Loading session...

AI Roundtable Debate · 6 models

Bananas are dangerous

Result: Unanimous — No (6/6 votes)

Options

Model Responses

Claude Haiku 4.5

Vote: No

Bananas are not inherently dangerous for the vast majority of people. They are one of the most widely consumed fruits globally and are a staple food in many cultures. While there are extremely rare edge cases—such as individuals with severe banana allergies or those taking certain medications (like MAOIs) that interact with tyramine in bananas—these represent negligible risks to the general population. Bananas are nutritious, affordable, and safe. They contain potassium, vitamin B6, and fiber, contributing positively to human health. The premise that bananas are dangerous conflates exceptional medical circumstances with general truth.

GPT-5.4

Vote: No

Bananas are not inherently dangerous. They are a common food eaten safely by millions of people every day. Like almost anything, bananas can pose limited risks in specific cases, such as allergies, choking for small children, or overconsumption in certain medical conditions. But that does not make bananas generally dangerous. The broad claim is too strong. For an ordinary person, bananas are a safe, routine, nutritious food.

Sonar Pro

Vote: No

Bananas are not dangerous; they are a common, nutritious fruit with well-established safety for consumption. Potential concerns like high potassium causing heart issues ('banana panic') are myths—only extreme cases (e.g., eating 400 bananas) pose any risk, far beyond normal intake. Slippery peels are a minor, preventable hazard, not warranting a 'dangerous' label. No credible evidence from health authorities supports bananas as inherently dangerous; they provide vitamins, fiber, and antioxidants with rare allergies.

Grok 4.1 Fast

Vote: No

Bananas are a staple healthy fruit, providing essential nutrients like potassium, vitamin C, and fiber with no significant health risks for the vast majority of people. Misconceptions about danger—such as hyperkalemia from potassium or minor radioactivity from natural isotopes—are unfounded; you'd need to eat thousands daily for any concern, and even then, risks are negligible compared to benefits. Slipping on peels is a comedic stereotype, not a public health issue; CDC data shows no notable fatalities from bananas, unlike far riskier items like alcohol or processed meats. Overall, bananas are safe and beneficial, making claims of danger baseless hyperbole.

Kimi K2.5

Vote: No

While bananas contain trace amounts of potassium-40 (radioactive isotope), the radiation dose is negligible—equivalent to a few minutes of natural background exposure. You'd need to eat millions in one sitting to reach toxic levels. The 'slip on a peel' hazard is largely a cartoon myth; modern banana peels lack the lubricating properties of 19th-century varieties, and pedestrian accidents are statistically insignificant compared to common household hazards. For the general population, bananas are a safe, nutrient-dense food providing essential potassium, fiber, and vitamin B6. True risks exist only in specific medical contexts (severe hyperkalemia in end-stage kidney disease) or rare allergies (latex-fruit syndrome), making 'dangerous' an inappropriate blanket classification.

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Vote: No

Bananas are overwhelmingly safe and beneficial for human consumption. They are packed with essential nutrients like potassium, vitamin C, and dietary fiber, actively promoting heart health and healthy digestion rather than causing harm. While it is a popular piece of trivia that bananas contain a radioactive isotope (Potassium-40), the radiation dose is microscopic. A person would need to eat tens of millions of bananas in a single sitting to experience acute radiation poisoning, making this purely a fun fact rather than a legitimate physical danger. Furthermore, while the classic cartoon trope of slipping on a banana peel exists, it does not make the fruit itself inherently hazardous. Under normal, everyday circumstances, bananas pose absolutely no threat to public safety or individual health.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable reached an immediate and unanimous consensus that bananas are not dangerous, treating the prompt with a blend of scientific rigor and dry dismissal. Models like Kimi K2.5 and Gemini 3.1 Pro mathematically dismantled the 'radioactive banana' myth, while Grok 4.1 Fast and Sonar Pro relegated the 'slippery peel' hazard to the realm of physical comedy rather than public health.

All 6 models agreed on "No" after discussion

Strongest Arguments

  • No: The risk of radiation poisoning is purely theoretical, as a human would need to consume tens of millions of bananas in one sitting to reach toxic levels, while the 'slippery peel' is a historical artifact of 19th-century varieties rather than a modern safety concern.