Report: Nestle Dumps Sugar Into Baby Food. “Let them eat high-fructose corn syrup!” -Nestle Antoinette
Posted by freedomforall 6 months, 1 week ago to Business
Excerpt:
"The liberal and loving executives in charge of manufacturing wholesome Nestle foodstuffs to sustain the peasantry have reportedly been busy beavers, dumping unheard-of quantities of processed sugar into its baby feed marketed to Third World mothers.
...
“Cerelac and Nido are some of Nestlé’s best-selling baby-food brands in low- and middle-income countries… Their sales value in this category was greater than $2.5 billion in 2022.
In its own communications or via third parties, Nestlé promotes Cerelac and Nido as brands whose aim is to help children “live healthier lives”. Fortified with vitamins, minerals and other micronutrients, these products are, according to the multinational, tailored to the needs of babies and young children and help to strengthen their growth, immune system and cognitive development.
But do these infant cereals and powdered milks really offer “the best nutrition,” as Nestlé claims...
Most Cerelac and Nido products marketed in lower-income countries do contain added sugar, often at high levels…
In Senegal and South Africa, Cerelac cereals contain 6 grams of added sugar per serving…
Manufacturers may try to get children accustomed to a certain level of sugar at a very early age, so that they prefer products high in sugar.”
One need not have done an endocrinology residency at Mount Sinai or whatever to understand how devastating 6 grams of added sugar would be for a 10-pound baby."
"The liberal and loving executives in charge of manufacturing wholesome Nestle foodstuffs to sustain the peasantry have reportedly been busy beavers, dumping unheard-of quantities of processed sugar into its baby feed marketed to Third World mothers.
...
“Cerelac and Nido are some of Nestlé’s best-selling baby-food brands in low- and middle-income countries… Their sales value in this category was greater than $2.5 billion in 2022.
In its own communications or via third parties, Nestlé promotes Cerelac and Nido as brands whose aim is to help children “live healthier lives”. Fortified with vitamins, minerals and other micronutrients, these products are, according to the multinational, tailored to the needs of babies and young children and help to strengthen their growth, immune system and cognitive development.
But do these infant cereals and powdered milks really offer “the best nutrition,” as Nestlé claims...
Most Cerelac and Nido products marketed in lower-income countries do contain added sugar, often at high levels…
In Senegal and South Africa, Cerelac cereals contain 6 grams of added sugar per serving…
Manufacturers may try to get children accustomed to a certain level of sugar at a very early age, so that they prefer products high in sugar.”
One need not have done an endocrinology residency at Mount Sinai or whatever to understand how devastating 6 grams of added sugar would be for a 10-pound baby."
Baby formula can be a satisfactory substitute when the mother cannot supply.
Adding sugar to induce addiction to sweet food is evil.
The message of Objectivism, as in the behavior of characters in Atlas Shrugged, is not just pure profit for yourself, there is a severe ethical code of behavior. Never steal or cheat.
I was going to show off by telling family members about this sugar scam - but I was firmly told they know- the baby formula Nestle sells in Europe does not have the sugar content that their Asian product contains.
Further, some baby formula has been found to contain added steroids- good for fattening farm animals for market but not for long term health.
Similarly, the fed banksters were surreptitiously destroying the economies of South American
countries (and their people) until the evil scum decided that Americans were the new target
for slavery.