Please attack the post, not the poster...
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Let him Rant if he Wants to Rant.
I always Love hearing people Telling me what My Opinion is.
LOL
Please attack the post, not the poster...
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Please attack the post, not the poster...
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What Causes Heart Disease? | Weston A Price
"There are dozens of risk factors for heart disease. Those cited most often by medical orthodoxy include high blood cholesterol, smoking, lack of exercise, stress and overweight....
One factor of apparent importance is smoking, which has been associated in many studies with an increased risk of coronary mortality, even after correction for other risk factors. It is easy to speculate on the mechanism by which smoking causes heart disease. Exposure to fumes containing free radicals may promote the growth of atherosclerotic plaques. Perhaps chronic carbon monoxide intoxication limits the heart’s utilization of oxygen.
But the picture is more complex than simple cause and effect. In a multi-year British study involving several thousand men, half were asked to reduce saturated fat and cholesterol in their diets, to stop smoking and to increase the amounts of unsaturated oils such as margarine and vegetable oils. After one year, those on the “good” diet had 100 percent more deaths than those on the “bad” diet, in spite of the fact that those men on the “bad” diet continued to smoke.2 In a study of Indians from Bombay and Punjab, researchers found that those from Punjab had one-fifth the number of heart attacks even though they smoked eight times more cigarettes.3 And while smoking was widespread at the turn of the century, myocardial infarction was not. This suggests that there may be factors in traditional diets that protect against the negative effects of smoking. It also raises the question of whether additives now used in cigarette paper and filters and changes in the curing process itself have exacerbated the harmful effects of cigarette use.
Perhaps the association between smoking and heart disease is really an association with some other factor—stress, biochemical imbalances, nutrient deficiencies—that creates the desire or the need to smoke. Often when people quit smoking they become nervous and overweight, which may seem a bad bargain of one risk factor in exchange for two more."
As a smoker of 47 years I would like to take time to share my experiences with you. ...
To add to this, researchers have been puzzled for a long time over why the cancer rate is so low in Japan when the smoking rate is so high theremost suggest there are protective factors in their diet.
To add to this, researchers have been puzzled for a long time over why the cancer rate is so low in Japan when the smoking rate is so high theremost suggest there are protective factors in their diet.
Yep. That's been a 'puzzle' for years - highest smoking rate in the world (the men) and lowest lung cancer cases. (at one point in time) .., although a lot of stomach cancer, if I recall correctly.
Maybe they just don't inhale!
To add to this, researchers have been puzzled for a long time over why the cancer rate is so low in Japan when the smoking rate is so high theremost suggest there are protective factors in their diet.
Yep. That's been a 'puzzle' for years - highest smoking rate in the world (the men) and lowest lung cancer cases. (at one point in time) .., although a lot of stomach cancer, if I recall correctly.
Maybe they just don't inhale!
The japanese eat a huge amount of soy... "Hot flashes" are apparently almost completely unknown among menopausal japanese women, because of the phyto-estrogens in soy. Real estrogen can be a definite causative factor in many cancers of women, but apparently the plant kind (phyto-estrogen) has some protective effect.
Andria
The japanese eat a huge amount of soy... "Hot flashes" are apparently almost completely unknown among menopausal japanese women, because of the phyto-estrogens in soy. Real estrogen can be a definite causative factor in many cancers of women, but apparently the plant kind (phyto-estrogen) has some protective effect.
Andria
Oh and soy is too much sodium!!! Did you see recently there was a study showing 'salt' isn't all that bad after all? And Trans fats are now good for you. "People should switch from butter to margarine!" Decades later: "Actually butter is better for you, sorry.... "lol
Well for those with hypertension... too much sodium is really not a good thing. And I found that, for myself, with the dehydration inherent in vaping, I have to consume, along with a lot of fluids, a lot more potassium (coconut water) and a good bit less sodium, or I get cankles and sore lumpy feet. But till this problem raised its ugly head, I had no problems with sodium; I ate salt in whatever quantity I desired and had no issues.
I think the main thing is that you have to consider the WHOLE organism, and the WHOLE diet, and everything that's going on with that organism consuming that diet -- and that's where the dishonesty begins; these "public health" fools start saying things like "fat is bad for you" or "sodium is bad for you" but that's not the whole story; I can't eat cholesterol because thanks to my stone-ridden gallbladder, I can't digest it, but children <12 actually REQUIRE cholesterol for brain development.
"Smoking causes cancer" is another one; it does NOT cause cancer. It can *play a part* in conditions leading to cellular mutations -- if you have multiple risk factors for cancer, then sure, smoking can certainly add to that risk. But now the ANTZ have accepted it as gospel truth that smoking CAUSES cancer, and has been busy indoctrinating the world with that fallacy. I doubt if anyone thinks that smoking is actually GOOD for you, there is far too much clinical and anecdotal evidence to the contrary -- but in the modern world, there are so many risk factors for cancer, how can any of us avoid all of them? I really doubt that we can -- but vaping instead of smoking sure takes some of the risk out of the equation.
Andria
I think this is because people in our society have an innate desire for simple answers, as well as belief in a dichotomy between "good" and "bad". In our culture we have been trained to believe there is a clear separation between black and white (this is not true for many other cultures). So if you tell the public that a certain thing is good in moderation under certain circumstances but is best minimized under other circumstances, you'll generate confusion. If instead, you say that something is "GOOD" but another thing is "BAD", people will latch onto the idea because it makes more sense to them.
A good example of this cultural dichotomy are the fairy tales and stories many of us heard growing up. Watch the lion king with this in mind - the good guys are always pure and good at heart, while the bad guys do nothing but evil things all the time. You never see the good guys do something evil intentionally and justify it, nor do you see the bad guys have a temporary change of heart and do something nice for someone. In many of these tales, they even go so far as to make the good guys attractive and the bad guys ugly!
So the end result is a bunch of grown ups who split everything, and everyone, into the categories of "good" or "bad". It will take a massive cultural shift over a few generations to change this perception.
Heh... nowadays it's very easy to tell who the "bad guys" are -- they're the ones smoking cigarettes.X-Files really made hay with that, with the Cigarette-Smoking Man -- I mean, OF COURSE he was bad -- he's smoking cigarettes!
Andria
Ha ha exactly!
In sharp contrast, if you ever partake in Japanese anime, even the shows that were made for children frequently show bad guys becoming good guys and vice versa (an excellent example is Vegeta from DBZ, who starts off as a bad guy but turns into a good guy with a bad attitude). The reason for this is the difference in cultural perception of good and evil - in Japanese culture they are more likely to view them as mixed, as they generally are in real life. The reason for these differences is rooted in the traditional religions of the different societies, which is too far OT and outside forum flavor to be discussed at length here, but you get the picture
and I do see our culture shifting in that direction (see Shrek, an ugly good guy
), but again, it will take another generation or two to fully take root.