Sugar became the fall guy for a society addicted to
overeating, junk food, and fake wellness. The real poison is corporate food
greed, emotional binge eating, and people treating their stomachs like
all-you-can-eat amusement parks.
Sugar has become the easiest criminal to arrest in modern
society. Mention sugar today, and people react like you just released a cobra
into a daycare center. Everybody suddenly turns into a street-corner nutrition
prophet. “Sugar is poison.” “Sugar kills.” “Sugar is toxic.” Meanwhile, the
same people saying this are swallowing caramel frappes large enough to drown a
goat, inhaling donuts at midnight, and eating “healthy” granola bars packed
with enough hidden syrup to keep a hummingbird awake for 3 business days. The
loudest preacher in town is often the one hiding whiskey under the bed.
Let us stop acting stupid for one minute. Sugar is not
some mysterious white powder cooked inside a cartel laboratory. Sugar is
chemistry. Sugar is carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. Glucose and sucrose are
organic compounds that help fuel life itself. The human body literally runs on
glucose. Your brain depends heavily on it. Your muscles use it. Your cells burn
it for energy. Remove sugar completely from the human system, and the body
begins acting like a city during a blackout. Confusion. Weakness. Fatigue.
Collapse. Nature itself refuses to quit sugar. During starvation, the body
starts breaking down glycogen stores and muscle tissue just to keep glucose
circulating in the blood. That is how desperate the body is to keep sugar alive
inside you.
Yet modern society talks about sugar like it is Satan
wearing a chef’s hat. The hypocrisy would be funny if it were not so
ridiculous.
Back in the 1700s, the average American consumed roughly
4 pounds of sugar yearly. Today, estimates place annual sugar consumption above
100 pounds per person when added sugars in processed foods are included. That
is not “a sweet tooth.” That is industrial-scale gluttony wearing yoga pants
and pretending to care about wellness. The problem is not the teaspoon of sugar
inside coffee. The problem is that food corporations transformed sugar into a
weaponized business model. They shoved it into bread, ketchup, cereal, yogurt,
sports drinks, pasta sauce, frozen meals, and snacks marketed to children using
dancing cartoon animals with psychopathic levels of enthusiasm.
A child wakes up today and eats sugar before even
brushing his teeth. Sugary cereal for breakfast. Sugary juice box for school.
Sugary snack after lunch. Sugary soda after dinner. Then society acts shocked
when obesity rates explode like fireworks in a gasoline factory.
The World Health Organization says global obesity has
more than doubled since 1990. Nearly 3 billion people worldwide are overweight
or obese. But instead of discussing overeating, sedentary lifestyles, emotional
binge eating, stress addiction, and corporate food engineering, society wants a
clean villain. So sugar became the public punching bag. When everybody spits
on one man in the village, either he stole something, or the villagers are
hiding their own sins.
And trust me, the villagers are hiding plenty. The
sugar industry itself helped create this disaster. In the 1960s, internal
documents later revealed that sugar lobby groups funded research designed to
downplay sugar’s link to heart disease while shifting blame toward fat. That
revelation poisoned public trust for decades. Americans discovered that parts
of nutrition science had been massaged like a corrupt boxing scorecard. So
naturally, the backlash came hard. People felt deceived. Betrayed. Hustled.
But here is where the conversation becomes dishonest.
There is a massive difference between sugar and excess
sugar. There is a massive difference between eating fruit and drinking 4 giant
sodas daily. There is a massive difference between balanced eating and
industrial food addiction. Society keeps mixing these things together because
outrage sells faster than truth. A calm explanation never trends. Panic does.
Fear does. “Sugar is killing your children!” gets more clicks than “Maybe stop
drinking 7 milkshakes weekly.”
And social media made everything worse. Every week,
another self-declared health warrior appears online looking like a gym
mannequin dipped in coconut oil, screaming about “clean eating” while secretly
promoting protein bars loaded with disguised sugar under fancy names like brown
rice syrup, maltodextrin, agave concentrate, evaporated cane juice, and fruit
solids. Same sugar. Different lipstick. A thief who wears a suit is still a
thief.
The real problem is not sweetness. The real problem is
human appetite without discipline. That truth makes people uncomfortable
because it destroys the victim narrative. It forces people to admit something
ugly: many of us eat emotionally, not biologically. People eat because they are
lonely. Angry. Exhausted. Stressed. Bored. Depressed. Modern life is a pressure
cooker with Wi-Fi. Sugar simply became the cheapest legal sedative available.
And corporations knew it.
Scientists understand that sugar stimulates dopamine
release in the brain. It produces pleasure and reward signals. Food companies
exploited that knowledge with the precision of casino owners designing slot
machines. Ultra-processed food was engineered not merely to taste good, but to
make stopping difficult. Once the public realized this, sugar became the enemy.
But the deeper problem was greed masquerading as convenience.
Still, let us stop pretending sugar itself is useless.
Athletes rely on glucose during intense activity. Hospitals use glucose
solutions in medical care. Emergency medicine uses sugar to treat hypoglycemia.
The body converts carbohydrates into glucose because human survival depends on
energy transfer. Roughly 45% to 50% of the dry weight of many foods consists of
carbon because carbohydrates, proteins, and fats are carbon-based molecules.
Carbon is not the villain. Sugar is not the villain. Excess and manipulation
are the villains.
But society loves theater more than honesty.
Look at modern grocery stores. Entire aisles look like
crime scenes sponsored by marketing departments. Neon-colored drinks. Giant
snack bags. Frosted pastries carrying enough calories to fuel a snowplow. Then
politicians appear on television pretending they are horrified by obesity
statistics. Please. These same societies subsidize industries producing
mountains of cheap processed food because unhealthy calories are profitable.
Everybody wants to cash the check, but nobody wants to own the funeral.
Even artificial sweeteners failed to become the perfect
escape route. Some studies and health organizations now question whether
non-sugar sweeteners truly help long-term weight control. So society sits
trapped inside nutritional confusion. Sugar is demonized. Artificial sweeteners
are distrusted. Processed food dominates shelves. Obesity climbs higher.
Diabetes spreads faster. And average consumers stand inside supermarkets
looking like exhausted gamblers trying to choose the least dangerous slot machine.
I find the moral performance around sugar especially
hilarious. Somebody rejects dessert dramatically at a restaurant like they are
rejecting organized crime.
“No thanks. I don’t consume sugar anymore.” Wonderful.
Alert the Nobel committee.
Meanwhile, that same person sleeps 4 hours nightly,
drinks alcohol every weekend, never exercises, and lives under enough stress to
bend steel beams. Health is not a Disney movie where
killing one villain saves the kingdom.
The truth is uglier and simpler than the health industry
wants to admit. Human beings need glucose. Human beings do not need industrial
excess. Those are two separate realities. Society keeps blending them together
because nuance is boring and outrage pays rent.
Sugar helped build empires. Sugar plantations fueled
colonial wealth. Millions of enslaved Africans were forced into brutal labor
because sugar generated enormous profits. People once called sugar “white gold”
because nations fought over it like wolves fighting over fresh meat. The same
society that once built fortunes from sugar now talks about it like radioactive
waste. That irony could choke a horse.
So no, I am not buying the cartoon version of this debate
anymore. Sugar did not sneak into kitchens wearing a ski mask. Human beings
created a culture of overconsumption, corporate manipulation, emotional eating,
and endless appetite. Sugar simply became the most visible face inside a much
darker system.
And now society wants to execute the mascot while
protecting the circus.
This article stands on
its own, but some readers may also enjoy the titles in my “Brief BookSeries”. Read it here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.