all know that aspartame is safe, it’s been researched about as extensively as it can be. It only starts to be a concern when you’re drinking 2 dozen diets sodas daily.
But people give “natural” a pass for some reason.
Natural is always good, my cereal has natural uranium for a spicy natural alternative to sugar. It’s totally safe.
(For legal purposes, this comment is a joke)
Which is no sugar. So wheres the Problem?
I don’t like it when my tea is sweet :(
So then buy unsweetened tea. We already have a term for things that aren’t sweet.
https://www.amazon.com/Pure-Leaf-Unsweetened-Brewed-Calories/dp/B015Z6WJDY/
I seriously don’t understand why you want the “no sugar added” label to have factually incorrect requirements.
I want flavored tea that doesn’t have sweet but all the bottles are sweet :(
Them’s fighin’ words
-the entire state of NC
It’s okay, their toes will fall off if they try to chase us. /s
Every time I go south I forget this and always end-up with disgustingly sweet tea at restaurants. I always get one huge gulp then want to vomit. lol
I live in Arkansas and prefer non-sweet. I can’t imagine not specifying.