Feb 23, 2017 12:48 PM
BlueStringsAttached
2809
75
9
the_more_you_know
Fabyoulust
It's almost as if people will take advantage of other people's stupidity.
redjuice71
Right, we need some oxygen or nitrogen up in here...
bwizzle360
I saw gluten free soap the other day, still don't quite understand that.
morakdais
Is it vegan?
Trickstasama
Is it grass fed?
StormageddonDarkLordOfAllAKAAlfie
I bet it's gluten free too.
GonadTheBeerBellyan
Is it vegetarian fed though?
MrKnowItAll1903
NO Carbon, NO Organic!
thevortexmaster
I'm assuming it has to do with the extraction from seawater other than the chemical process it takes to make regular table salt?
Randomice
But this salt was milked from coarse organic sea salt cows.
TECHNICALLYC0RRECT
I thought it was milked from cage free sea bulls?
boneh3ad
I love seeing bottle water that says gluten free on the label.
JazzHandsFan
Right? The only thing you can do to make water healthier is ADDING to it (minerals, vitamins, etc).
KingOfTheAnarchists
But is it free range?
whereisthenutella
Yeah it was wild captured, from the ocean.
NuclearChimichangas
Was it grass fed at least?
Sea weed
DefinitelyNotAShark
I'm all in on the science behind this, but that's not the definition of organic when it comes to food.
badpetrock
Actually... https://www.nal.usda.gov/afsic/organic-productionorganic-food-information-access-tools
3>produced without the use of chemicals or other agents that aren't allowed in "organic" food production. That's pretty much it.
2>merely defines the term "organic" as a label on food products, which was my point in the first place? Organic salt would be washed and>
Salt is labelled a food, so the fact that it's chemically inorganic doesn't matter. I don't get what the link is supposed to show me. It>
Was to show that the USDA does have a definition for "organic" when it comes to food, though it focuses more on production processes.
Well, pretty much all foods are organic matter. The term "organic" is meant to describe production processes only, and is scientifically>
2>inaccurate anyway. Different languages use far more accurate terms as to describe the methods that are commonly used.
Fabyoulust
It's almost as if people will take advantage of other people's stupidity.
redjuice71
Right, we need some oxygen or nitrogen up in here...
bwizzle360
I saw gluten free soap the other day, still don't quite understand that.
morakdais
Is it vegan?
Trickstasama
Is it grass fed?
StormageddonDarkLordOfAllAKAAlfie
I bet it's gluten free too.
GonadTheBeerBellyan
Is it vegetarian fed though?
MrKnowItAll1903
NO Carbon, NO Organic!
thevortexmaster
I'm assuming it has to do with the extraction from seawater other than the chemical process it takes to make regular table salt?
Randomice
But this salt was milked from coarse organic sea salt cows.
TECHNICALLYC0RRECT
I thought it was milked from cage free sea bulls?
boneh3ad
I love seeing bottle water that says gluten free on the label.
JazzHandsFan
Right? The only thing you can do to make water healthier is ADDING to it (minerals, vitamins, etc).
KingOfTheAnarchists
But is it free range?
whereisthenutella
Yeah it was wild captured, from the ocean.
NuclearChimichangas
Was it grass fed at least?
whereisthenutella
Sea weed
DefinitelyNotAShark
I'm all in on the science behind this, but that's not the definition of organic when it comes to food.
badpetrock
Actually... https://www.nal.usda.gov/afsic/organic-productionorganic-food-information-access-tools
DefinitelyNotAShark
3>produced without the use of chemicals or other agents that aren't allowed in "organic" food production. That's pretty much it.
DefinitelyNotAShark
2>merely defines the term "organic" as a label on food products, which was my point in the first place? Organic salt would be washed and>
DefinitelyNotAShark
Salt is labelled a food, so the fact that it's chemically inorganic doesn't matter. I don't get what the link is supposed to show me. It>
badpetrock
Was to show that the USDA does have a definition for "organic" when it comes to food, though it focuses more on production processes.
DefinitelyNotAShark
Well, pretty much all foods are organic matter. The term "organic" is meant to describe production processes only, and is scientifically>
DefinitelyNotAShark
2>inaccurate anyway. Different languages use far more accurate terms as to describe the methods that are commonly used.