HoldenCaulfield 420
New Member
- Joined
- May 29, 2005
- Messages
- 6
- Reaction score
- 0
My friend is telling me that labels on many or even most nutritional supplements contain fake info about things like the number of calories, protein grams, etc. I don't believe him.
I think a label claim like "Use to promote muscle growth" or "Has been shown to increase testosterone production" could easily be bullshi t since these claims aren't evaluated by the FDA. But if the label says "Protein: 18 g per serving" then there damn well better be 18 g of protein in the stated serving size or it would be blatant weights and measures fraud and the company would get shut down.
Am I being gullible in trusting the ingredients list and nutritional info? I'm talking about the white panel that is required by the govt that includes the amounts of different nutrients and % of daily value. Personally I trust whatever is in that box, but ignore the rest of the label. My friend thiks the entire label is bullshi t.
I think a label claim like "Use to promote muscle growth" or "Has been shown to increase testosterone production" could easily be bullshi t since these claims aren't evaluated by the FDA. But if the label says "Protein: 18 g per serving" then there damn well better be 18 g of protein in the stated serving size or it would be blatant weights and measures fraud and the company would get shut down.
Am I being gullible in trusting the ingredients list and nutritional info? I'm talking about the white panel that is required by the govt that includes the amounts of different nutrients and % of daily value. Personally I trust whatever is in that box, but ignore the rest of the label. My friend thiks the entire label is bullshi t.