this post was submitted on 08 Jul 2023
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Sure, these things on their own, at the amount they're generally consumed, may not cause issues. But when you are combining these things, the sum total can be worrisome. Maybe red meat alone isn't much; maybe hot coffee alone isn't much; maybe aspartame alone isn't much; maybe alcohol alone isn't much. But when you have hot coffee for breakfast, red meat for 2 meals, aspartame drinks all day, and alcohol at night, you are at a completely different level of risk. Knowing which small things contribute to this sum is important. Or, from another angle: maybe someone really likes alcohol, even acknowledging the potential cancer-causing aspect. So to somewhat offset that known risk, they're wanting to minimize other sources of potential-cancer.
That's not the point I was trying to raise.
My point was that people love to pile on anything artificial because they see it as unnatural and they claim it's cause they just want to be aware of the risks, but those same people usually don't know and don't care that things they partake of everyday are also cancer risks and much higher ones than the artificial stuff.
My point in asking OP was because id wager (and wanted to see) they didn't know those were cancer risks and won't change their habits or they did know but hadn't changed their habits.
If you're drinking 30 cans a day, I'm going to guess that switching to water won't be the easiest of the things to change from that list. And it would be the least significant impact.