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It seems that some people will eat just about anything. If you are of the highly omnivorous persuasion, congratulations. This story won't be any help at all, so please instead read the instructables about eating cute animals of some sort.
Let's be perfectly clear about this: this instructable is titled "How to eat fewer insects." It is meant to help you eat fewer (not zero) insects IF that is your choice. We do not make any judgements or claims about whether, when, or how many insects you should eat. Yes, lots of people like to eat insects, and lots of people don't like to eat insects. However, please keep in mind that it is not the topic under discussion here
If you're still interested, let's look at a box of candy in the next step.
































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Resist eating oh just any insect though: Insects and plants invented chemical warfare. (What else have they got, after all.) Some of their chemicals can be medicine at the right time and dosage, but many are plain nasty--even lethal.
Thank you, Oskay, for helping us to know more of the specifics!
Please read that a few more times until it sinks in.
So your comment, helpfully informing me that "we cannot avoid eating insects " is kind of redundant. You put down a comment to tell me that I'm wrong for writing this article, and the best argument that you can come up with is something that I already mentioned in the article? Very helpful indeed.
How about this: why don't you try writing some instructables so that everyone else can leave condescending, off-topic, offensive, and redundant comments on yours. You'll find that most of your commenters haven't read the other comments to know that what they had to say has already been said-- and answered. You'll find that maybe a quarter of them have a question that you already answered in the article-- indicating that they hadn't read it all the way-- and you'll find the very few, very special commenters who haven't even read the title. You'll have lots of fun-- you should try it.
Anaphylactic shock from carmine is a genuine concern to a certain set of allergic people. Since you think that I should lighten up about it, it's clear that you're not one of the people that could end up in the hospital from eating a popsicle containing carmine-- and good for you. But that's no reason to wish that fate on others.
It's a great resource, and I didn't know that such a thing existed-- I though that we were just on our own to figure out which agencies were reliable. Looking at that list does inject a little bit of sanity into these things!
Red No. 40 is an extremely common dye in foods. It is also known as Allura Red AC, Food Red 17, C.I. 16035, and E129. It's apparently a common misconception that it is a variety of carmine-- that misconception even gets a mention on the wikipedia page about Allura Red:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allura_Red_AC
Since Red 40 is a synthetic dye (made from petroleum or coal tar), it is subject to FDA oversight, as opposed to carmine-based dyes, which are not. For more, see
http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/~lrd/colorfac.html