



The World Health Organization (WHO) has lost trust and credibility in the eyes of many Americans.
This is largely due to how the institution managed and responded to COVID. The push to force-vaccinate Americans with the threat of joblessness, for instance, alienated a sizable portion of the country.
Nevertheless, the WHO is still around and playing a considerable role in how this nation approaches health-related matters.
This is why a new announcement to come from the organization is raising eyebrows, according to the Gateway Pundit.
The WHO will soon be declaring aspartame consumption as a risk factor for cancer. Aspartame is one of the most used and popular sweeteners today. It’s found in Coke products, ice cream, chewing gum, Snapple drinks, and more.
However, some questions are coming up about what’s really behind this prospective announcement from the WHO. For decades, health regulators and other key industry officials have maintained that aspartame consumption in moderation doesn’t pose health threats.
Despite planning to disclare this as a cancer risk, various past rulings from the WHO have led to lawsuits and controversy. Therefore, some Americans are not sold on the narrative that aspartame actually poses a threat of cancer.
Despite the mystery and questionable nature surrounding this situation, if WHO does formally classify aspartame consumption as a cancer risk, various governments could move to regulate it accordingly.
Likewise, there could be lawsuits raised about the WHO declaring this popular and long-established sweetener as potentially cancerous.
Americans will have to see what happens and pay attention to how various governments respond, once the WHO moves forward with this announcement.
On different social media platforms, some folks are already suggesting there’s more than what meets the eye when it comes to aspartame and how the World Health Organization is planning to address it.