If you are fat and want to lose weight, we recommend you stop drinking soft drinks immediately.
These drinks contain a lot of sugar that stays in the body and turns into fat. In addition, people who regularly drink soft drinks are at high risk of developing diabetes.
This disease is mainly related to the elderly, but now more young people suffer from diabetes.
Students have the right to choose their favorite soft drink. However, schools should not sell drinks that may hurt students.
Children who wish to cool in the summer can replace their soft drinks with natural juice or water. This is a more healthy option and has the same effect.
Please do not drink soft drinks like classmates. Candied drinks may overactivate some children and affect attention in the classroom.
However, after a hot summer or after a physical lesson, you should be able to enjoy one or two cans.
If an adult can drink coffee every day - this is not a healthy drink - why can not you enjoy a soft drink?
Soft drinks are more attractive for young people if they are banned at school. Students can purchase at supermarkets and vending machines. I doubt whether such ban is effective
If you drank anything that could lead to obesity, does the government want to punish the young consumer? Then they should ban chocolate, McDonalds and potato chips - they are also junk food!
There is no absolute "correct drink" or "wrong drink" in the world. It is acceptable to ingest adequate amounts of fat and sugar.
The only effective way to maintain student health is to increase the importance of regular exercise and balanced diet.
My theme of the speech is "Is it impossible to drink soft drinks from school?" As we know, soft drinks contain a lot of sugar. However, many children are still drinking them and the average person drinking soft drinks everyday is 3 cans a day, which is 30 glasses of sugar flowing in your throat. Many Canadian people are overweight due to soft drinks causing not only obesity, but also heart disease, hypertension and other serious problems. According to the School Food Service Association, soft drinks have increased dramatically in the last 20 years and each sweet soft drink should contain "teaspoon of teaspoon" and should be "eliminated" from school.
Discussions on whether or not schools should allow the use of high-calorie soft drink vending machines since 2006 have been increasing. (Soft drinks) Those who oppose vending machines think soft drinks are an important element of childhood obesity and caries. Opponents claim that schools are responsible for the health of their children and making it easier for children to drink soft drinks is a violation of this responsibility. Supporters of vending machines believe that obesity is a complicated problem and that only soft drinks are not the reason. The bill to tax soft drinks in California fails in 2011 and some opposing legislators believe that parents, not governments, should be responsible for the choice of drinking of children
A similar CSE report in August 2006 encouraged many state governments to issue a ban on selling soft drinks at school. Kerala completely prohibits the sale or manufacture of soft drinks. Instead, soft drink companies like Coca-Cola and Pepsi have advertisements on the safety of drink consumption in the media. The UK Central Science Institute, which was commissioned by Coca-Cola Company, discovered in 2006 that the product meets EU standards. Coca-Cola and the University of Michigan have asked the Energy Resources Institute (TERI) for an independent investigation of the bottling factory. It reported on the use of unsafe chemicals for water supply in 2008.