Just position the cups on a table to play and as the game continues remove the cups that have the tennis ball landing in them and use them to pour the drink for the shooter. HOW TO USE: Multiple use of Beer Pong Cups makes it a value for money addition to your get together.A pack of 20 Pink Beer Pong Cups made with sturdy material making it easily usable to play the game as well as pour in your favourite drinks at the party. MORE ABOUT TABLEWARE: Our Beer Pong Cups are a great addition to make your gatherings a hit. All you have to do in Beer Pong is set the Beer Pong Cups in a postion at two opposite ends for each team, each player throws a tennis into the cups placed and if it lands in any, you get to drink the desired beverage/alcohol in teh cup. WHAT IS IT? : An ultimate party game where you shoot your chance to gulp down your favourite drink."It's not fair that you have to have a PhD to figure out what's safe for your kid today. "She doesn't know anything about BPA or what chemicals are in her sippy cup," he said. Green said she's just like every other happy, inquisitive five-year-old. "We have other options."īut back to Green's daughter, Juliette, whose love of a pink, princess sippy cup got this whole process started. If you're talking about your health, you want to err on the side of caution, he said. "I wouldn't let my child play in the street, even if I'm not certain there's a car coming down the street. He added that the best way to minimize preventable risk is to avoid taking that risk in the first place. Green suggested choosing glass or stainless steel drink containers and wood or ceramic dishes instead of plastic. "Or it might tell your child's body to grow their reproductive organs in a different way." "So they might tell your child's body to store fat cells, or stop storing fat cells," he said. Green admitted that we don't know how exposure to estrogenic chemicals will affect health in the long run, but he did say minute amounts can have an impact.īecause hormones are chemical messengers that tell your body to act, estrogen-mimicking chemicals like the ones in plastic can send messages too, he said. "Has it ever been in a microwave? Has it ever been in a dishwasher? Has it ever sat on a window sill in the sun? That would cause the plastic to start to break down." "That can be impacted by, one, just the chemicals leaching from the plastic, but two, other things that have happened to the plastic since," Green said. When the lab results came back, nine of 35 products tested positively for estrogenic impacts, including Juliette's pink cup. Seven of those nine products had higher levels than cups made with BPA. If later, that one's found to be toxic, just switch again. "They take out the one that's been found to be toxic and they replace it with a chemical cousin where the health impacts are unknown because it's not well tested yet. And though BPA isn't in bottles and sippy cups anymore, it has been replaced with other, similar chemicals. It's still used in products like plastic wrap, food can liners and packaging and plastic containers used to store leftovers. Green said BPA was originally used as a synthetic estrogen, and the chemical has since been linked to obesity, reproductive problems and cancer. And what it tells you is not what's inside the sippy cup it tells you what are the potential health impacts of whatever's inside there." "And that's a much more complicated thing to test for. "What we were testing for was the health outcome," he explained. Green was testing for potential estrogenic effects. So he took Juliette's cup and a few dozen other samples and sent them to two different labs for testing, but the tests were not for specific chemicals like BPA or lead. "My guess is the manufacturer didn't even know what was in the sippy cup because that's the nature of the way we make things today," he said. (Michael Green) Green knew the cup was free of bisphenol A, a chemical that had been banned in baby bottles and sippy cups thanks to public outcry. But he didn't know what it had been replaced with. Juliette Green's passion for her pink sippy cup prompted her dad to find out what chemical compounds were in the plastic.
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