High Fructose Corn Syrup to be Relabeled "Corn Sugar" in Hopes of Fooling Consumers

When the public finally figures out the evils of how food is prepared in the United States by Big Agra, Big Agra fights back giving an evil product a new name. Consumers are about to notice the words high fructose corn syrup will soon be mission from ingredient labels; however, Big Agra isn't going back to healthier sugar. No, they are just giving high fructose corn syrup a different name.

In 2011, ingredient labels will soon read corn sugar. Guess what. It's still high fructose corn syrup--a cheap sweetener made from the starchy portion of corn. Nothing has changed but the name.

Big Agra began replacing real sugar with the cheaper substitute in the mid 1980s. Perhaps the most famous case of transition was how Coca-Cola rolled out the new Coke, which failed, that featured high fructose corn syrup for the first time. Consumers hated new Coke so much, they begged Coca-Cola to bring back the original formulation. Consumers wanted it so bad, they didn't even notice the change in Coca-Cola classic from a sugar sweetened drink to a corn sweetened drink.

Now, it's hard not to find a product without high fructose corn syrup in it as Big Agra uses the cheap sweetener to make food more addictive. It's even in most loaves of bread.

As Congress looks at putting Big Agra's needs before the health concerns of consumers with the Food Safety Modernization Act, which attacks the little farmers trying to keep food safer through organics, it's not hard to make a correlation over health concerns over the past 25 plus years since high fructose corn syrup was approved and the increase of obesity and diabetes. When you think of the Food Safety Act, the only safety may be to the United States government who has over $100 trillion in unfunded liabilities like Social Security who need you to die sooner rather than later. Mix this with the need for government to take over healthcare, and it's not hard to see what is at play.