Despite being highly processed and not at all healthy, consumers still purchase box after box of “natural” and organic breakfast cereals thinking it’s good for them.
This is because consumers get so easily excited about a label with just one or two ingredients and no chemicals or preservatives, but rarely seem to consider how those ingredients are sourced or processed – which is many times more important!
Kashi GoLean, an extremely popular brand of “natural” cereal recently got slapped for abusing this misplaced consumer trust by The Cornucopia Institute’s Cereal Crimes report.
A box of Kashi GoLean cereal was purchased from a Whole Foods in Boston and sent to an accredited lab for testing.
The findings?
The cereal was 100% GMO and had pesticide residues despite having “natural” on the label.
Kashi responded by saying the information was inaccurate and misleading because it was not based on a formal scientific analysis of Kashi products.
Huh??
How can testing a box of Kashi cereal at an accredited lab not be scientifically accurate?
Oh wait, I know! Â It’s because Kashi wasn’t funding the testing behind the scenes so they could stealthily control the results that were reported, right?
Kashi’s arrogant and lame response is typical of giant food manufacturers like Kellogg, which owns Kashi, who are used to being able to claim just about anything they want about their products and get away with it.
Even more lame, when it became apparent that Kashi wasn’t going to be able to spin its way out of the PR nightmare, it was announced that Kashi would be 100% GMO free by …
2015!
Don’t worry guys. Â Keep on eating that GMO, pesticide laced cereal for just a few more years and we’ll be sure to get our act together and get rid of them before you’re in a wheelchair! Â And, if we’re lucky, you will forget all about this messy public relations snafu in a few short months so we won’t really have to change at all!
The fact is, Kellogg supports GMOs for use in “natural” products. According to the grassroots organization GMO Free USA, Kellogg is actively working against requiring the labeling of GMOs having contributed $33,000 so far to propaganda campaigns to defeat it.
Best not to trust food companies with your most important meal of the day and go barcode free with your breakfast choices. Â The soaked cereals of traditional cultures are an excellent choice or, if you really need a cold breakfast cereal, make a truly healthy one yourself so that it doesn’t contain the extruded, denatured, allergenic cereal grains of the heavily processed, boxed variety that are falsely promoted on the label as somehow healthy because they are natural or organic.
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
Cheryl Grover via Facebook
Funny some of their commercials say they trek all over the world to find the right ingredients……
Marion Hyde via Facebook
Pure garbage.
Kathy Place via Facebook
Wow
Koren Ng via Facebook
love this…no idea !
Kathy Place via Facebook
Wow!
Kimber Thompson via Facebook
I’m boycotting Kellogg’s
Christine Raney Weeks via Facebook
I look for GMO Project emblem. More and more products are going that way finally. Love my organic lifestyle. So many wonderful kind polite and courteous people are also organic consumers. I see rage all around but never in a natural food store or farmer’s market. Go organic or go home
Amy Duncan via Facebook
I saw a few flavors of Kashi labeled non-gmo project today at the store
Susanne DeKeyser Buskell via Facebook
All those GREAT GMO’S and ALL for just $2.99! WOW!! GAG 😛
Linda Dobey via Facebook
Yep I’ve converted breakfast at our house to your “soaked oatmeal” thanks to the video you posted with the instructions! I’m thankful you are educating us on the traditional cooking methods where the real nutrition is found :))