This has circulated here a lot.. so just to clarify, there is no evidence that the stem cells themselves are in the food products. They are only used in testing the “flavorings” (stimulus tests).
It’s not good, but it’s a lot different than the “they put babies in our food” narrative.
To be clear, liberals will say there's no evidence... They always have and always will. If you pay attn to Snopes et al, then stop reading.
The smelling senses of the aborted fetuses, whatever they're called, orfactory? is what's used by this company to enhance the appeal of the foods. I've looked into this extensively for the past few years. The joke's on us. They get a big belly laugh at the anti abortionists buying M&Ms and Hersheys and fast foods, etc for their own children. They really get a kick out of our feeding fetal cells to our own kids. And don't even start on the human meat and the undertakers selling it. Scoff all you want. Go ahead and spend your money on it and eat it. I just felt it's good to remind folks.
I have also extensively looked into this, and couldn’t find a lick of evidence or reason that the cells themselves would be added to the food, only baseless speculation.
From what I gathered, the cells are useful for biofeedback, testing chemicals and other ingredients, but there is nothing to support the idea that the cells themselves are being added to food products.
If you have any evidence to support this, please share your findings.
Appreciate the articles. However, neither of these support the assertion that the stem cells are added to food products.
If it wasn’t clear, I am not defending the use of stem cells in testing flavorings, organ harvesting, fetus harvesting, or any other heinous crime… just clarifying that there is no evidence that the stem cells are added to the food that is being consumed, which is a very important distinction.
Untruths obfuscate truths — and there is enough wrong with the stem cell industry to add misleading information to it, which will ultimately deter people from the truth altogether. The best argument for a thing is a bad argument against it.
This has circulated here a lot.. so just to clarify, there is no evidence that the stem cells themselves are in the food products. They are only used in testing the “flavorings” (stimulus tests).
It’s not good, but it’s a lot different than the “they put babies in our food” narrative.
To be clear, liberals will say there's no evidence... They always have and always will. If you pay attn to Snopes et al, then stop reading.
The smelling senses of the aborted fetuses, whatever they're called, orfactory? is what's used by this company to enhance the appeal of the foods. I've looked into this extensively for the past few years. The joke's on us. They get a big belly laugh at the anti abortionists buying M&Ms and Hersheys and fast foods, etc for their own children. They really get a kick out of our feeding fetal cells to our own kids. And don't even start on the human meat and the undertakers selling it. Scoff all you want. Go ahead and spend your money on it and eat it. I just felt it's good to remind folks.
I have also extensively looked into this, and couldn’t find a lick of evidence or reason that the cells themselves would be added to the food, only baseless speculation.
From what I gathered, the cells are useful for biofeedback, testing chemicals and other ingredients, but there is nothing to support the idea that the cells themselves are being added to food products.
If you have any evidence to support this, please share your findings.
https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2021/10/exclusive-pfizers-nervousness-covid-vaccines-origins-conceals-horror-story/
Appreciate the articles. However, neither of these support the assertion that the stem cells are added to food products.
If it wasn’t clear, I am not defending the use of stem cells in testing flavorings, organ harvesting, fetus harvesting, or any other heinous crime… just clarifying that there is no evidence that the stem cells are added to the food that is being consumed, which is a very important distinction.
Untruths obfuscate truths — and there is enough wrong with the stem cell industry to add misleading information to it, which will ultimately deter people from the truth altogether. The best argument for a thing is a bad argument against it.