@Sir Suck
I never said it was impossible, it's just not the more likely option; Your alternate explanation doesn't dismiss the fact that it's still evidence against the suggestible motive, because any single motive can be dismissed with accusations that they're just using advanced reasoning. You have to go with the option that actually has the evidence to support it, and to put it bluntly, there is none that the FDA or Big Pharma is colluding with caffeine manufacturers.
I made a point that it's also possible that the FDA is one-upping you in a case of reverse-reverse phychology in an attempt to trick someone like you into thinking their limit is only there to downplay because they knew that you would think that limit is there to downplay; This is as possible what you purport the FDA is doing.
It's not the more likely option, both are equally likely.
What would the point of 'reverse-reverse' psychology be in this instance?
Money is almost certainly corrupting some of the science, why wouldn't it be?
Scientists are motivated both by love of truth, and love of money.
If there's good points and bad points for and against coffee, but there's only a profit motive for reporting on the good points, the good points are going to be reported on more.
It certainly happened in the past with other big stimulants and substances, and no stimulant or substance is bigger than coffee.
The only real question is, to what extent is this happening?
Our society is generally corrupt, some of the most prestigious scholars will even tell you that, which makes any particular corruption more plausible.
Furthermore, from our collective experience coffee is plainly worse than much of the available science suggests, high doses lead to anxiety/panic attacks, among other negative symptoms, which almost certainly lead to vehicular accidents, among other accidents.
There's also lots of other negative effects we haven't covered in as much detail in this thread.
Lastly, there is also some very well written negative literature on coffee in the alt community.
Some of this community seems to be at odds with government, but since no one has a monopoly on truth, it may turn out they're right and the government is wrong.
Conversely, a lot of the data you propose can't be trusted because you have an extreme bias against caffeine? No one is addicted to caffeine in this extreme meth-esqe way that you purport. You need to stop it, it's simply not align with reality. Even if all the studies on caffeine are bias, it's not to say the reverse of the findings are true, or even accurate. Regardless, that's not really the type of bias to watch out for in a scientific study. Mostly it's about business ties that cause concern, and not personal affairs.
...Like the author of the book that you linked to earlier, and his inclination to suggest that caffeine is bad for you based on the fact that he sells his own product that claims to 'negate' the adverse effects of the very substance he claims is this demon. You still haven't disowned 'Dr' Stephen Cherniske, by the way, so I'm still waiting for that.
I may be biased, you may be, they may be.
But if I'm overly attached to my views, at least it's not because I also have a substance addiction.
I'm not suggesting this alone means all the science on coffee is bunk, but it's going to be more bunk than the science on a drug scientists aren't also addicted to, in all probability.
This, in conjunction with the profit motive, and how the system arguably idolizes/requires this fight/flight mode to perpetuate itself, means coffee will tend to be placed in a positive light rather than looked at objectively.
...Like the author of the book that you linked to earlier, and his inclination to suggest that caffeine is bad for you based on the fact that he sells his own product that claims to 'negate' the adverse effects of the very substance he claims is this demon. You still haven't disowned 'Dr' Stephen Cherniske, by the way, so I'm still waiting for that.
I don't trust government institutions sufficiently to conclude anything about Cherniske.
It was a well written book, it resonated with me and my experiences and the experiences of people I've talked to, and I don't even remember him mentioning anything about supplements in the book.
I'm not saying they don't have an ability to taste, I just don't think most if any of them have the intricacy to determine to themselves what 'tastes bad' and what 'tastes good', as though they were some sort of connoisseur on the food network. I'm sure it could also be demonstrated that our taste buds differ pretty radically from most other animals, so I don't think we could even project our senses onto them.
And that ability to smell and taste, millions of cells and nerve endings, obviously evolved to give animals and human animals survival advantages, and animals and manimals, uncorrupted by civliization, will tend to avoid things like drugs/poisons, and tend to be attracted to what's food for them.
Whether they derive pleasure from it or not is a moot point, we're discussing its utility, in regards to survival.
That being said, I don't see why you have to be a connoisseur to know whether you enjoy a sensation or not, babies can do that, and I'm sure cats and dogs can too. Seems like you're out of touch with your own sensations.