Theres arsenic and lead in coffee, tomatos, chocolate, etc. Its all over. Theres arsenic and lead in your drinking water provided to you by your local government. Gasp. Theres also acceptable levels established by the FDA for all those things, and none of the products are over the levels.
Oh well when you put it that way I'm glad it's there. :trink26:
No, the point was that this is just another sensationalism article put out by media companies trying to find ways to build excitement. Its probably also being pushed by the agenda that coke + pepsi now have of putting out gatorade/powerade with protein in it. Someone is trying to make sure their launch flops. If you can scare people enough about protein drinks right before they both drop multimillions into selling it....
I understand your point. But... I didn't know protein powders contained these substances and i would've rather invested my money in a company that used "cleaner" protein. i just don't like having to find this out after years of using protein powders.
I think they should test all the protein companies out there including Nutra's to see where everyones protein stands.
Hmm see I don't think you are getting the point. Protein powders, milk in gallon jugs, ground beef, chicken breasts, any food items at all (all the crap you eat day to day) have trace amounts of these in it. "Cleaner" protein is likely a joke as there are only so many facilities that process milk into protein powder and then those resell to everyone.
So the companies that weren't specifically named are right now having a field day smack talking about the ones that were named, but for most of them the only reason they weren't listed was because they weren't tested in the article.
They all already are tested, and all fall into safety guidelines set by the federal government.
I understand that it's in "everything" we eat but if you can avoid it in at least one part of your diet, wouldn't you?
Just help here please- Are implying that Solgar (which had the lowest of all listed) tested that low on a fluke? Cause whichever whey manufacturer they get theirs from would seem to be the best, no?
Theres arsenic and lead in coffee, tomatos, chocolate, etc. Its all over. Theres arsenic and lead in your drinking water provided to you by your local government. Gasp. Theres also acceptable levels established by the FDA for all those things, and none of the products are over the levels.
... if you are drinking 3 servings of muscle milk a day, you are doing something wrong anyhowCause thats around 1100 calories and 150g protein from that alone.
We see one set of test results from how many batches of each product? 1?
2) Now you're just splitting hairs - as if heavy metal contamination would be isolated in mass-produced protein.
Thats not true. Each of the ingredients including the whey itself are of different batches from different manufacturers at any given time. They could 6 months from now retest and solgar be highest while EAS is lowest. When you are dealing in parts per million or parts per billion, the variation is easy
I'd be surprised if any of the companies in the list used different sources/manufacturers from production batch to production batch. Very surprised.