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Can you even buy all natural tea with food stamps?
I ain't seen a food stamp since 98' nigga I got my money right! But forreal tho all your racist jokes suck. Theyre not creative nor humorous. You prolly the type of person who gets nervous whenever they walk past a black guy with a du-rag on. Tryna avoid eye contact n shit, lol
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My shit got the geishas on it nigga, we all natural over here.
ahahah quote of the fucking day
But about the "100% natural tea" claim.
Practically anything can be labeled as "natural" or "all natural" as long as nothing is synthetic aka man made.� All the things you find in an Arizona green tea may be found in nature, but not all of it is found in green tea naturally.�
And like I said before, I doubt there's any regulation as to what can/can't be labeled "tea."� As long as the Arizona tea company wants to label their end product as "tea," they can (Even if none of the end product contains tea truly brewed from tea leaves).� Although to be honest I'm not too sure myself, but judging by the label, it truly seems that the arizona green tea you have is not actually green tea, but rather something they call "green tea"
Like I said the its gon be as legit as bottled tea can get and it doesn't taste like no brisk shit either, its noticeably thicker. I know a few asian niggas who be serious as fuck with their tea theyd prolly question everything in here lol. They be gettin those packets imported from overseas n shit, if anything THAT'S the real tea but hey, ill im cool with the arizona
Give me your address.
I will personally mail you a box of bottled teas that use actual tea. Ya know, like, water that's been heated up with actual tea leaves in it?
Really. I'm sure you'll find quite quickly that AZ is not the pinnacle of bottled teas...
Note:
When a product says 'All Natural', yes, that means none of it is man-made. Same with USDA certified organic - there is a strict set of guidelines; there can be no bending of the rules.
However, natural doesn't mean it's good for you. Sugar is natural. And while natural cane sugar is indeed superior to, say, splenda, it is still not advised to overindulge in sugar.
So, sk8dood, you have water, natural sugar-type substance, maybe some citric acid and honey...and the AZ marketing team decides to call it tea. I guess it sells better than calling it "drink". Whatever anyone wants to call it, there is no way in hell someone with even a handful of braincells will call it "tea".
I'm not your mom, and I truthfully don't care what you drink. I just merely advise you to broaden your horizons and maybe drink something that your body may enjoy a little more.
Andrew Reynolds eats fruits.