View Full Version : 75 cents off Silk Soy Milk
nerdyandrew
11-04-2009, 05:59 PM
Save 75 cents off your next purchase of Silk Soymilk (1/2 gallon or more).
Here's the link:
http://www.silksoymilk.com/content/lactosefree-thanks
Click the "Print Coupon Now" button and print your coupon. You may need to install Java on your computer.
wikipost
11-04-2009, 05:59 PM
-- please cite your source for this if you're going to have a warning like that up here.
** estrogen does NOT induce hair loss. if anything, it prevents hair loss. Androgens/DHEA/testosterone are more accountable for hair loss than estrogen. -Appleonius
Estrogen influences secondary female characteristics.......and that has nothing to do with hair loss. Moreover, you will probably only start seeing side effects if you ingest huge amounts, which you probably won't. If you're drinking this for lactose intolerance i would go with lactaid.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/05/070516133004.htm
dude123
11-04-2009, 06:54 PM
anyone can share a printout? Don't want to install whatever software to pc.
pl_holt
11-04-2009, 07:22 PM
Thanks for the coupon...every little bit helps!
nerdyandrew
11-04-2009, 07:35 PM
anyone can share a printout? Don't want to install whatever software to pc.
I'd share it, but each coupon has a unique code. The only thing I think you have to install is Java (not the coupon printer software).
drunkfr0g
11-04-2009, 08:44 PM
you have to have the "printer coupon applet"
here's the wording if you don't have it already installed -
"Printing our coupons requires the SmartSource Printer Java Applet. Our secure printing technology prevents fraud and gives you access to our full network of offers. Be sure your printer is on and ready and click the button below to accept our applet and print your coupons."
squeaks
11-04-2009, 08:58 PM
man boobs! (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/11/03/jeremy-piven-soy-milk-gav_n_343897.html) sorry, had to. never seen a soy milk deal before on sd, and i just heard about this story.
RashmiX
11-04-2009, 09:02 PM
man boobs! (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/11/03/jeremy-piven-soy-milk-gav_n_343897.html) sorry, had to. never seen a soy milk deal before on sd, and i just heard about this story.
OMG!! :omg:
To drink or not to drink??
Dliteful
11-04-2009, 09:06 PM
man boobs! (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/11/03/jeremy-piven-soy-milk-gav_n_343897.html) sorry, had to. never seen a soy milk deal before on sd, and i just heard about this story.
People, please read the WHOLE article before you start having a titty-attack! He was drinking 12 cups a day! This is also from a man who ate fish TWICE A DAY for 20 years before getting mercury poisoning! Moderation is a good thing, unfortunately many people don't know what that means.
The regular Silk soymilk package now does not have the organic label. And also
after looking at the following, I am not sure if Silk is good anymore:
http://www.organicconsumers.org/articles/article_18228.cfm
Commitment to Organics and Sustainability:
1. Recently, Dean Foods reformulated their Silk product line converting almost all their products to "natural" (conventional) soybeans. They did this, quietly, without telling retailers or changing the UPC code numbers on the products. Many retailers have reported to us that they didn't find out about the change until their customers noticed and complained.
2. To add insult to injury, not only did the price of Silk products not go down when they switched to cheaper conventional soybeans, but they now reintroduced three products with organic soybeans and raised the price on those. Greedy profiteering plain and simple.
3. Dean Foods tells its customers that it partners with Conservation International to source soybeans that are produced in a sustainable, socially responsible and ethical manner. Dean Foods has not made these standards of sustainability available to its customers-unlike the USDA organic standards, customers have no way of accessing their exact definition of sustainability, which remains unclear. We question why they do not simply purchase USDA-certified organic soybeans.
Production with a Neurotoxic Chemical:
1. Silk's Light soymilk, as well as its "Heart Health" soymilk, is made with hexane-extracted soy flour instead of whole soybeans. Hexane is a highly explosive volatile solvent. It is a byproduct of gasoline refining and a neurotoxin. Soybeans used in Silk's Light and Heart Health soymilk are immersed in this neurotoxic petrochemical to make soy flour, which is listed as the main ingredient in these Silk products.
2. Hexane is classified as a "hazardous air pollutant" by the Environmental Protection Agency and emissions are regulated for their contribution to air pollution. Food processors are the country's major hexane emitters. When The Cornucopia Institute sent samples of hexane-extracted soy flour to an independent lab for residue testing, residues as high as 21 parts per million were found. The effects on consumer health of repeated and long-term consumption of hexane-extracted soy ingredients have not been thoroughly studied. An extraction process that does not involve hexane is available, but using hexane is cheaper for the processor.
3. Silk's creamers and Silk Plus Omega-3 DHA contain other minor hexane-extracted ingredients-soy lecithin and algal oil, respectively. Moreover, the Cornucopia Institute has received reports from parents of toddlers and children who experienced diarrhea and stomach upset from the DHA used in Silk (Life's DHA by Martek Biosciences Corporation). This is the same additive, found in infant formula (extracted from algae and soil fungus), that has been linked to severe adverse reactions in infants. (Cornucopia has obtained adverse reaction reports from the FDA verifying this unfortunate health side-effect.) The FDA has never tested the safety of Life's DHA, relying instead on safety data supplied by the same corporation that has a financial interest in selling and placing these additives in foods. The FDA did, however, indicate serious reservations regarding the safety of these additives.
dvast8n
11-04-2009, 09:11 PM
OMG!! :omg:
To drink or not to drink??
Worthless without pics! LOL
jinshady
11-04-2009, 09:29 PM
jesus its just soy milk
whats with all this intense research jeez
drink or not to drink
thats it
daregan
11-04-2009, 09:32 PM
Get the chocolate, it's tasty!
BoredMom
11-04-2009, 09:32 PM
.75 off soy milk is a slick deal? Really? Really?
moSom
11-04-2009, 09:35 PM
When we do buy it I usually just drink 1-2 glasses a week, at most 3, so I don't worry about it. I cow it more often since I'm not lactose intolerant.... yet.
I wouldn't give soy milk to an infant though, but that goes without saying.
ksucatinokc
11-04-2009, 09:38 PM
You need to watch the Penn & Teller bit on the whole "organic" scam...
It has some course language, but it is funny as heck to watch these fruit cakes pretend they can tell the difference between organic and regular food.
Did you know that organic foods are less safe than normal food??? Much of it comes from China no less...we all know how good their quality control is...
Good grief people...get a clue.
moSom
11-04-2009, 09:40 PM
You need to watch the Penn & Teller bit on the whole "organic" scam...
Did you know that organic foods are less safe than normal food??? Much of it comes from China no less...we all know how good their quality control is...
Good grief people...get a clue.
So you're saying that the Silk brand comes from China? Or are you going off topic...
KyleMittskus
11-04-2009, 09:46 PM
Drink soy milk. But not worth the ink.
joel2007
11-04-2009, 09:50 PM
How about the other thing? Just wanna make wife happier. lol.
DOONE
11-04-2009, 09:53 PM
Get the chocolate, it's tasty!
Thanks, I will
nerdyandrew
11-04-2009, 10:12 PM
The regular Silk soymilk package now does not have the organic label. And also
after looking at the following, I am not sure if Silk is good anymore:
http://www.organicconsumers.org/articles/article_18228.cfm
Commitment to Organics and Sustainability:
1. Recently, Dean Foods reformulated their Silk product line converting almost all their products to "natural" (conventional) soybeans. They did this, quietly, without telling retailers or changing the UPC code numbers on the products. Many retailers have reported to us that they didn't find out about the change until their customers noticed and complained.
2. To add insult to injury, not only did the price of Silk products not go down when they switched to cheaper conventional soybeans, but they now reintroduced three products with organic soybeans and raised the price on those. Greedy profiteering plain and simple.
3. Dean Foods tells its customers that it partners with Conservation International to source soybeans that are produced in a sustainable, socially responsible and ethical manner. Dean Foods has not made these standards of sustainability available to its customers-unlike the USDA organic standards, customers have no way of accessing their exact definition of sustainability, which remains unclear. We question why they do not simply purchase USDA-certified organic soybeans.
Production with a Neurotoxic Chemical:
1. Silk's Light soymilk, as well as its "Heart Health" soymilk, is made with hexane-extracted soy flour instead of whole soybeans. Hexane is a highly explosive volatile solvent. It is a byproduct of gasoline refining and a neurotoxin. Soybeans used in Silk's Light and Heart Health soymilk are immersed in this neurotoxic petrochemical to make soy flour, which is listed as the main ingredient in these Silk products.
2. Hexane is classified as a "hazardous air pollutant" by the Environmental Protection Agency and emissions are regulated for their contribution to air pollution. Food processors are the country's major hexane emitters. When The Cornucopia Institute sent samples of hexane-extracted soy flour to an independent lab for residue testing, residues as high as 21 parts per million were found. The effects on consumer health of repeated and long-term consumption of hexane-extracted soy ingredients have not been thoroughly studied. An extraction process that does not involve hexane is available, but using hexane is cheaper for the processor.
3. Silk's creamers and Silk Plus Omega-3 DHA contain other minor hexane-extracted ingredients-soy lecithin and algal oil, respectively. Moreover, the Cornucopia Institute has received reports from parents of toddlers and children who experienced diarrhea and stomach upset from the DHA used in Silk (Life's DHA by Martek Biosciences Corporation). This is the same additive, found in infant formula (extracted from algae and soil fungus), that has been linked to severe adverse reactions in infants. (Cornucopia has obtained adverse reaction reports from the FDA verifying this unfortunate health side-effect.) The FDA has never tested the safety of Life's DHA, relying instead on safety data supplied by the same corporation that has a financial interest in selling and placing these additives in foods. The FDA did, however, indicate serious reservations regarding the safety of these additives.
Wow, that's a shame...seems like everything goes to crap once a huge company buys a small guy out and mass produces.
anni77777
11-04-2009, 10:14 PM
totally random..but I read about this study done in the 70's where they said soy milk given to babies caused homosexuality due to the hormones in it...dont kill the messenger...jus sayin....
http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=53327
ikrit
11-04-2009, 10:23 PM
thank you andrew
KyleMittskus
11-04-2009, 10:32 PM
totally random..but I read about this study done in the 70's where they said soy milk given to babies caused homosexuality due to the hormones in it...dont kill the messenger...jus sayin....
http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=53327
It's from the 70s....
nerdyandrew
11-04-2009, 10:56 PM
totally random..but I read about this study done in the 70's where they said soy milk given to babies caused homosexuality due to the hormones in it...dont kill the messenger...jus sayin....
http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=53327
I guess my coupon contributes to gayness.. :lol:
catluver
11-04-2009, 11:16 PM
totally random..but I read about this study done in the 70's where they said soy milk given to babies caused homosexuality due to the hormones in it...dont kill the messenger...jus sayin....
http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=53327
Manboobs and homosexuality. No wonder Silk is offering coupons. :lol:
HRockets
11-04-2009, 11:17 PM
Thank you HEB for carrying a generic brand of soy milk.
minmaster
11-04-2009, 11:52 PM
Manboobs and homosexuality. No wonder Silk is offering coupons. :lol:
lol seriously, seems like nothing is safe in this world anymore. one can discover something harmful in every product if they look hard enough.
but manboobs and being gay, that's totally hilarious.
UWHUSKY19
11-04-2009, 11:56 PM
man boobs! (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/11/03/jeremy-piven-soy-milk-gav_n_343897.html) sorry, had to. never seen a soy milk deal before on sd, and i just heard about this story.
serves him right. The goods; live free sell hard sucked...i was actually looking forward to it
anyone know a place that sells the silk milk for cheap? walmart maybe?
DieselAmy
11-05-2009, 09:01 AM
anyone know a place that sells the silk milk for cheap? walmart maybe?
Walmart sells Silk as well as a house brand (Great Value) of soymilk. I happen to like the GV chocolate soymilk better than the Silk brand chocolate soymilk, but that's my taste preference. Every brand is a bit different. I have chocolate soymilk for breakfast every morning.
75 cents off Silk is actually a pretty good coupon.
FWIW the dairy industry likes to fund all the 'soy is bad!' studies, tried to legislate that soymilk couldn't use the word 'milk' in the product name, etc. They're so in bed with government programs and school lunches and the food pyramid folks I pretty much stop listening to anything without really checking the source. Try reading The China Study and see if you ever drink a glass of real milk again.
/soapbox
Anyway, soymilk tastes good! Be sure to shake the container before you pour. You can also buy shelf-stable (non refrigerated) containers, usually in the baking aisle, which is great to keep on hand for cooking and then you don't have to worry about it going bad.
FlashJT
11-05-2009, 10:59 AM
Let me print it twice before saying I've already printed it. Barcodes are the same between both coupons. Wondering if they are both valid or if the other was allowed to print in error....Hmmm.
Anyone else print 2?
Edit: Looks like they are the same. It let me print from another computer too and the number was the same. Everyone else have coupons with the "special" barcode ending in 912?
AnbuItachi
11-05-2009, 10:09 PM
i drink silk soy milk 2-3 times a day, tastes good, it has better stuff than reg milk
nerdyandrew
11-06-2009, 02:03 PM
Let me print it twice before saying I've already printed it. Barcodes are the same between both coupons. Wondering if they are both valid or if the other was allowed to print in error....Hmmm.
Anyone else print 2?
Edit: Looks like they are the same. It let me print from another computer too and the number was the same. Everyone else have coupons with the "special" barcode ending in 912?
I'd try to print on 2 different computers if you can, maybe that will work.
vfdfs2
11-06-2009, 02:53 PM
I printed 2 from one computer, then went to print 3 more from 3 DIFFERENT computers. They appear to be all the same, ending with 912.
Let me print it twice before saying I've already printed it. Barcodes are the same between both coupons. Wondering if they are both valid or if the other was allowed to print in error....Hmmm.
Anyone else print 2?
Edit: Looks like they are the same. It let me print from another computer too and the number was the same. Everyone else have coupons with the "special" barcode ending in 912?