Sounded like multiple other countries have their own GRAS which has hundreds, not thousands, of items on that list.
My initial thought is to look at the healthiest country's GRAS list, and require food companies to offer the exact same ingredients in the US for the same price they charge to that country (similar to the drug costs that Trump demanded drop during his first term). Maybe even go with the top 10 healthiest countries.
I don't know what those prices will look like once they hit the shelves, but requiring the lowest price sold to other nations to be offered here should help with the keeping the pricing honest. Stock the product ls side by side clearly labeled as "Clearly Safe Foods" & the other right next to it labeled "Testing For Saftey" with prices side by side. That will allow consumers an easy choice. If the box/bag of cereal is twice as much for the Clearly Safe option, then many are likely to keep using the Testing Saftey option. Though if that Clearly safe is less than a dollar difference, I would believe most would take the Clearly Safe option.
Run the data based on self reporting during well visits at doctors offices between groups of like individuals (ie age, gender, race, known medical condition, vaccination statuses, etc...). I would think that we could get a similar set of data monkeys to work on this like they are for DOGE to quickly find patterns that cross similar groups.
Maybe I am wrong, though that is where my head is initially at.
Sounded like multiple other countries have their own GRAS which has hundreds, not thousands, of items on that list.
My initial thought is to look at the healthiest country's GRAS list, and require food companies to offer the exact same ingredients in the US for the same price they charge to that country (similar to the drug costs that Trump demanded drop during his first term). Maybe even go with the top 10 healthiest countries.
I don't know what those prices will look like once they hit the shelves, but requiring the lowest price sold to other nations to be offered here should help with the keeping the pricing honest. Stock the product ls side by side clearly labeled as "Clearly Safe Foods" & the other right next to it labeled "Testing For Saftey" with prices side by side. That will allow consumers an easy choice. If the box/bag of cereal is twice as much for the Clearly Safe option, then many are likely to keep using the Testing Saftey option. Though if that Clearly safe is less than a dollar difference, I would believe most would take the Clearly Safe option.
Run the data based on self reporting during well visits at doctors offices between groups of like individuals (ie age, gender, race, known medical condition, vaccination statuses, etc...). I would think that we could get a similar set of data monkeys to work on this like they are for DOGE to quickly find patterns that cross similar groups.
Maybe I am wrong, though that is where my head is initially at.