News ID: 1255
Publish Date: 01 February 2012 - 08:47
A senator in Oklahoma blundered in revealing that some food manufacturers such as PepsiCo, Kraft ed_fetus_and Nestle are using fetus members for flavorings.
BarackObama.ir_ According to Natural News, a senator in Oklahoma blundered in revealing that some food manufacturers such as PepsiCo, Kraft and Nestle, are actually using aborted fetal cells to test and produce artificial chemical enhancers that millions of people in the world consume every day.



This link contains a heartbreaking image of a fetus that its liver has been extracted by the PepsiCo lab staffs to be used in artificial flavorings. Don’t click if you think you might be offended.

Concerned about the ethical and moral implications of such a process, Oklahoma Senator Ralph Shortey has introduced a new legislation to outlaw this practice from happening in his home state. This bill has caused the social observers to ask this question that whether using aborted fetus cells was a common practice among these companies.

The AP and the O'Collegian, the first paper to report this news, say that Shortey didn't answer to calls for comment. Two calls from NPR to the senator's office were set to voicemail and were not returned. But Tulsa radio station KRMG managed to contact him to ask about the legislation, Senate Bill 1418. The senator in response to the question said that his research shows there are companies in the food industry that have used human stem cells to help them research and develop products, including artificial flavorings.

"What I am saying is that if it does happen then we are not going to allow it to manufacture here" Sen. Shortey is quoted as saying by KRMG News Talk Radio.
It is noteworthy to say that this practice is only prohibited in Oklahoma which does not put any limitations on any other states to prevent this ongoing trend.

PepsiCo and Nestle are financial supporters of the Zionist regime after 1992 as the Haaretz newspaper admits.
Considering all the oppositions against this practice, the reasons behind the companies in choosing this process, which reminds us the Chinese similar affair, is still unclear.

Your Comment
Name:
Email:
* Comment:
* Security Code:
Chaptcha