Thanks for the clarification.
I don't know that sucralose is dangerous, but we're at a disadvantage in terms of finding out. It's not a situation such as we had with pesticide applicators who applied chlordane, dry cleaners who worked with perchloroethylene, or industrial workers who worked with carbon tetrachloride, all chlorocarbon chemicals not commonly used by the general public. Those people became guinea pigs in something akin to natural experiments, with the rest of society serving as the control group.
Sweeteners are different because they are ubiquitous. They're like salt and sugar in that they're in many, many products where one wouldn't expect to find them. Also, I doubt that most people even know, much less care, which one is used to sweeten their beverages of choice, so it would be almost impossible to gather even empirical data of any real value regarding long-term health effects. Most people who buy "diet," "low-cal," or "sugar-free" products don't delve into the labels to see exactly which sweeteners are used in the products.
And yet in order to know for sure that sucralose is safe, we'd need studies of a lifespan's length. The elevated instances of diseases like prostate cancer, NHL, testicular cancer, liver damage, dementia, DM2, and so forth that were observed in pesticide applicators who had extensive exposure to chlordane and other organochlorines occurred after decades of exposure, not a few years.
So here we have this sweetener that is a member of this huge bunch of compounds, the vast majority of which (including the pharmaceuticals) are known to be toxic to some extent, and some of which were actually designed as poisons. And they want me to sprinkle it in my coffee to make it sweet, despite the lack of any long-term research (nor even empirical data) to prove that it's an exception to the rule that chlorinated hydrocarbons in general aren't things that are good for human health.
I say no thanks.
This could be a case of a little knowledge being dangerous. But it could also be a case of assuming that someone wearing gang colors is probably a member of a gang. Until I know otherwise, I prefer to keep my distance.
Rich