Can Pringles Cause Cancer? Don’t Let Your Children Eat These Deadly Chips.
Cancer In A Can: The Shocking Truth About How Pringles Are Made. Please watch the video below and share this information with your friends and family. This is VERY serious and is a true matter of life or death!
To understand the nature of Pringles and other stackable chips, forget the notion that they come from actual potatoes in any recognizable way. The Pringles company, in an effort to avoid taxes levied against “luxury foods” like chips in the UK, once even argued that the potato content of their chips was so low that they are technically not even potato chips. So if they are not made of potatoes, what are they exactly?
I’m sure nearly everyone reading this likely enjoys the taste of potato chips. However, they are clearly one of the most toxic processed foods you can eat – whether they are made from actual potato shavings or not. So what is this toxic chemical they have chosen to add to these snacks? Potassium bromate – a preservative allowed in limited quantities in the US but banned in China, Hong Kong and other countries because tests have found it to be carcinogenic.
Potassium bromate is a chemical additive used in flour to improve the action of the gluten. Gluten is a protein in wheat flour that gives bread dough its elasticity during kneading and that allows dough to rise by trapping gases produced by yeast. By strengthening the gluten, potassium bromate results in bread that rises higher and is more likely to hold its shape. In the US, the FDA has encouraged bakers to voluntarily stop using brominated flour, but most of them have not. This includes the Pringles company.
The Department of Health hazard summary states:
- Potassium bromate can affect you when breathed in and by passing through your skin.
- Potassium bromate should be handled as a carcinogen – with extreme caution.
- Contact can irritate and burned the skin and eyes.
- Breathing potassium bromate can irritate the nose, throat and lungs causing coughing, wheezing and/or shortness of breath.
- Repeated exposure to potassium bromate may affect the nervous system causing headache, irritability, impaired thinking and personality changes.
- Potassium bromate may damage the kidneys.