Guest guest Posted April 12, 2002 Report Share Posted April 12, 2002 ------ Start of Forwarded Message ------ JoAnn Guest <joguest Fri, 12 Apr 2002 20:52:01 +0000 Melanoma Dairy Education Newsletter Menu at: (http://www.notmilk.com/deb/column.html) DAIRY EDUCATION BOARD NEWSLETTER FRIDAY - JULY 3, 1998 AN AMERICAN PICNIC FOR THE HOLIDAY WEEKEND Happy Fourth of July weekend! What could be more American than a slice of apple pie a la-mode covered with whipped cream and accompanied by a tall glass of ice cold frothy milk? The dairy industry would have you believe that by eating such a snack you are ingesting " great protein. " Let's investigate the most abundant milk protein, casein. CASEIN is a tenacious glue. Eighty-seven percent of milk is water. Four percent of the remaining thirteen percent is CASEIN. The furniture in your home is held together by this powerful glue. So too is the label affixed to a bottle of beer. If you are a beer drinker, try scraping that label off this weekend. That will be no easy task and quite a learning experience! Food manufacturers have long understood that glue holds foods together giving them a firmer and more concrete appearance. It is no coincidence that each of the major tuna fish manufacturers have elected to put nature's perfect glue in their little cans. Open that tin and expect to eat tuna? Got milk? Got glue! Starkist Tuna (Sorry, Charlie), Bumble Bee Tuna and even Chicken of the Sea all use this tenacious glue. Why do they put milk in our tuna fish? It's not nice to fool Mother Nature! Can we ever look at Hostess Twinkies the same way after learning that CASEIN is used as the binding agent? American's munchie cravings are satisfied by Ring Dings and Yankee Doodles...all containing this most powerful bovine glue. Why do they do that to us? How can glue be used in the name of good health? " Healthy Choice " foods sells a product called Garlic Chicken Milano which contains casein. Certainly not my idea of a healthy choice! Heinz sells a " Home Style " gravy called " Chicken Classic. " They put this CASEIN-glue in their home-style product. Is that the way you cook home-style foods? Weight Watchers promotes a line of products called " Smart Ones. " Their Strawberry Royal contains gluey CASEIN. Is it really a smart choice to eat glue to lose weight? I'll bet that this glue does quite a bit more than just stick to the ribs! Not to be outdone, suppliments like Slim Fast and Ensure have each added CASEIN-goo to their special foods. Ensure boasts, " #1 Doctor Recommended... Complete balanced nutrition. " I'd like to have a word with those doctors and give them all a second opinion. Slim Fast sells " Jump Start, the natural way to lose weight fast. " They put CASEIN in Jump Start. How does one lose weight by eating glue? Perhaps your intestines are internally cemented and no food can be absorbed. Doesn't seem real healthy to me. A review of cereals reveals only one product that contains CASEIN, Special K. Now, revealed for the first time, What it is that really makes Special K so special? It's glue! The ultimate assault on logic and insult of our sensibilities can be found in many non-dairy creamers. The front container of Carnation's milk substitute contains a lie and should be taken off the market, revealed as a fraud. The rear of that container reveals that sodium caseinate; a milk derivative is a component of this " non-dairy " product. How can they get away with this? Dry Coffee-Mate perpetrates a similar deception... all in the name of good health. One of the few truly offensive racial stereotypes still adorns a supposedly healthy food product. Aunt Jemima is no liberated African American woman of the nineteen-nineties. She represents a better and simpler era to some... a time when women belonged in the kitchen producing stacks of pancakes for men to eat. Can you imagine that a component of Aunt Jemima's secret recipe was glue? Read the label. That's just what is in those pancakes. What would America's foods be without this powerful adhesive glue? Would they be as attractive? NO! Would we have as much congestion and mucus and asthma resulting from histamines produced to combat this allergenic protein? Food for thought! Have a wonderful Fourth of July picnic and remember to carefully READ THOSE LABELS! Robert Cohen Executive Director Dairy Education Board http://www.NOTMILK.com JoAnn Guest joguest Friendsforhealthnaturally http://canceranswer.homestead.com/AIM.html theaimcompanies " Health is not a Medical Issue " ------ End of Forwarded Message ------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 14, 2002 Report Share Posted April 14, 2002 I am changing my opinion of Robert Cohen. What is he trying to accomplish that is of benefit to humanity. Casein has no value but as a glue with which to build a house?!? If you ever eat some food that is so spicy that it is burning your mouth to charcoal, swish some milk around in it. The casein will bind with the ingredient in the peppery substance and cool your mouth, pronto! Because it binds things together, does that in itself make it bad?!? Molecules in our skin bind to each other to hold us together - does that make it bad? We have to be analytical and critical. But what value is there in casein other than that it binds things together? In 100 grams of casein, there is a multitude of trace minerals, etc., but a list of the more quantitative ingredients are: 136 calories 1 gram protein 10 grams fat 9 mgs calcium 64 mgs phosphorous 191 mgs potassium 79 mgs sodium 1.1 mcg selium 89 I.U. Vitamin A 9 mgs phytosterols The most important thing which one can glean from this is that one should question everything. Just because someone sets himself up as a guru does not make him so. It is a well-known fact that if a lie is big enough and repeated often enough, good people will believe it. I used to listen to Robert Cohen unquestioningly, but that was a fault in me because I set him up above me as being knowledgeable, unbiased, and forthright - never again. Question everything!!!!! Morton JoAnn Guest wrote: > ------ Start of Forwarded Message ------ > JoAnn Guest <joguest > Fri, 12 Apr 2002 20:52:01 +0000 > Melanoma > Dairy Education Newsletter > > Menu at: (http://www.notmilk.com/deb/column.html) > > DAIRY EDUCATION BOARD NEWSLETTER > > FRIDAY - JULY 3, 1998 > > AN AMERICAN PICNIC FOR THE HOLIDAY WEEKEND > > Happy Fourth of July weekend! What could be more American than a slice > of apple pie a la-mode covered with whipped cream and accompanied by a > tall glass of ice cold frothy milk? The dairy industry would have you > believe that by eating such a snack you are ingesting " great protein. " > > Let's investigate the most abundant milk protein, casein. > > CASEIN is a tenacious glue. Eighty-seven percent of milk is water. > Four percent of the remaining thirteen percent is CASEIN. The furniture > in your home is held together by this powerful glue. So too is the > label affixed to a bottle of beer. If you are a beer drinker, try > scraping that label off this weekend. That will be no easy task and > quite a learning experience! > > Food manufacturers have long understood that glue holds foods together > giving them a firmer and more concrete appearance. It is no coincidence > that each of the major tuna fish manufacturers have elected to put > nature's perfect glue in their little cans. Open that tin and expect to > eat tuna? Got milk? Got glue! Starkist Tuna (Sorry, Charlie), Bumble > Bee Tuna and even Chicken of the Sea all use this tenacious glue. Why > do they put milk in our tuna fish? It's not nice to fool Mother Nature! > > Can we ever look at Hostess Twinkies the same way after learning that > CASEIN is used as the binding agent? American's munchie cravings are > satisfied by Ring Dings and Yankee Doodles...all containing this most > powerful bovine glue. Why do they do that to us? > > How can glue be used in the name of good health? " Healthy Choice " > foods sells a product called Garlic Chicken Milano which contains > casein. Certainly not my idea of a healthy choice! Heinz sells a " Home > Style " gravy called " Chicken Classic. " They put this CASEIN-glue in > their home-style product. Is that the way you cook home-style foods? > Weight Watchers promotes a line of products called " Smart Ones. " Their > Strawberry Royal contains gluey CASEIN. Is it really a smart choice to > eat glue to lose weight? I'll bet that this glue does quite a bit more > than just stick to the ribs! Not to be outdone, suppliments like Slim > Fast and Ensure have each added CASEIN-goo to their special foods. > Ensure boasts, " #1 Doctor Recommended... Complete balanced nutrition. " > I'd like to have a word with those doctors and give them all a second > opinion. Slim Fast sells " Jump Start, the natural way to lose weight > fast. " They put CASEIN in Jump Start. How does one lose weight by > eating glue? Perhaps your intestines are internally cemented and no > food can be absorbed. Doesn't seem real healthy to me. > > A review of cereals reveals only one product that contains CASEIN, > Special K. Now, revealed for the first time, What it is that really > makes Special K so special? It's glue! > > The ultimate assault on logic and insult of our sensibilities can be > found in many non-dairy creamers. The front container of Carnation's > milk substitute contains a lie and should be taken off the market, > revealed as a fraud. The rear of that container reveals that sodium > caseinate; a milk derivative is a component of this " non-dairy " product. > How can they get away with this? Dry Coffee-Mate perpetrates a similar > deception... all in the name of good health. > > One of the few truly offensive racial stereotypes still adorns a > supposedly healthy food product. Aunt Jemima is no liberated African > American woman of the nineteen-nineties. She represents a better and > simpler era to some... a time when women belonged in the kitchen > producing stacks of pancakes for men to eat. Can you imagine that a > component of Aunt Jemima's secret recipe was glue? Read the label. > That's just what is in those pancakes. > > What would America's foods be without this powerful adhesive glue? > Would they be as attractive? NO! Would we have as much congestion and > mucus and asthma resulting from histamines produced to combat this > allergenic protein? Food for thought! > > Have a wonderful Fourth of July picnic and remember to carefully READ > THOSE LABELS! > > Robert Cohen > Executive Director > Dairy Education Board > http://www.NOTMILK.com > > JoAnn Guest > joguest > Friendsforhealthnaturally > http://canceranswer.homestead.com/AIM.html > theaimcompanies > " Health is not a Medical Issue " > > ------ End of Forwarded Message ------ > > > Getting well is done one step at a time, day by day, building health > and well being. > > To learn more about the Gettingwell group, > Subscription and list archives are at: > Gettingwell > > To receive NO EMAIL from group, but stay a member,which will allow you to still read all of the posts at group site. Send message: " No Mail " . To: Gettingwell-owner > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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