Agreements are in place between Public Health England and United Utilities which require artificial fluoridation at three of our water treatment works. Two of these works are in West Cumbria, at Cornhow and Ennerdale. The third is at Hurleston, in Cheshire. The agreements for fluoridating these supplies date back to the early 1970s.
I had a pop two weeks ago, thought of it as a treat after inadvertently avoiding pop for a year. Had three sips and threw the bottle away; it was cloy and disgusting. I don't undertand how anyone can drink it and enjoy it anymore, actually.
I hate pop... not to mention juice. For some odd reason I liked juice up until I was 10, then I hated it. When my family moved here from Ecuador, I was seven. Canadian orange juice tasted weird, and so did apple juice. And I still hate both kinds of juice, especially apple juice.
Pop vs. Soda. There is a great debate in the US about what to call a generic soft drink. The answer is incredibly complex, but generally the answer is: soda on the east and west coasts, coke in the south, and pop everywhere else. In Canada, no such scruples - it's pop everywhere. http://whatsdifferentincanada.tumblr.com/post/51331368665/pop-vs-soda
And I disagree, having been to the States: Canada and the U.S. are two totally different countries; could never live in the States. The States is hostile and has a completely different culture about it. Canada is an open country, everyone is accepted, and there is little to no physical contact. The personal bubble is everything here.
"For example, diabetes, which creates excess sugar in the bloodstream, can be triggered by the stress caused by feelings of powerlessness. To compensate for this sense of powerlessness, the body manufactures more and more sugar to fuel the muscles. To halt this runaway sugar production, the psychic distress that caused it must be identified and resolved or it will be passed on to the next generation."
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I had a pop two weeks ago, thought of it as a treat after inadvertently avoiding pop for a year. Had three sips and threw the bottle away; it was cloy and disgusting. I don't undertand how anyone can drink it and enjoy it anymore, actually.
I hate pop... not to mention juice. For some odd reason I liked juice up until I was 10, then I hated it.
When my family moved here from Ecuador, I was seven. Canadian orange juice tasted weird, and so did apple juice. And I still hate both kinds of juice, especially apple juice.
I only drink water, tea and black coffee.
And never tap water.
https://www.buzzfeed.com/pablovaldivia/soda-or-pop?utm_term=.uv0vl1QEm#.eg2xA9vKW
http://whatsdifferentincanada.tumblr.com/post/51331368665/pop-vs-soda
And I disagree, having been to the States: Canada and the U.S. are two totally different countries; could never live in the States.
The States is hostile and has a completely different culture about it.
Canada is an open country, everyone is accepted, and there is little to no physical contact. The personal bubble is everything here.
Bubble wrap comes to mind when I say pop now.
Thinking of moving back to Wyoming.
If we do, it will be coming full circle.