Big Sugar Versus Big Corn: Bitter Fight Over Sweeteners in California Court
Real scandal is the amount of subsidies both Sugar Daddies are pulling down from Uncle Sugar.

Trade restrictions on imported sugar that to aim protect America's 4,714 sugar growers from foreign competition cost American consumers about $3.7 billion annually. Meanwhile the federal subsidies for corn - used to produce high fructose corn syrup - average around $5 billion per year.
Now Big Sugar and Big Corn are squared off in a California court room charging that each is lying about the other's products. Specifically Big Sugar is worried that the Corn Refiners Association's effort to rebrand high fructose corn syrup as "corn sugar" has caused consumers to think twice about eating cane and beet sugar. As the Associated Press reports:
Its ad campaign featured a TV commercial with a father walking with his daughter across a cornfield and saying that he's reassured by experts that high fructose corn syrup is the same as cane sugar.
"Your body can't tell the difference," he says. "Sugar is sugar."
That didn't go over well with the Western Sugar Cooperative and other sugar processors, who sued the corn refiners and Archer Daniels Midland Co. and Cargill Inc. for false advertising. They are seeking as much as $2 billion.
Corn refiners and the two agribusiness giants countersued, charging the sugar industry with making false and misleading statements that included a comment that high fructose corn syrup is as addictive as crack cocaine. They are seeking $530 million.
Jurors will hear from experts on both sides of the debate, getting a mix of science and spin.
Whatever the spin, the science is clear: There is no essential difference in the way that the human body digests either. As I reported earlier:
A 2012 review article in the journal Advances in Nutrition summarized this research: "a broad scientific consensus has emerged that there are no metabolic or endocrine response differences between HFCS and sucrose related to obesity or any other adverse health outcome. This equivalence is not surprising given that both of these sugars contain approximately equal amounts of fructose and glucose, contain the same number of calories, possess the same level of sweetness, and are absorbed identically through the gastrointestinal tract." Another 2012 review article, in the Journal of Obesity, concluded, "In the past decade, a number of research trials have demonstrated no short-term differences between HFCS and sucrose in any metabolic parameter or health related effect measured in human beings including blood glucose, insulin, leptin, ghrelin and appetite."
Sugar is sucrose, which is half fructose, half glucose. High-fructose corn syrup is about 55 percent fructose and 45 percent glucose.
As it happens, the Food and Drug Administration has already ruled that sugar is a solid, dry, crystallized food. So how about "corn molasses" then?
In any case, the real scandal is the amount of subsidies both Sugar Daddies are pulling down from Uncle Sugar.
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Big Sugar vs Big Corn
Sounds like a gay wrestling porn movie.
Gonna get some Big Sweet on Big Sweet action!
Isn't "corn sugar" already used to refer to pure glucose derived from corn?
Technically, it's sold as glucose or dextrose.
For brewing I seem to remember it being sold as "corn sugar" for use in priming for natural carbonation in the bottle.
Yes. Fructration has to happen to make it taste similar to real sugar.
Specifically Big Sugar is worried that the Corn Refiners Association's effort to rebrand high fructose corn syrup as "corn sugar" has caused consumers to think twice about eating cane and beet sugar.
Well, you can't switch from calling them Big Corn to the Corn Refiners Association and not switch from Big Sugar to whatever corresponding legit name Big Sugar has. Western Sugar Cooperative, I guess. It's disrespectful to Big Sugar and their sweet, sweet product.
Mmmmmmmmmm sugar.
A pox on both their houses.
"Corn sugar" is fine by me. People redefine words all of the time.
I've seen some ridiculous arguments about mayonnaise in this very comment section.
"Corn sugar" is accurate, so that's all good. Don't get me started about mayonnaise. Or things called "bacon" that aren't pork products.
People redefine words all of the time.
Right, like "public use".
Any use of corn that doesn't involve putting it in charred oak barrels to age is irrelevant.
Why make HCFS when you can make EtOH?
I think we can all agree that whomever wins, we will lose.
Also, technically, I think they are promoting 45-55 HFCS as "corn sugar". The stuff that is only 10% fructose or 85% fructose isn't as popular.
Does this mean we can start calling our local poet laureate 'CornFree'?
/starts humming that song from that old lion movie...
I want to move to the moon. the darkside...
Huh, two protected, subsidized industries going at it.
I don't suppose it's possible to just declare both sides guilty and throw everyone involved into a giant water tank filled with piranhas.
I approve of this plan.
In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women! --Homer Simpson
I never thought about it like that.
http://www.CompletePrivacy.tk
How to Eliminate Sugar from Your Diet
Sugar can lead to many diseases, such as Type 2 diabetes and high cholesterol. So it's definitely important to watch what you eat when it comes to sugar