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Originally posted by Jezus
My personal opinion is that the biggest conspiracy in the world is convincing people that food and drugs are different.
Amazon.com Review Get ready to give up that morning latte and kiss cola goodbye. Here comes Caffeine Blues, by Stephen Cherniske, M.S., the first book to expose the dark side of America's No. 1 drug: caffeine. If you are one of the nearly 80 percent of Americans hooked on caffeine--a natural component of coffee, tea, and chocolate and a common ingredient in drugs, soda, candy, and other products--this book will be a wake-up call. In Caffeine Blues, Cherniske, a nutritional biochemist with more than 25 years of academic research and clinical experience and author of the bestseller The DHEA Breakthrough, reveals the truth about caffeine and explains how to kick the habit forever. Cherniske discusses how caffeine affects the body and brain and why it can increase your risk of dozens of health disorders ranging from osteoporosis, diabetes, and PMS to hypertension and heartburn. After spending 300 pages documenting all of caffeine's evils, Cherniske finally offers a decaffeinated life line: "Off the Bean and on to Vitality," a step-by-step, clinically proven program to help readers kick the habit and boost energy levels naturally. --Ellen Albertson
From Library Journal Nutritional biochemist Cherniske claims that people who consume more than 300 milligrams of caffeine per day are victims of caffeinism: a state of chronic toxicity resulting from excess caffeine consumption and a major contributing factor to heart disease, hypertension, stomach ailments, diabetes, and sleep disorders. Cherniske also warns that most coffee beans are contaminated by pesticides, which harm not only drinkers but also exposed agricultural workers. For conservationists, he highlights the effects of the pesticides on the land and water surrounding the plantations as well as the destruction of the rain forest to make room for coffee plantations. The presence of caffeine in over-the-counter medicines, candy, and soft drinks is stressed, especially in the addiction of children. Cherniske also suggests alternatives to caffeine and ways of quitting the habit. While his book is thought-provoking, its rhetoric is somewhat extreme. Not a necessary purchase.?Janet M. Schneider, James A. Haley Veterans Hosp., Tampa, FL Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Originally posted by LadySkadi
Here comes Caffeine Blues, by Stephen Cherniske, M.S., the first book to expose the dark side of America's No. 1 drug: caffeine. If you are one of the nearly 80 percent of Americans hooked on caffeine--a natural component of coffee, tea, and chocolate and a common ingredient in drugs, soda, candy, and other products--this book will be a wake-up call.
Noted British psychiatric researcher Malcolm Peet conducted a provocative cross-cultural analysis of the relationship between diet and mental illness. His primary finding was a strong link between high sugar consumption and the risk of both depression and schizophrenia.
There are at least two potential mechanisms through which refined sugar intake could exert a toxic effect on mental health. First, sugar actually suppresses activity of a key growth hormone in the brain called BDNF. BDNF levels are critically low in both depression and schizophrenia.
Second, sugar consumption triggers a cascade of chemical reactions in your body that promote chronic inflammation. In the long term, inflammation disrupts the normal functioning of your immune system, and wreaks havoc on your brain. Once again, it’s linked to a greater risk of depression and schizophrenia.
Originally posted by Jean Paul Zodeaux
reply to ]post by Jezus[/url]
The reasons MaryJane is illegal are multiple. One being it's a more Eastern comteplative state inducing substance which our society doesn't want because it comptomises productivity. Every culture has it's type of drugs. We like ones that make us wired, not chill out.
MJ was endemic to America from the very beginning. A good cash crop valued for it's fibre, heartiness, ability to grow anywhere. The psychotropic benefits of the flowering plant were a vestigial bonus. Us by medicos and popular with black musicians, bohemians, intellectual experimenters.
Ironically in the 30s when a new process was developed that could make quality paper out of hemp and timber industries freaked out. Newspaper chains had invested heavily in forests all over, in Canada and Mexico. So a major campaign was launched propagating the evils of the dangerous drug Thomas Jefferson had once grown on his plantation.
So a Prohibition on a fairly innocuous substance has been in effect for over 70 years. But it grows readily and is easily available - just pricier than it should be.
The US will finally break down and decriminalize it soon. Economics. Costs $90,000 a year to imprison a few hundred thousand people whose crime was ingesting smoke from a mood altering weed.