The names and labels of products are selected using profit-motivated strategies and are misleading about the quality of their product. In “What’s Natural about Our Natural Product?”, Sarah Federman, who works at the Institute for Health and Healing at California Pacific Medical Center in San Francisco explains about the indeterminate modifier-one of the most common advertisement methods that companies employ. She says, “’Natural’ serves as a meaningless label, a deceptive marketing tool, or means contains natural critters and natural toxins that may make you sick” (Federman 474). The government should regulate advertisements that confuse the customers to verify whether the food is healthy or unhealthy by
The names and labels of products are selected using profit-motivated strategies and are misleading about the quality of their product. In “What’s Natural about Our Natural Product?”, Sarah Federman, who works at the Institute for Health and Healing at California Pacific Medical Center in San Francisco explains about the indeterminate modifier-one of the most common advertisement methods that companies employ. She says, “’Natural’ serves as a meaningless label, a deceptive marketing tool, or means contains natural critters and natural toxins that may make you sick” (Federman 474). The government should regulate advertisements that confuse the customers to verify whether the food is healthy or unhealthy by