marvin martian
Diamond Member
RFK, Jr. issued an order to American food companies to remove these poisons from their products, and they are responding.
Food and beverage giant PepsiCo is likewise changing things.
In related news, the left will come out strongly (and hilariously) in favor of petroleum-based chemical food dyes very soon.
www.breitbart.com
The makers of Jimmy Dean breakfast sandwiches and Hillshire Farm meats will remove artificial dyes after Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has pushed to remove the dyes from America’s food supply.
“As a recognized leader in protein, none of the products Tyson Foods offers through our school nutrition programs include petroleum-based synthetic dyes as ingredients,” Donnie King, president and CEO of Tyson Foods, said in an earnings call on Monday.
King noted that most of the company’s products, including its chicken nuggets, “do not contain any of these types of dyes, and we have been proactively reformulating those few products that do.”
“We expect that our work to eliminate the use of petroleum-based synthetic dyes in production will be completed by the end of May,” the CEO continued.
PepsiCo said that its snack products such as Lay’s and Tostitos will “be out of artificial colors by the end of this year.”
Food and beverage giant PepsiCo is likewise changing things.
In related news, the left will come out strongly (and hilariously) in favor of petroleum-based chemical food dyes very soon.

Tyson Foods to Remove Synthetic Dyes by End of Month

Tyson Foods to Remove Synthetic Dyes by End of Month
The makers of Jimmy Dean breakfast sandwiches and Hillshire Farm meats will remove artificial dyes as HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. pushes to remove the dyes from America's food supply.

The makers of Jimmy Dean breakfast sandwiches and Hillshire Farm meats will remove artificial dyes after Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has pushed to remove the dyes from America’s food supply.
“As a recognized leader in protein, none of the products Tyson Foods offers through our school nutrition programs include petroleum-based synthetic dyes as ingredients,” Donnie King, president and CEO of Tyson Foods, said in an earnings call on Monday.
King noted that most of the company’s products, including its chicken nuggets, “do not contain any of these types of dyes, and we have been proactively reformulating those few products that do.”
“We expect that our work to eliminate the use of petroleum-based synthetic dyes in production will be completed by the end of May,” the CEO continued.
PepsiCo said that its snack products such as Lay’s and Tostitos will “be out of artificial colors by the end of this year.”