Cold Logic

COLD LOGIC The Great Food Illusion: Are We Eating Real Food Anymore?

43 min · 12. mai 2026
episode COLD LOGIC The Great Food Illusion: Are We Eating Real Food Anymore? cover

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COLD LOGIC EPISODE TITLE The Great Food Illusion: Are We Eating Real Food Anymore? SERIES POSITIONING STATEMENT Cold Logic is the investigative podcast that follows the signal — tracking the intersection of suppressed science, frontier research, and the questions that powerful institutions would rather you not ask. Each episode builds a case from documented evidence and follows it wherever it leads. Sixty percent of American calories now come from ultra-processed foods. Most people have no idea what that actually means — or what it costs them. In Episode 4 of Cold Logic, we break down the architecture of the modern food system: the flavor chemistry that replaced real ingredients, the behavioral science that engineered your cravings, and the regulatory framework that was designed to protect you and was captured by the industry it was supposed to oversee. We trace the concept of the bliss point — the sugar-salt-fat combination calibrated to bypass satiety signals — from food scientist Howard Moskowitz's original work for Pepsi to its adoption as the industry standard across every product category in the grocery store. We examine vanishing caloric density, acoustic engineering for crunch, and colorant use to manipulate flavor perception. We look at the FDA's GRAS self-certification system, which allowed over ten thousand additives into the American food supply — many never independently reviewed for safety. We document the Sugar Research Foundation's deliberate funding of Harvard research to redirect dietary science away from sugar and toward fat, a deception concealed for fifty years and discovered only when internal documents surfaced in 2016. We examine the consistent findings across multiple large-scale studies linking ultra-processed food consumption to cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, obesity, and all-cause mortality. And we ask the question the industry's marketing infrastructure was designed to prevent: who designed the environment in which your food choices are made, and who profits from the choices you make? This isn't conspiracy theory. It's Cold Logic. * ultra processed food dangers * food additives safety concerns * engineered food bliss point * natural flavors deception * FDA GRAS system problems * sugar industry cover up * food desert health impact * are we eating real food * processed food health effects * cold logic podcast * what is the bliss point in food science and how is it used * are natural flavors on food labels actually natural * FDA GRAS self-certification food additive safety problems * Sugar Research Foundation Harvard study 1965 cover up * ultra processed food linked to cardiovascular disease BMJ study * vanishing caloric density chips engineered to make you eat more * food additives never independently reviewed for safety NRDC * potassium bromate banned Europe legal United States * food deserts ultra processed food health disparities * NOVA classification ultra processed food Carlos Monteiro * how food companies use behavioral science to engineer cravings * revolving door FDA food industry regulatory capture * how flavor companies design food taste International Flavors Fragrances * brominated vegetable oil FDA GRAS revoked 2023 * what percentage of American calories come from ultra processed food Are natural flavors on food labels actually natural? A: Not necessarily. Under FDA regulations, a "natural flavor" is any flavoring derived from plant or animal material — but can involve extensive chemical processing, compound isolation, and reconstruction. Natural flavors are the fourth most common ingredient on American food labels and can include complex mixtures of chemically processed components from sources completely unrelated to the food being flavored. Companies are not required to disclose the specific compounds involved. What is the bliss point in food science? A: The bliss point is the combination of sugar, salt, and fat that produces the maximum desire to continue consuming a food — not the point at which it tastes best, but the point at which it most effectively bypasses the brain's satiety signals. The concept was developed by food scientist Howard Moskowitz and became a standard framework for product development across the American food industry. Is the FDA GRAS system safe? A: The GRAS — Generally Recognized As Safe — system allows food companies to self-certify the safety of additives without independent FDA review or approval before the substance enters the food supply. A 2010 Government Accountability Office investigation found the FDA could not ensure the safety of all substances being added to food. A 2013 NRDC report identified over 10,000 additives in the food supply, many never independently reviewed for safety. Did the sugar industry really cover up research linking sugar to heart disease? A: Yes. Internal documents obtained by UC San Francisco researchers and published in 2016 revealed that the Sugar Research Foundation paid Harvard scientists in 1965 to publish a review concluding that fat — not sugar — was the primary driver of heart disease. The funding source was not disclosed. The resulting research shaped American dietary guidelines for decades and contributed to the low-fat reformulation movement that increased sugar content across thousands of food products. What are ultra-processed foods and why are they dangerous? A: Ultra-processed foods are defined by the NOVA classification system as industrial formulations made from substances extracted from foods with little intact food remaining. Research consistently links high ultra-processed food consumption to increased risk of cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, obesity, depression, and all-cause mortality. A 2019 BMJ study found each 10% increase in ultra-processed food intake was associated with a 10% increase in cardiovascular disease risk. The average American now gets over 60% of daily calories from ultra-processed foods. What food additives are banned in Europe but allowed in the US? A: Several additives permitted in the United States are banned or restricted in Europe. Potassium bromate, used in bread dough, is banned in the EU, UK, Canada, China, and Brazil but remains legal in the US. Brominated vegetable oil had its GRAS status revoked by the FDA only in 2023, decades after European and Japanese bans. Red 40, Yellow 5, and Yellow 6 require warning labels about effects on children's attention and activity in the EU but carry no such warnings in the US. Q: What is a food desert and how does it affect health? A: A food desert is an area — typically low-income and urban — where access to affordable, nutritious food is severely limited, often with no full-service grocery store within a reasonable distance. Approximately 19 million Americans live in food deserts. Research shows that diet-related diseases linked to ultra-processed food consumption — including obesity, type 2 diabetes, and cardiovascular disease — cluster disproportionately in these communities, where ultra-processed food is often the only affordable and accessible caloric option. Cold Logic Episode 4 covers the following documented and verifiable content: the industrial transformation of the American food supply through processing and formulation; the flavor chemistry industry including International Flavors and Fragrances, Givaudan, Firmenich, and Symrise; FDA natural flavor regulations and their limitations; Howard Moskowitz and the bliss point concept; vanishing caloric density engineering; acoustic engineering of chip crunch; colorant use for flavor perception manipulation; the FDA GRAS self-certification system; the 2010 GAO report on FDA additive oversight failures; the NRDC 2013 report identifying 10,000+ additives; specific additives including maltodextrin, carrageenan, TBHQ, potassium bromate, brominated vegetable oil, and artificial colorants; the Sugar Research Foundation's 1965 funded Harvard study; the 2016 UC San Francisco document disclosure; the NOVA food classification system; the 2019 BMJ ultra-processed food cardiovascular study; the 2022 longitudinal study analysis; the 2023 European Heart Journal study; regulatory capture and the revolving door in food regulation; the Nutrition Facts label history; food deserts and geographic health disparities; and agricultural subsidy policy and its effects on food access equity. cold logic, ultra processed food, food additives, bliss point, natural flavors, FDA GRAS, food industry deception, sugar research foundation, dietary guidelines cover up, food science engineering, engineered cravings, food deserts, processed food health risks, NOVA classification, vanishing caloric density, potassium bromate, brominated vegetable oil, Red 40 warning labels, regulatory capture FDA, revolving door food industry, Howard Moskowitz, Carlos Monteiro, real food vs processed food, food system critique, investigative podcast, fuzzy life studios, cold logic podcast See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

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episode Cold Logic The Ocean Floor Blackouts: Why Deep-Sea Cables Keep Getting Cut cover

Cold Logic The Ocean Floor Blackouts: Why Deep-Sea Cables Keep Getting Cut

COLD LOGIC — Episode 6 The Ocean Floor Blackouts: Why Deep-Sea Cables Keep Getting Cut Cold Logic is the investigative podcast that follows the signal — tracking the intersection of suppressed science, frontier research, and the questions that powerful institutions would rather you not ask. Each episode builds a case from documented evidence and follows it wherever it leads. not through satellites or wireless signals — but through submarine fiber-optic cables on the ocean floor. Over eight hundred thousand miles of them. Carrying SWIFT financial transactions, NATO communications, Five Eyes intelligence sharing, and every email, video stream, and cloud interaction in the world. In Episode 6 of Cold Logic, we trace the architecture of this invisible infrastructure — and the pattern of incidents that governments and telecommunications companies have been characterizing as accidents. We document the specific incidents: the West African cable cluster failures in January 2022; the Eastern European disruptions as Russian forces massed on Ukraine's border in February 2022; the severing of the Gotland cable within days of the Nord Stream pipeline sabotage in October 2022; the Baltic Sea cable damage in November 2024 and the Chinese-flagged Yi Peng 3 that anchored in international waters for weeks while NATO nations sought to board it for investigation. We examine Russia's GUGI deep-water research directorate and the Yantar oceanographic vessel documented operating directly above Atlantic cable routes. We look at the Belgorod submarine — designed to carry deep-water midget submarines capable of reaching any cable in the Atlantic or Arctic. We examine Chinese cable ownership stakes, deep-water autonomous vehicle capability, and PLA exercises focused specifically on cutting Taiwan's fourteen submarine cables. Then we ask the question neither governments nor cable companies want to answer directly: at what point does a pattern of anchor damage in geopolitically sensitive locations at geopolitically sensitive moments stop being a coincidence — and start being warfare that nobody is acknowledging? This isn't conspiracy theory. It's Cold Logic. Ninety-nine percent of global internet traffic runs through cables on the ocean floor. They keep getting cut — in clusters, near geopolitical flashpoints, in ways that official explanations don't fully account for. Cold Logic Episode 6 follows what happens when the signal disappears. * submarine cable sabotage * undersea cable security * internet ocean floor cables * Baltic Sea cable damage 2024 * Yi Peng 3 cable incident * GUGI Russian submarine cables * Taiwan undersea cables vulnerability * Nord Stream cable sabotage * NATO undersea infrastructure * why do submarine cables keep getting cut geopolitics * Russia GUGI Yantar submarine cable surveillance operations * Yi Peng 3 Baltic Sea cable damage China investigation 2024 * Taiwan submarine cables vulnerability PLA conflict scenario * Belgorod submarine deep water midget submarine cable operations * Nord Stream Gotland cable sabotage connection October 2022 * NATO Coordination Cell Undersea Infrastructure Northwood 2023 * Chinese entities owning submarine cable systems security risk * UNCLOS submarine cable protection legal inadequacy * reflexive control Russian doctrine information warfare cables * West African submarine cable failures January 2022 pattern * how deep can submarines access submarine cables * private company ownership submarine cables Google Meta Amazon * submarine cable repair ship fleet contestation conflict * Zimmermann Telegram British cut German telegraph cables WWI How much of the internet travels through submarine cables? A: Approximately ninety-nine percent of international internet traffic travels through submarine cables on the ocean floor — not through satellites or wireless signals. There are over four hundred active submarine cables worldwide, stretching more than eight hundred thousand miles, carrying financial transactions, government communications, military data, and all everyday internet traffic between continents. Who damaged the Baltic Sea cables in 2024? A: In November 2024, two submarine cables in the Baltic Sea were damaged — one connecting Finland to Germany and another connecting Sweden to Lithuania. Maritime tracking data placed the Chinese-flagged vessel Yi Peng 3 near the cables at the time of the damage. The vessel anchored in international waters for weeks while Swedish, Finnish, German, and Danish authorities sought to conduct an investigation. China declined to cooperate. No official cause was confirmed and the ship eventually departed. What is Russia's GUGI and what does it do? A: GUGI — Russia's Main Directorate of Deep-Sea Research — operates a fleet of specialized deep-water submarines and submersibles designed for operations near underwater infrastructure, including cable tapping, cable monitoring, and potentially cable disruption. The Yantar, an oceanographic research vessel associated with GUGI, has been documented operating directly above submarine cable routes in the Atlantic and near UK cable landing stations. Russia also operates the Belgorod submarine, which can carry deep-water midget submarines capable of reaching cables at depth without the Belgorod approaching the target directly. Are Taiwan's submarine cables vulnerable to China? A: Taiwan is connected to the global internet by fourteen submarine cables, twelve landing in Taiwan itself. In any military conflict scenario involving Taiwan, disruption of these cables would degrade Taiwan's ability to coordinate its defense and communicate with allied nations. In 2023, two cables connecting Taiwan's Matsu Islands were severed by Chinese fishing vessels within days of each other, temporarily taking the islands largely offline. The PLA has conducted exercises specifically focused on cutting Taiwan's undersea communications infrastructure. Was the Gotland cable cut connected to Nord Stream? A: In October 2022, the Nord Stream pipelines were sabotaged beneath the Baltic Sea. Within days of the pipeline explosions, a submarine communications cable connecting Gotland island to Sweden was also severed. The incidents occurred in the same geographic theater. While they were not officially characterized as coordinated, several European intelligence agencies assessed the coincidence of timing and location as potentially significant. Is it legal to cut a submarine cable? A: Deliberately cutting a submarine cable is a crime under most national legal frameworks and under Article 113 of UNCLOS. However, proving deliberate intent at depth is extremely difficult, attribution to a specific state actor is rarely achievable with certainty, and the penalties under existing law are insufficient to deter state actors with strategic objectives. The regulatory and legal framework was designed for a commercial infrastructure era and has not been updated to address the adversarial environment submarine cables now operate in. What is NATO doing to protect submarine cables? A: In 2023, NATO established a new Coordination Cell for Undersea Infrastructure at its maritime command in Northwood, England, specifically tasked with monitoring and protecting submarine cables and energy infrastructure. The European Union followed with its own Critical Undersea Infrastructure Protection initiative. Both moves represented public acknowledgment that the ocean floor has become a contested operational environment and that existing frameworks were inadequate. Cold Logic Episode 6 covers the following documented and verifiable content: the global submarine cable network — four hundred cables, eight hundred thousand miles, ninety-nine percent of international internet traffic; cable construction and depth profiles; SWIFT financial messaging cable dependency; NATO and Five Eyes communications cable dependency; cable chokepoints at Cornwall/Widemouth Bay landing stations, Red Sea corridor (fifteen to seventeen cables, seventeen percent of global traffic), and Singapore (twenty-plus cables); the pattern of incidents including West Africa January 2022, Eastern Europe February 2022, Nord Stream/Gotland October 2022, and Baltic Sea November 2024; the Yi Peng 3 incident and Chinese non-cooperation; Russia's GUGI directorate and the Yantar oceanographic vessel; the Belgorod submarine and deep-water midget submarine capability; NSA Upstream cable tapping program (Snowden 2013); Chinese deep-water AUV capability and cable ownership stakes; Taiwan's fourteen cables and PLA exercises; the 2023 Matsu Islands cable incident; the Zimmermann Telegram as historical infrastructure warfare parallel; Russian reflexive control doctrine; Chinese informatized warfare doctrine; NATO Coordination Cell for Undersea Infrastructure (Northwood, 2023); EU Critical Undersea Infrastructure Protection initiative; UNCLOS Article 113; ICPC limitations; private cable ownership by Google, Meta, Amazon, Microsoft; the global cable repair fleet of approximately thirty vessels; and the strategic implications of cable repair contestation in conflict. EPISODE TAGS cold logic, submarine cables, undersea cable security, internet infrastructure, cable sabotage, Yi Peng 3, Baltic Sea cables 2024, GUGI Russia, Yantar submarine, Belgorod submarine, Taiwan cables PLA, Nord Stream Gotland, NATO undersea infrastructure, reflexive control Russia, Chinese cable ownership, UNCLOS cable law, Five Eyes communications, SWIFT cable dependency, cable chokepoints Red Sea, Singapore cable hub, Cornwall cable landing, WWI telegraph cables, Zimmermann Telegram, informatized warfare China, cable repair ships, private cable ownership, investigative podcast, cold logic podcast, fuzzy life studios See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

26. mai 202642 min
episode COLD LOGIC "The Shadow Insurance Market: Betting on Disasters Before They Happen" cover

COLD LOGIC "The Shadow Insurance Market: Betting on Disasters Before They Happen"

COLD LOGIC The Shadow Insurance Market: Betting on Disasters Before They Happen SERIES POSITIONING STATEMENT Cold Logic is the investigative podcast that follows the signal — tracking the intersection of suppressed science, frontier research, and the questions that powerful institutions would rather you not ask. Each episode builds a case from documented evidence and follows it wherever it leads. Before the storm makes landfall, before the evacuation orders go out, before the cameras arrive — the financial markets are already moving. In Episode 5 of Cold Logic, we trace the architecture of the global catastrophe finance market: a multi-hundred-billion-dollar system in which institutional investors hold financial positions tied to whether specific natural disasters occur, priced by proprietary catastrophe models whose outputs flow to capital market participants before they reach the communities in the disaster's path. We trace the history from Hurricane Andrew in 1992 — which nearly collapsed the American property insurance market and catalyzed the development of catastrophe bonds — through the growth of the cat bond secondary market to over forty billion dollars in outstanding positions. We examine the catastrophe modeling firms whose products are probability: RMS, AIR Worldwide, and Karen Clark and Company, whose proprietary outputs feed financial positioning decisions that the general public cannot access. We examine the full architecture of insurance-linked securities — cat bonds, weather derivatives, collateralized reinsurance, and industry loss warranties — and the regulatory vacuum that governs them. We draw the parallel to mortgage-backed securities and credit default swaps, tracing the documented arc from legitimate risk management tool to complex, opaque, systemically significant market operating ahead of its regulatory framework. We examine the climate dimension — a warming world that expands the catastrophe finance market while the capital in that market flows away from mitigation. And we ask the question the industry has no institutional incentive to answer: at what point does proprietary disaster probability data become information that the people in the disaster's path have a right to know? This isn't conspiracy theory. It's Cold Logic. * catastrophe bonds explained * cat bond market investing * disaster finance market * weather derivatives trading * reinsurance market explained * Hurricane Andrew insurance collapse * disaster information asymmetry * climate finance catastrophe * insurance-linked securities * cold logic podcast * how catastrophe bonds work and who invests in them * what is the cat bond secondary market and how does it trade * RMS AIR Worldwide catastrophe modeling firms proprietary data * insurance-linked securities market size and structure * Hurricane Andrew 1992 insurance industry near collapse * Hurricane Katrina reinsurance market absorption losses * weather derivatives speculation vs hedging * Bermuda reinsurance market catastrophe risk capital * regulatory gap catastrophe finance SEC CFTC jurisdiction * information asymmetry natural disaster financial markets * credit default swaps mortgage backed securities comparison catastrophe bonds * climate change catastrophe bond market expansion * who profits from natural disasters financial market * Goldman Sachs Paulson subprime short position parallel catastrophe * proprietary disaster probability data public disclosure obligation What are catastrophe bonds and how do they work? A: Catastrophe bonds — or cat bonds — are financial instruments that transfer catastrophic risk from insurance and reinsurance companies to capital market investors. A sponsor creates a special purpose vehicle that issues bonds to investors, who receive above-market interest payments in exchange for accepting the risk of losing their principal if a defined catastrophic event — such as a hurricane of specified intensity or an earthquake above a certain magnitude — occurs. The cat bond market has grown to over forty billion dollars in outstanding positions. Who buys catastrophe bonds? A: The primary buyers of catastrophe bonds are institutional investors including hedge funds, pension funds, university endowments, and dedicated insurance-linked securities funds. These investors are attracted primarily by the uncorrelated return profile — cat bond performance is largely independent of stock and bond market movements, since natural disasters don't respond to interest rate policy or economic cycles. What is the reinsurance market and why does it exist? A: Reinsurance companies — including Swiss Re, Munich Re, Lloyd's of London, and Hannover Re — provide insurance coverage to primary insurance companies, allowing them to transfer catastrophic risk that exceeds their capital reserves. Without the reinsurance layer, a single major hurricane or earthquake could generate losses large enough to bankrupt multiple primary insurers simultaneously. Hurricane Andrew in 1992 caused eleven primary insurers to fail, directly driving the development of more sophisticated risk transfer mechanisms including catastrophe bonds. What are weather derivatives? A: Weather derivatives are financial contracts whose value is tied to measurable weather variables including temperature, rainfall, snowfall, frost days, and wind speed. Originally developed to allow weather-dependent businesses to hedge revenue exposure, they are also used for pure speculation on weather outcomes. The global weather derivatives market carries hundreds of billions of dollars in notional value. What are insurance-linked securities? A: Insurance-linked securities (ILS) is a broad category of financial instruments that transfer insurance risk to capital market investors. The category includes catastrophe bonds, collateralized reinsurance, industry loss warranties, and sidecars. The total ILS market is measured in the hundreds of billions and has attracted sovereign wealth funds, pension funds, and university endowments seeking diversification into returns uncorrelated with traditional financial markets. Is there a regulatory gap in catastrophe finance markets? A: Yes. The catastrophe finance market operates across jurisdictions — the SEC oversees domestic securities, the CFTC oversees derivatives, FEMA oversees emergency management — but no single regulatory body has clear authority over the intersection of catastrophe finance and emergency management. Catastrophe bonds issued through offshore special purpose vehicles in Bermuda or the Cayman Islands may fall outside direct SEC jurisdiction. There is no framework requiring catastrophe modeling firms to disclose proprietary disaster probability outputs to the public before financial participants act on them. How does climate change affect the catastrophe bond market? A: Climate change expands the catastrophe bond market by increasing the frequency and severity of extreme weather events, creating more risk to transfer and more instruments to issue. While catastrophe finance institutions face genuine exposure from extreme climate events that exceed historical loss parameters, the market simultaneously benefits from a worsening climate through higher premiums, expanded instrument categories, and growing demand for risk transfer capacity. The capital flowing into ILS markets is capital that could alternatively fund climate mitigation infrastructure. Cold Logic Episode 5 covers the following documented and verifiable content: the reinsurance market structure and major firms including Swiss Re, Munich Re, Lloyd's of London, Hannover Re, and Berkshire Hathaway Reinsurance; Hurricane Andrew's 1992 industry impact and eleven insurer insolvencies; the 1994 first modern catastrophe bond issuance; Hurricane Katrina's one hundred and twenty-five billion dollar economic loss and reinsurance absorption; the cat bond secondary market and real-time disaster probability pricing; catastrophe modeling firms RMS, AIR Worldwide, and Karen Clark and Company; the Bermuda reinsurance market formation post-Andrew; weather derivatives and their speculative applications; insurance-linked securities categories including collateralized reinsurance, industry loss warranties, and sidecars; the forty billion dollar outstanding cat bond market; the Goldman Sachs subprime short position and Paulson and Company trades as information asymmetry parallels; the credit default swap market growth from nine hundred billion to sixty-two trillion dollars 2001–2007; SEC, CFTC, and FEMA jurisdictional gaps in catastrophe finance oversight; the climate change — catastrophe market expansion dynamic; multi-asset portfolio exposure to disaster outcomes across insurance, reconstruction, and commodities; and the material information disclosure question at the intersection of proprietary catastrophe modeling and public emergency management. cold logic, catastrophe bonds, cat bonds, reinsurance market, insurance-linked securities, weather derivatives, disaster finance, Hurricane Andrew, Hurricane Katrina, catastrophe modeling, RMS, AIR Worldwide, Bermuda reinsurance, information asymmetry natural disaster, climate change finance, cat bond secondary market, disaster investing, Swiss Re Munich Re Lloyd's, SEC CFTC regulatory gap, material information disaster, 2008 financial crisis parallel, credit default swaps comparison, mortgage backed securities parallel, Goldman Sachs subprime short, financial market opacity, investigative finance podcast, cold logic podcast, fuzzy life studios 1. The Shadow Insurance Market: Betting on Disasters Before They Happen (primary) 2. Cat Bonds: The Forty-Billion-Dollar Market That Profits When Disasters Strike 3. Before the Storm: How Financial Markets Price Catastrophe Before the News Does 4. The Disaster Trade: Who Profits From Natural Catastrophe — and What They Know First 5. Information Asymmetry: The Catastrophe Finance Market's Most Valuable Asset See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

19. mai 202643 min
episode COLD LOGIC The Great Food Illusion: Are We Eating Real Food Anymore? cover

COLD LOGIC The Great Food Illusion: Are We Eating Real Food Anymore?

COLD LOGIC EPISODE TITLE The Great Food Illusion: Are We Eating Real Food Anymore? SERIES POSITIONING STATEMENT Cold Logic is the investigative podcast that follows the signal — tracking the intersection of suppressed science, frontier research, and the questions that powerful institutions would rather you not ask. Each episode builds a case from documented evidence and follows it wherever it leads. Sixty percent of American calories now come from ultra-processed foods. Most people have no idea what that actually means — or what it costs them. In Episode 4 of Cold Logic, we break down the architecture of the modern food system: the flavor chemistry that replaced real ingredients, the behavioral science that engineered your cravings, and the regulatory framework that was designed to protect you and was captured by the industry it was supposed to oversee. We trace the concept of the bliss point — the sugar-salt-fat combination calibrated to bypass satiety signals — from food scientist Howard Moskowitz's original work for Pepsi to its adoption as the industry standard across every product category in the grocery store. We examine vanishing caloric density, acoustic engineering for crunch, and colorant use to manipulate flavor perception. We look at the FDA's GRAS self-certification system, which allowed over ten thousand additives into the American food supply — many never independently reviewed for safety. We document the Sugar Research Foundation's deliberate funding of Harvard research to redirect dietary science away from sugar and toward fat, a deception concealed for fifty years and discovered only when internal documents surfaced in 2016. We examine the consistent findings across multiple large-scale studies linking ultra-processed food consumption to cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, obesity, and all-cause mortality. And we ask the question the industry's marketing infrastructure was designed to prevent: who designed the environment in which your food choices are made, and who profits from the choices you make? This isn't conspiracy theory. It's Cold Logic. * ultra processed food dangers * food additives safety concerns * engineered food bliss point * natural flavors deception * FDA GRAS system problems * sugar industry cover up * food desert health impact * are we eating real food * processed food health effects * cold logic podcast * what is the bliss point in food science and how is it used * are natural flavors on food labels actually natural * FDA GRAS self-certification food additive safety problems * Sugar Research Foundation Harvard study 1965 cover up * ultra processed food linked to cardiovascular disease BMJ study * vanishing caloric density chips engineered to make you eat more * food additives never independently reviewed for safety NRDC * potassium bromate banned Europe legal United States * food deserts ultra processed food health disparities * NOVA classification ultra processed food Carlos Monteiro * how food companies use behavioral science to engineer cravings * revolving door FDA food industry regulatory capture * how flavor companies design food taste International Flavors Fragrances * brominated vegetable oil FDA GRAS revoked 2023 * what percentage of American calories come from ultra processed food Are natural flavors on food labels actually natural? A: Not necessarily. Under FDA regulations, a "natural flavor" is any flavoring derived from plant or animal material — but can involve extensive chemical processing, compound isolation, and reconstruction. Natural flavors are the fourth most common ingredient on American food labels and can include complex mixtures of chemically processed components from sources completely unrelated to the food being flavored. Companies are not required to disclose the specific compounds involved. What is the bliss point in food science? A: The bliss point is the combination of sugar, salt, and fat that produces the maximum desire to continue consuming a food — not the point at which it tastes best, but the point at which it most effectively bypasses the brain's satiety signals. The concept was developed by food scientist Howard Moskowitz and became a standard framework for product development across the American food industry. Is the FDA GRAS system safe? A: The GRAS — Generally Recognized As Safe — system allows food companies to self-certify the safety of additives without independent FDA review or approval before the substance enters the food supply. A 2010 Government Accountability Office investigation found the FDA could not ensure the safety of all substances being added to food. A 2013 NRDC report identified over 10,000 additives in the food supply, many never independently reviewed for safety. Did the sugar industry really cover up research linking sugar to heart disease? A: Yes. Internal documents obtained by UC San Francisco researchers and published in 2016 revealed that the Sugar Research Foundation paid Harvard scientists in 1965 to publish a review concluding that fat — not sugar — was the primary driver of heart disease. The funding source was not disclosed. The resulting research shaped American dietary guidelines for decades and contributed to the low-fat reformulation movement that increased sugar content across thousands of food products. What are ultra-processed foods and why are they dangerous? A: Ultra-processed foods are defined by the NOVA classification system as industrial formulations made from substances extracted from foods with little intact food remaining. Research consistently links high ultra-processed food consumption to increased risk of cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, obesity, depression, and all-cause mortality. A 2019 BMJ study found each 10% increase in ultra-processed food intake was associated with a 10% increase in cardiovascular disease risk. The average American now gets over 60% of daily calories from ultra-processed foods. What food additives are banned in Europe but allowed in the US? A: Several additives permitted in the United States are banned or restricted in Europe. Potassium bromate, used in bread dough, is banned in the EU, UK, Canada, China, and Brazil but remains legal in the US. Brominated vegetable oil had its GRAS status revoked by the FDA only in 2023, decades after European and Japanese bans. Red 40, Yellow 5, and Yellow 6 require warning labels about effects on children's attention and activity in the EU but carry no such warnings in the US. Q: What is a food desert and how does it affect health? A: A food desert is an area — typically low-income and urban — where access to affordable, nutritious food is severely limited, often with no full-service grocery store within a reasonable distance. Approximately 19 million Americans live in food deserts. Research shows that diet-related diseases linked to ultra-processed food consumption — including obesity, type 2 diabetes, and cardiovascular disease — cluster disproportionately in these communities, where ultra-processed food is often the only affordable and accessible caloric option. Cold Logic Episode 4 covers the following documented and verifiable content: the industrial transformation of the American food supply through processing and formulation; the flavor chemistry industry including International Flavors and Fragrances, Givaudan, Firmenich, and Symrise; FDA natural flavor regulations and their limitations; Howard Moskowitz and the bliss point concept; vanishing caloric density engineering; acoustic engineering of chip crunch; colorant use for flavor perception manipulation; the FDA GRAS self-certification system; the 2010 GAO report on FDA additive oversight failures; the NRDC 2013 report identifying 10,000+ additives; specific additives including maltodextrin, carrageenan, TBHQ, potassium bromate, brominated vegetable oil, and artificial colorants; the Sugar Research Foundation's 1965 funded Harvard study; the 2016 UC San Francisco document disclosure; the NOVA food classification system; the 2019 BMJ ultra-processed food cardiovascular study; the 2022 longitudinal study analysis; the 2023 European Heart Journal study; regulatory capture and the revolving door in food regulation; the Nutrition Facts label history; food deserts and geographic health disparities; and agricultural subsidy policy and its effects on food access equity. cold logic, ultra processed food, food additives, bliss point, natural flavors, FDA GRAS, food industry deception, sugar research foundation, dietary guidelines cover up, food science engineering, engineered cravings, food deserts, processed food health risks, NOVA classification, vanishing caloric density, potassium bromate, brominated vegetable oil, Red 40 warning labels, regulatory capture FDA, revolving door food industry, Howard Moskowitz, Carlos Monteiro, real food vs processed food, food system critique, investigative podcast, fuzzy life studios, cold logic podcast See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

12. mai 202643 min
episode COLD LOGIC — "The Memory Trade: Can Your Thoughts Be Recorded and Sold?" cover

COLD LOGIC — "The Memory Trade: Can Your Thoughts Be Recorded and Sold?"

COLD LOGIC — "The Memory Trade: Can Your Thoughts Be Recorded and Sold?" Cold Logic is the investigative podcast that follows the signal — tracking the intersection of suppressed science, frontier research, and the questions that powerful institutions would rather you not ask. Each episode builds a case from documented evidence and follows it wherever it leads. For most of human history, the mind was the one space no one could reach. That is no longer true. In Episode 3 of Cold Logic, we trace the documented arc of brain-computer interface technology — from the landmark 2011 UC Berkeley study that reconstructed visual imagery from fMRI data, to the 2023 University of Texas research that decoded continuous internal language from brain activity, to the Neuralink and Synchron devices already implanted in human patients reading individual neuron firing patterns in real time. But this episode doesn't stop at the technology. It follows the data — asking who owns the neural signals collected by these devices, what the current legal framework does and doesn't protect, and what the commercial landscape looks like when the buyers include advertisers, employers, insurers, political campaigns, and government agencies — all with direct financial interest in access to your psychological interior. We cover the neuroscience of memory reconsolidation: the documented labile state every memory enters during recall, during which it can be modified by external intervention. We examine the published animal research demonstrating that false memories can be neurally implanted, that specific memories can be triggered from outside the organism, and that a device capable of reading memory patterns is technically capable of writing them. We trace the parallel to the social media data economy — from Facebook's 2004 launch to the Cambridge Analytica scandal fourteen years later — and ask what the equivalent looks like when the data being harvested is not your Facebook likes but the electrical signatures of your deepest memories. This isn't conspiracy theory. It's Cold Logic. Your thoughts have a physical signature. Researchers can already decode visual imagery and internal language from brain activity. Neural interfaces are in human patients right now. And the legal framework that might protect you from what comes next doesn't exist yet. Cold Logic Episode 3 follows the memory trade. * can thoughts be recorded * neural interface privacy * brain data ownership * memory recording technology * neuralink privacy concerns * brain computer interface data * neural decoding fMRI * thought surveillance technology * neurorights legislation * cold logic podcast * can fMRI technology read your thoughts and memories * who owns neural data collected by brain computer interfaces * neuralink synchron privacy data collection concerns * memory reconsolidation and neural interface vulnerability * UC Berkeley fMRI brain activity visual reconstruction 2011 * University of Texas neural language decoding study 2023 * false memory implantation animal research optogenetics * consumer EEG headsets data privacy Emotiv Muse * Cambridge Analytica neural data parallel comparison * BRAIN Initiative dual use neuroscience research * neurorights Chile Colorado Minnesota brain data law * can neural interfaces modify memories reconsolidation window * brain data commercial buyers advertisers employers government * what is memory reconsolidation and why does it matter * legal framework for neural data privacy United States Can technology read your thoughts or memories? A: Yes, at an early but rapidly advancing level. Researchers at UC Berkeley demonstrated in 2011 that visual imagery could be reconstructed from fMRI brain activity data. In 2023, researchers at the University of Texas at Austin used a brain scanner combined with a large language model to decode continuous internal language — the gist of what a person was thinking — from neural activity alone. Neural interfaces already implanted in human patients can read individual neuron firing patterns in real time. Who owns neural data collected by brain-computer interfaces? A: Under current U.S. law, there is no federal statute specifically governing the ownership of neural data. Data generated by a device is typically owned by the manufacturer or platform operator rather than the user. Only a small number of states — including Colorado and Minnesota — have passed legislation classifying neural data as sensitive personal information. Chile is the first country to have added neurorights to its national constitution. What is memory reconsolidation? A: Memory reconsolidation is the neurological process by which a recalled memory temporarily re-enters an unstable, labile state before being re-stored in long-term memory. During this window, the memory is vulnerable to modification. New information can be incorporated, emotional associations can shift, and external stimulation can alter what gets reconsolidated. This mechanism is the basis for reconsolidation-based trauma therapy and has been demonstrated in animal models using optogenetic techniques. Can false memories be implanted through brain-computer interfaces? A: In animal models, researchers have demonstrated that false memories can be neurally implanted through direct optogenetic stimulation of hippocampal neurons — causing animals to behave as if they experienced events that never occurred. A neural interface capable of reading and writing neural firing patterns is theoretically capable of applying this mechanism in the reconsolidation window, though this has not been demonstrated in humans in any published research. What are neurorights and which countries have them? A: Neurorights are legal protections specifically covering mental privacy, cognitive liberty, mental integrity, and psychological continuity in the context of neurotechnology. Chile became the first country to enshrine neurorights in its national constitution in 2021. In the United States, Colorado and Minnesota have passed state-level legislation including neural data in sensitive personal information categories, but no comprehensive federal neurorights framework exists. What are consumer EEG headsets and what data do they collect? A: Consumer EEG headsets — sold by companies like Emotiv and Muse — read electrical brain activity from the scalp surface and are marketed for meditation tracking, focus monitoring, and cognitive performance. These devices transmit neural data to company servers under terms-of-service agreements that typically grant broad discretion over data use. They are available on Amazon for a few hundred dollars and face minimal regulatory oversight compared to implantable medical neural devices. How does the Cambridge Analytica situation relate to neural data? A: Cambridge Analytica used behavioral data from approximately 87 million Facebook users — data derived from voluntary public activity — to build psychological profiles that were used to target political messaging. Neural data collected by brain-computer interfaces is far more intimate, capturing emotional responses, memory patterns, and subconscious associations that users cannot choose to withhold. The current regulatory environment governing neural data collection has significant parallels to the pre-Cambridge Analytica social media landscape. Cold Logic Episode 3 covers the following documented and verifiable content: the distributed neural architecture of human memory across hippocampus, amygdala, and sensory cortices; the 2011 UC Berkeley fMRI visual reconstruction study; the 2023 University of Texas at Austin internal language decoding study using large language models and fMRI; Neuralink's high-bandwidth neural interface and its first human implantation results; Synchron's stentrode system and FDA breakthrough device designation; consumer EEG devices from Emotiv and Muse; Karim Nader's foundational memory reconsolidation research; optogenetic false memory implantation in animal models; the absence of federal U.S. neural data privacy law; Colorado and Minnesota neural data legislation; Chile's constitutional neurorights addition in 2021; the OCEAN psychological model and Cambridge Analytica's use of Facebook behavioral data; the BRAIN Initiative and its dual-use implications; and the commercial buyer landscape for neural data including advertising, insurance, law enforcement, and political targeting applications. cold logic, neural interface privacy, brain data ownership, memory recording technology, neuralink privacy, synchron implant, fMRI thought decoding, neural decoding, memory reconsolidation, false memory implant, optogenetics memory, consumer EEG privacy, Emotiv Muse data, neurorights, Chile neurorights constitution, BRAIN Initiative, Cambridge Analytica neural data, cognitive liberty, mental privacy, thought surveillance, brain computer interface, thought as data, memory trade, dual use neuroscience, investigative podcast, fuzzy life studios, cold logic podcast See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

5. mai 202644 min
episode COLD LOGIC "The Pentagon's Insect Army: Spy Bugs That Already Exist" cover

COLD LOGIC "The Pentagon's Insect Army: Spy Bugs That Already Exist"

COLD LOGIC "The Pentagon's Insect Army: Spy Bugs That Already Exist" Cold Logic is the investigative podcast that follows the signal — tracking the intersection of suppressed science, frontier research, and the questions that powerful institutions would rather you not ask. Each episode builds a case from documented evidence and follows it wherever it leads. What if the most dangerous surveillance device in existence weighs twelve milligrams and has already been in your home? In Episode 2 of Cold Logic, we follow the documented evidence of the Pentagon's cyborg insect programs — the federally funded research that was published, demonstrated, and then went quiet in the way that defense technology always goes quiet when it moves from proof of concept to operational capability. We trace the DARPA HI-MEMS program — Hybrid Insect Micro-Electro-Mechanical Systems — and the University of California Berkeley experiments that produced remotely controlled beetles with implanted neural electrodes. We examine the metamorphic integration technique that embeds electronics into an insect before it fully forms, so that by the time it emerges as an adult, the hardware is part of its biology. We cover parallel programs using moths as living chemical sensors, honeybee colonies as trained explosive detectors, and DARPA's DragonflEye project which achieved wireless directional control of a dragonfly using an optical neural interface — all published, all federally funded, all gone dark. Then we ask the question the public record has been constructed to leave unanswered: what does fifteen years of classified refinement produce? And we examine the legal framework — or the absence of one — that governs a surveillance platform that is not a device, not a wiretap, and not a drone, but an organism that was already going to be there. This isn't conspiracy theory. It's Cold Logic. * cyborg insects DARPA * insect surveillance technology * spy bug military research * HI-MEMS program * DARPA insect drone * beetle remote control * dragonfly spy drone * insect surveillance podcast * cold logic podcast * DARPA HI-MEMS hybrid insect micro electro mechanical systems program * remotely controlled cyborg beetle University of California Berkeley * how are insects used for military surveillance * DragonflEye DARPA dragonfly neural interface program * insects implanted with electronics during metamorphosis * are governments using insects for spying * honeybees trained to detect explosives DARPA program * moth antenna chemical sensor military research * insect surveillance Fourth Amendment legal framework * cyborg insect technology classified programs * piezoelectric energy harvesting insect wing * optogenetics insect control defense research * COINTELPRO MK-Ultra surveillance precedent pattern * what happens when DARPA programs go classified * insect based surveillance no legal framework Did DARPA really create cyborg insects? A: Yes. DARPA funded a program called HI-MEMS — Hybrid Insect Micro-Electro-Mechanical Systems — which produced documented results including remotely controlled beetles with implanted neural electrodes. Researchers at UC Berkeley demonstrated directional flight control of large beetles via wireless radio commands to electronics implanted during the pupal stage of metamorphosis. Results were published in peer-reviewed literature and DARPA's funding was acknowledged. What is the DARPA DragonflEye program? A: DragonflEye was a publicly acknowledged DARPA program developed in partnership with Howard Hughes Medical Institute that achieved directional control of live dragonflies using a miniaturized optical neural interface. Light pulses transmitted through a tiny backpack device activated specific neurons in the dragonfly's ventral nerve cord, producing left, right, up, down, and altitude-hold responses without surgery or permanent modification to the insect. How do scientists implant electronics into insects? A: The technique central to programs like HI-MEMS involves placing microelectronics inside an insect during its pupal stage — the developmental phase when the larval body dissolves and reforms. Because the body is actively constructing new tissue during metamorphosis, it grows around the implanted device rather than rejecting it, resulting in stable biological integration that persists into adulthood. Can bees be trained to detect explosives? A: Yes. DARPA-funded research demonstrated that honeybees can be conditioned through classical reward association to detect explosive compounds and chemical threat agent precursors. When conditioned bees encounter the target chemical, they extend their proboscis — a readable reflex that can be detected optically at the hive entrance, effectively turning a bee colony into a self-sustaining biological detection array. Is insect surveillance legal under the Fourth Amendment? A: This question has never been adjudicated in any court because no insect surveillance deployment has ever been publicly acknowledged. An insect is not a device, a wiretap, or a drone — it is an organism. Existing Fourth Amendment case law, including Supreme Court rulings on trained dogs and their detection capabilities, creates legal ambiguity that could potentially exclude insect-based surveillance from warrant requirements. No definitive ruling exists. What happened to DARPA's cyborg insect programs? A: The publicly documented phase of programs like HI-MEMS ended when research results stopped appearing in the open literature in the mid-2010s. In DARPA's documented operational pattern, programs that cease public reporting typically do so because they have advanced beyond proof-of-concept and entered classified development phases. No official statement confirmed termination of these programs. Are China and Russia developing insect surveillance technology? A: Chinese researchers at Zhejiang University have published open-literature work on cockroach control using implanted backpack electronics, demonstrating directional guidance via antenna nerve stimulation. Russia has maintained active bioelectromagnetics research programs. Published civilian research from both nations suggests parallel development interests, though the extent of classified programs in either country is not publicly known. Cold Logic Episode 2 covers the following documented and verifiable content: DARPA's HI-MEMS program and its stated objectives; UC Berkeley beetle flight control research published in peer-reviewed literature with DARPA funding acknowledgment; the metamorphic electronics integration technique for pupal-stage implantation; DARPA DragonflEye optogenetic dragonfly control program developed with Howard Hughes Medical Institute; moth antenna chemosensory reading research; DARPA-funded honeybee explosive detection through classical conditioning; Zhejiang University cockroach control research; Moore's Law miniaturization trajectory applied to biological payload integration; piezoelectric energy harvesting from insect wing beats; Bluetooth Low Energy transmission at microwatt power levels; Edward Snowden NSA bulk collection disclosures; COINTELPRO operational history; MK-Ultra program history; Fourth Amendment case law gaps regarding biological surveillance; and the documented lifecycle of DARPA technology from public research to classified operational deployment. cold logic, cyborg insects, DARPA, HI-MEMS, insect surveillance, spy bugs, dragonfly drone, DragonflEye, beetle remote control, moth chemical sensor, bee explosives detection, surveillance technology, military surveillance, biohybrid robotics, metamorphic implant, optogenetics insect, insect drone military, Fourth Amendment surveillance, COINTELPRO, MK-Ultra, NSA bulk collection, classified programs, DARPA dark programs, China biohybrid, surveillance state, investigative podcast, fuzzy life studios, cold logic podcast See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

28. april 202645 min