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originally posted by: quintessentone
a reply to: ChaoticOrder
A new study proves that erythritol causes blood clotting:
Consuming foods containing erythritol, a popular artificial sweetener that’s also used in keto diet products, increases the risk of heart attack and stroke, according to a new study.
www.msn.com... p
Another tidbit of health information, a you tube doctor said the medical community really does not know how cholesterol is used by the body, the brain requires fat to function properly - the brain is 60% fat - then the doctor added that 99% of people should not be on anti-cholesterol medication.
Is it any wonder many people are experiencing ill health when we are given the wrong health advice.
Add to that the microplastics and who knows what else (?) that we all ingest and just thinking about it is mindblowing.
The study:
www.ahajournals.org...
originally posted by: ChaoticOrder
Between 2020 and 2022 there was an unprecedented rise in the number of dementia cases in Australia.
Conclusions: A healthy plant-based diet was associated with a slower rate of decline in global cognition, perceptual speed, and episodic memory in AA adults.
The data available to date do not allow an assessment of whether strict veganism is beneficial for brain health or AD risk compared with vegetarianism or diets with occasional meat consumption. Increasing plant-based foods may positively affect cognitive health and perhaps prevent AD. However, it is difficult to find evidence of the effects of a strictly vegan diet on cognition. Plant-based diets have a more extensive body of research that indicates protective effects on brain health. Further, it is unclear if the beneficial health effects are due to the avoidance of harmful effects associated with excessive calories and meat consumption, the specific dietary nutrients and bioactive compounds found in plants, or a combination of both. Randomized controlled trials and prospective cohort studies comparing veganism to other popular diets are scarce. The evidence provided in this review indicates that the net effect of a vegan diet on AD prevention and/or progression should be ascertained by taking into account all the positive and negative effects described here. It is advised that future studies on a vegan diet in AD should include supplementation with specific micronutrients to optimize any positive effects.
originally posted by: Fdttaut
originally posted by: ChaoticOrder
Between 2020 and 2022 there was an unprecedented rise in the number of dementia cases in Australia.
Most of which were in the year 2020, before the vaccine rollout.
You don't need covid vaccines to explain dementia cases in the western world. High consumption of heavily processed foods and lack of exercise take care of that fine by themselves.
originally posted by: chr0naut
a reply to: ChaoticOrder
It was called a pandemic. They do that.
Look at the data. It's obvious. In every case, the trend of the curve begins before the roll-out of immunizations against COVID-19.
Pages and pages of people suggesting it was the immunizations and the data clearly shows that it wasn't.
originally posted by: TheSlav
here is an excellent documentary on what some of our leading embalmers are finding:
A person might ask: Why is the scene in Died Suddenly featuring the removal of clots from bodies so appealing to embalmers? The answer is simple: The removal of clots of all shapes and sizes is a hallmark of an embalming going well and is exactly what we would expect and hope to see. This is particularly illustrated when Hirschman is shown removing a clot from the jugular vein and there is a burst of embalming solution behind it shown briefly before the camera stops filming. Every embalmer loves to see this because that’s how we know that our embalming solution will have a clear path into the arteries and capillaries. Yes, we embalmers love a good clot story, however it seems that the clot story in Died Suddenly is now being used to repackage many of the same old antivaccination tropes we have heard before.
originally posted by: Justoneman
originally posted by: chr0naut
a reply to: ChaoticOrder
It was called a pandemic. They do that.
Look at the data. It's obvious. In every case, the trend of the curve begins before the roll-out of immunizations against COVID-19.
Pages and pages of people suggesting it was the immunizations and the data clearly shows that it wasn't.
Why do you care if people don't believe in the lies they told us. You have been on the side of lies since day one.
Why?
originally posted by: chr0naut
originally posted by: Justoneman
originally posted by: chr0naut
a reply to: ChaoticOrder
It was called a pandemic. They do that.
Look at the data. It's obvious. In every case, the trend of the curve begins before the roll-out of immunizations against COVID-19.
Pages and pages of people suggesting it was the immunizations and the data clearly shows that it wasn't.
Why do you care if people don't believe in the lies they told us. You have been on the side of lies since day one.
Why?
But the data showing that start of the trends in deaths clearly shows that all those people attributing the rise in numbers of deaths to the immunizations were the liars.
The rise in deaths started before the immunizations, and entirely in line with the numbers of active cases of COVID.
COVID is still a problem, endemic now because too few people did what was necessary to end it.
Despite our technology, and history of medical knowledge, the only countries that actually prevailed for a while against the disease, did so without big tech solutions, and just by common sense, unity of purpose and determination.