Anonymous ID: 3528be April 9, 2020, 12:27 p.m. No.8736119   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6261

>>8734927 (pb)

>CABAL COMMS (follow the White Rabbit) - 14 of the world's most sought-after sweets

https://www.greatbigstory.com/guides/best-candies-around-the-world

 

Found an interesting tidbit article from 11 years ago in the UK.

 

Tesco recalls Chinese sweets over melamine fears

 

Tesco has withdrawn a range of children's sweets from UK stores over fears they contain melamine, the chemical responsible for the contaminated baby milk scandal in China.

The supermarket chain recalled White Rabbit Creamy Candies because of reports about the presence of melamine, the chemical that has contaminated formula milk in China, killing four babies and leaving about 53,000 children ill.

Food testers in New Zealand, Hong Kong and Singapore found melamine in the sweets.

White Rabbit candies are stocked in UK branches of Tesco that sell ethnic foods from around the world. The supermarket said it had withdrawn the sweets on the advice of the Food Standards Agency (FSA), and that nobody was known to have fallen ill after eating them.

A Tesco spokesman said: "As a precautionary measure, we have withdrawn White Rabbit Candies from the very small number of UK stores that sell them as part of our ethnic range."…

https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2008/sep/24/foodsafety.tesco

 

What is melamine you say?

 

Melamine is an organic-based, nitrogen-rich compound used to manufacture cooking utensils, plates, plastic products, and more. Melamine resin is durable, fire and heat resistant and virtually unbreakable, making melamine products more desirable than other plastic housewares.

 

Another rather spoopy article;

 

After Lab Test, White Rabbit Candy Found To Be Non-Halal

 

China’s popular milk-based sweets, White Rabbit Creamy Candy was sent for a laboratory analysis by Brunei’s Ministry of Religious Affairs (MoRA), and results have shown that the candy contains pig protein.

With the result test, MoRA has officially labeled the White Rabbit candy brand as non-halal and sought importers and retailers’ cooperation to isolate the product and to place it in a non-Halal section of supermarkets.

The ministry warned Muslim consumers to avoid the Chinese-made product which has been going viral globally including Malaysia, Singapore, and Brunei, after America introduced White Rabbit candy-flavoured ice-cream…

https://hype.my/2019/167808/after-lab-test-white-rabbit-candy-found-to-be-non-halal/

 

What Pork protein (gelatein) you say?

 

Gelatin is a protein obtained by boiling skin, tendons, ligaments, and/or bones with water. It is usually obtained from cows or pigs. Gelatin is used in shampoos, face masks, and other cosmetics; as a thickener for fruit gelatins and puddings (such as Jell-O); in candies, marshmallows, cakes, ice cream, and yogurts; on photographic film; and in vitamins as a coating and as capsules, and it is sometimes used to assist in “clearing” wines. Gelatin is not vegan. However, there is a product called “agar agar” that is sometimes marketed as “gelatin,” but it is vegan. It is derived from a type of seaweed. Kosher symbols and markings are not reliable indicators on which vegans or vegetarians should base their purchasing decisions. This issue is complex, but the “K” or “Kosher” symbols basically mean that the food-manufacturing process was overseen by a rabbi, who theoretically ensures that it meets Hebrew dietary laws. The food also may not contain both dairy products and meat, but it may contain one or the other. “P” or “Parve” means that the product contains no meat or dairy products, but it may contain fish or eggs. Kosher gelatin is usually made from a fish source. “D,” as in “Kosher D,” means that the product either contains milk or was made with dairy machinery. For example, a chocolate and peanut candy may be marked “Kosher D” even if it doesn’t contain milk because the nondairy chocolate was manufactured on machinery that also made milk chocolate.

https://www.peta.org/about-peta/faq/what-is-gelatin-made-of/

 

There seems to be a history of deceit when it comes to ingredients in White Rabbit candies. Also note the lettering of the white rabbit candy wrapper…Also the sweet released in 1943, the rabbit was based off a 'beloved disney character'. This definitely stinks.

Anonymous ID: 3528be April 9, 2020, 12:57 p.m. No.8736579   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8736466

Yep I am fully aware of the facts in that department.

 

>I have been extremely paranoid about what I eat since…

 

Never said I believed it.