Nestle SELLS horse meat in beef pasta meals (as confirmed in 2013).
Of course, we would like to think this is all in the past, but who keeps these companies accountable today?
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I wonder for what other products the food corporations do not disclose the true ingredients. If a naked human body fell into the grinding machine, and got stuffed into a can labeled as a "beef" product, would we even know?
How do cans of beef ravioli actually get filled with horse meat?
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Related:
independent.co.uk ~ "Yes we sold horse"
Sources
https://www.timesunion.com/business/article/Nestle-finds-horse-meat-in-beef-pasta-meals-4291597.php
https://www.fsai.ie/publications/fsai-horse-meat-incident-survey-2013
Alexa confirmed horse meat was found in Nestlé's Buitoni ravioli.
Related
Nestlé adds fluoride to infant formula. But newborns do not have teeth. 🤔
Althéra milk powder
Found on
eBay
"It can be used, after consultation with the paediatrician, from birth and up to six months of the newborn also as the sole nutritional source."
Flúor is Spanish for fluoride.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. sold bottled water containing fluoride
Brand:
Keeper Springs
Bottled and distributed by
Nestlé
Founded in 1999, by environmental lawyer Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and partners John Hoving and Chris Bartle.
Kennedy, whom Trump nominated to lead the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, claims that fluoride is “an industrial waste associated with arthritis, bone fractures, bone cancer, IQ loss, neurodevelopmental disorders, and thyroid disease.”
Keeper Springs bottled water contained up to 1.3 milligrams of fluoride per liter, according to a 2009 chemical analysis. That’s a significantly higher concentration of the mineral than what’s found in most tap water—for example, New York City’s tap water contains only 0.2 milligrams of fluoride per liter.
source: newrepublic.com
I cannot confirm that this water analysis shows any problem regarding fluoride, and the article did not cite their source. The water source was natural springs, but no claims were found that flouride was
added. Fluoride can be present naturally in spring water, but that is NOT the same kind of fluoride added by water municipalities. Natural fluoride is found in tea and spring water as fluoride ions, while the stuff added to toothpaste and municipal water is
sodium fluoride (or NaF, FSA, or H₂SiF₆).
Keeper Springs came from springs in Pennsylvania, but it once came from Vermont, according to an archived page from
keepersprings.com.
Later water sources for Keeper Springs is Pennsylvania (why did they move?), according to
instacart.com /
archived
Frontier Springs, located in New Tripoli, PA; Langor, PA; Hegins, PA; South Coventry, PA; Pine Grove, PA and/or Newmanstown, PA.
Confirmation that Kennedy's water, which he co-founded, was part of Nestle
Joe Wiggetman has been promoted to general manager of Nestle Waters North America Inc.'s Earth Brands portfolio, consisting of the Re-Source and Keeper Springs brands.
Keeper Springs Natural Spring Water was launched by environmental lawyer and advocate Robert F. Kennedy Jr., and John Hoving and Chris Bartle...
timesunion.com
For part of Keeper Springs' history, the water source was "two Iranian guys".
“For a while, we had a source in upstate New York where the water was naturally fluoridated.... These two Iranian guys owned it. It was a pretty neat scenario, but we didn’t stay with them for long.” - The company’s other co-founder, Chris Bartle
Original outlet: The New Yorker
Article: “The Apostate: A former insider’s critique of the Waterkeeper Alliance”
Author: Lawrence Wright
Publication date: January 4, 2010
newsbreak.com /
archived
Notice that the statement about Keeper Springs coming from two Iranian guys in upstate New York, but not for long, is vague and suspicious. Why would Kennedy's water bottling company change sources so frequently, from Vermont, to New York, to Pennsylvania, and from where else? What a strange business. I wonder if co-founder Bartle was trying to shift blame for the fluoride to Iran, and if they had anything at all to do with it.
Summary
Nestlé was caught putting horse meat in "beef" products. In plain sight, Nestlé adds fluoride to some of their products. Kennedy co-founded a bottled water that may also have contained fluoride, which was bottled and distributed by Nestlé at some point, but those details are vague, and I cannot confirm if Nestlé was the bottler when fluoride was found.