![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#51
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article , Rodney Long wrote:
pearl wrote: :-) We assessed the effect of a diet high in leafy and green vegetables, fruit, and nuts on serum lipid risk factors for cardiovascular disease. Ten healthy volunteers (seven men and three women aged 33 +/- 4 years HAHAHAHAHAHA Some study 7 men and 3 women ROTFLMAO You imagine that they were all exceptions to the rule somehow? The jokes on you, clown. Ok I eat meat, LOTS of meat, my cholesterol level is under 100, been there forever. What's your level ? My 80 year old Dad was taken off of meat three years ago, trying to lower his cholesterol, they also added walking, and a bunch of other things, for him to change, his levels dropped from 310 to 270, they then put him on drugs to lower it, it dropped to 250, still too damn high according to your researchers My wife works with a person who eats like you do, ZERO MEAT, been doing it for 20 years, their cholesterol level is 290 Why is their level not lower than mine ????????????????????? Where the hell is their cholesterol coming from ????????? Are me, my dad, and this person exceptions to the rule ?????????????????? Show me a study where low levels of cholesterol have extended life, even 1 single day over those who have high levels. If they don't die from heart disease, they may die from cancer, or diabetes, but they still die. I say we need to outlaw process sugar, and flower, now those are the killers of man, so is margarine, and shortening ) all made from your "holy" vege's, How about French fries. I have fairly low cholesterol. My dad had high cholestrol. Cholestrol is also increased by improper heart function, arrhythmias. Heridity is the major cause of vast level changes, but in my case I guess my mother offset that. Its got to be said somewhere that high LDL increases chances for heart attact. Atkins diest high meat can reduce the bad cholestrol. Many vegatables act creating the chance of blod clots. Hoe about carrots. You better NOT eat carrots and green leafy vegetables. For me a blanced protien, carb, fat, diet is the best way to go, including excercise. For those with high LDL, I would want to be on drugs. Diet has a minimum effect on changing levels. My dad even though on cholestrol medication and blood thinners, still had heart failure and total blockage of the lower extremidies. |
#52
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Rodney Long wrote:
Why are you not condemning, them along with meat ? Because you don't want man to utilize animals, your looking for anything to help further your cause, YOU COULD CARE LESS, ABOUT THE HEALTH OF MANKIND !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! NOW,,,, ADMIT THAT !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! That ended this cholesterol "crap", and if it didn't, I am well armed , Obesity is the number one cause of heart disease, diabetes, and many cancers. Plants, and the way they are processed into food that people eat "CAUSE obesity", many plants increase cholesterol levels in humans, because humans "produce" cholesterol from "plant products they eat", even if they eat "ZERO" animal fat. Hydrogenated fats (made from plants) are the most dangerous fat people can eat. There are thousands of research studies on these facts, and they are accepted by 99% of the doctors. H'mmmm maybe we need to eat nothing but meat, like the "old" Eskimo diet, they sure didn't have the diet related medical problems people have today Whale blubber, anyone ? :-) -- Rodney Long, Inventor of the Mojo SpecTastic "WIGGLE" rig, SpecTastic Thread, Boomerang Fishing Pro. ,Stand Out Hooks ,Stand Out Lures, Mojo's Rock Hopper & Rig Saver weights, and the EZKnot http://www.ezknot.com |
#53
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thu, 16 Nov 2006 20:31:35 -0600, Rodney Long wrote:
ya know_ Even a freaking moron would know that it is hopeless to engage in any discussions with ****ing assholes like these peta scum_ Just put a ****ing bullet in their heads and move on to the next one. Hey Rodney why don't you freaking wise up and stop answering these assholes_ you are an ignorant **** for getting sucked into this bull**** to begin with. Now please shut the **** up and stop spewing this crap all over a dozen newsgroups. |
#54
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"GregS" wrote in message ...
In article , Rodney Long wrote: pearl wrote: :-) We assessed the effect of a diet high in leafy and green vegetables, fruit, and nuts on serum lipid risk factors for cardiovascular disease. Ten healthy volunteers (seven men and three women aged 33 +/- 4 years HAHAHAHAHAHA Some study 7 men and 3 women ROTFLMAO You imagine that they were all exceptions to the rule somehow? The joke's on you, clown. Ok I eat meat, LOTS of meat, my cholesterol level is under 100, been there forever. What's your level ? My 80 year old Dad was taken off of meat three years ago, trying to lower his cholesterol, they also added walking, and a bunch of other things, for him to change, his levels dropped from 310 to 270, they then put him on drugs to lower it, it dropped to 250, still too damn high according to your researchers My wife works with a person who eats like you do, ZERO MEAT, been doing it for 20 years, their cholesterol level is 290 Why is their level not lower than mine ????????????????????? Where the hell is their cholesterol coming from ????????? Are me, my dad, and this person exceptions to the rule ?????????????????? Anecdotes are not *evidence*. Show me a study where low levels of cholesterol have extended life, even 1 single day over those who have high levels. Done. Read what you've snipped. Yes... *all* of it, from the beginning! If they don't die from heart disease, they may die from cancer, or diabetes, but they still die. I say we need to outlaw process sugar, and flower, now those are the killers of man, so is margarine, and shortening ) all made from your "holy" vege's, How about French fries. I have fairly low cholesterol. My dad had high cholestrol. Cholestrol is also increased by improper heart function, arrhythmias. Heridity is the major cause of vast level changes, but in my case I guess my mother offset that. Its got to be said somewhere that high LDL increases chances for heart attact. Atkins diest high meat can reduce the bad cholestrol. Many vegatables act creating the chance of blod clots. Hoe about carrots. You better NOT eat carrots and green leafy vegetables. For me a blanced protien, carb, fat, diet is the best way to go, including excercise. For those with high LDL, I would want to be on drugs. Diet has a minimum effect on changing levels. My dad even though on cholestrol medication and blood thinners, still had heart failure and total blockage of the lower extremidies. 'Atkins Distorted His Record on Cholesterol Although ketogenic diets have caused a number of "serious potentially-life-threatening complications,"[317] perhaps the greatest danger of the Atkins Diet, according to the American Medical Association, lies in the heart. Atkins claimed a worsening of cholesterol levels typically only occurs "when carbohydrates are a large part of the diet."[318] We've known this to be false since 1929 when the Institute of American Meatpackers paid to see what would happen if people lived on an all-meat diet. The blood plasma of the unfortunate subjects was so filled with fat it "showed a milkiness" and one of the subjects' cholesterol shot up to 800![319] In the head-to-head comparisons of the four popular weight-loss diets, Ornish's vegetarian diet was the only one that showed a significant decrease in LDL levels--the so-called "bad" cholesterol. Even researchers paid by Atkins concede that high saturated fat diets like Atkins' tend to increase LDL cholesterol.[321] These researchers have to concede the truth since they publish their work in peer-reviewed scientific journals. Dr. Atkins, though, died without ever publishing a single paper in any scientific journal about anything, and thus had more freedom to bend the truth. "The truth," Atkins wrote, "is that every one of a score of studies on [very low carb diets] showed a significant improvement in cholesterol." He accused those who say otherwise of simply not doing their homework. Any claim that cholesterol doesn't significantly improve in "every one of scores of studies" is, he wrote in the last edition, "one of the many examples of untruths being perpetrated because the accusers don't bother to read the scientific literature."[322] He then goes on to recommend no less than 17 supplements for the "prevention of cholesterol elevations" on his diet.[323] But what about his claim that "every one of a score of studies showed a significant improvement in cholesterol." When the AMA and the American Heart Association question this "fact," is it just because they "don't bother to read the scientific literature?" That statement of his, in the latest edition of his book and in essence repeated to this day on the Atkins website, [537], presents a clear opportunity to test the veracity of his claims. And the actual truth is almost the exact opposite. Unfortunately, Dr. Atkins didn't include citations to back up his "score of studies" statement. In fact, when pressed for a list of citations in general, Dr. Atkins told an interviewer that "It and the papers I quoted were in a briefcase I lost some time ago."[324] Researchers have located about a dozen studies, though, that measured the effects of low carb diets on cholesterol levels. Did they all "show a significant improvement in cholesterol?" No. In fact, with only one exception, every single controlled study showed just the opposite--LDL cholesterol either stagnated or was elevated by a low carb diet, even in those that showed weight loss.[325-338] During active weight loss--any kind of weight loss (whether from chemotherapy, cocaine use, tuberculosis or the Atkins Diet)--cholesterol synthesis temporarily decreases[339] and LDL cholesterol levels should go down.[340] Yet, all the saturated animal fat in the Atkins Diet tends to instead push levels up, and in most studies the bad cholesterol doesn't fall as it should with weight loss. The saturated fat in effect cancelled the benefit one would expect while losing weight and cutting out trans fats.[522] And what happens when people on the Atkins Diet stop losing weight? People can't lose weight forever (Stephen King novels aside). The fear is that their LDL cholesterol level might then shoot through the roof.[341-342] "There is no doubt that you lose weight initially," Dr Jim Mann, an endocrinology specialist from the University of Otago, New Zealand, told the 2003 meeting of the European Society of Cardiology, "but there is a grave risk of a dramatic rise in cholesterol levels during the maintenance phase [of the Atkins Diet]. "When weight loss is maintained--or as often happens, there is weight gain [on the Atkins Diet]," Mann continued, "we have observed that a lot of people experience a rise in cholesterol to levels greater than when they started the diet."[1159] Sometimes even during the active weight loss, however, LDL cholesterol levels became elevated on the Atkins Diet. One study of women, for example, showed that just two weeks on the Atkins Diet significantly elevated average LDL levels over 15%.[343] In a trial of men on the Atkins Diet, even though they lost an average of 17 pounds after 3 months, their LDL cholesterol jumped almost 20%. The May 2004 Annals of Internal Medicine study showed that a third of Atkins dieters suffered a significant increase in LDL cholesterol. The goal is to have a double digit LDL--an LDL under 100 (mg/dl).[344] In the study, one person's LDL shot from an unhealthy 184 to a positively frightening 283 (which means their total cholesterol was probably somewhere over 350). [345] With so many people on these diets, that could mean Atkins is endangering the health of millions of Americans.[346] LDL cholesterol is, after all, the single most important diet related risk factor for heart disease,[527] the number one killer in the United States for both men and women.[347] In another clinical trial, despite statistically significant weight loss reported in the Atkins group, every single cardiac risk factor measured had worsened after a year on the Atkins Diet. The investigator concludes "Those following high fat [Atkins[526]] diets may have lost weight, but at the price of increased cardiovascular risk factors, including increased LDL cholesterol, increased triglycerides, increased total cholesterol, decreased HDL cholesterol, increased total/HDL cholesterol ratios, and increased homocysteine, Lp(a), and fibrinogen levels. These increased risk factors not only increase the risk of heart disease, but also the risk of strokes, peripheral vascular disease, and blood clots."[523] While the LDL in the Atkins group increased 6%, the LDL cholesterol levels in the whole-foods vegetarian group was cut in half--dropping 52%.[523] This kind of drop would theoretically make your average American[528] almost heart-attack proof.[529] When the pro-Atkins journalist who wrote the misleading New York Times Magazine piece was confronted as to why he didn't include the results of this landmark study, which directly contradicted what he wrote in the article, all he could do was to accuse the researchers of just making the data up. [348] It's interesting to note that the one exception --a published study of the Atkins Diet showing a statistically significant reduction in LDL--had no control group, put subjects on cholesterol-lowering supplements and was funded by the Atkins Corporation itself. Even in that study though, the drop was modest--only a 7% drop (compared, for example, to the 52% drop on the vegetarian diet)--and didn't include two subjects who quit because their cholesterol levels went out of control.[349] Yet studies like this have been heralded as a vindication of the Atkins Diet by the mainstream media.[350] As journalist Michael Fumento, co-author of Fat of the Land, pointed out, "How peculiar when the most you can say for the best-selling fad-diet book of all time is that it probably doesn't kill people." [351] To which I might add, "in the short-term." Based on an analysis of the Atkins Diet, long-term use of the Atkins Diet is expected to raise coronary heart disease risk by over 50%. [352] "The late Dr. A," Fumento quips, "still gets an F."[353] Less often reported in the media is the fact that one of the research subjects placed on the Atkins Diet in the 2003 "vindication" study was hospitalized with chest pain and another died.[354] Similarly, in the widely publicized May 2004 study, less widely publicized was the fact that two people in the low carb-diet arm of the study couldn't complete the study because they died. One slipped into a coma; the other dropped dead from heart disease.[355] As the Director of Nutrition at the Harvard School of Medicine has written, "there is still much danger in the widespread fad enthusiasm for these diets."[356] The Atkins Corporation boasts about the supposed ability of the Atkins Diet to significantly raise the level of HDL, or "good" cholesterol on a consistent basis.[357] HDL transports cholesterol out of one's arteries to the liver for disposal or recycling. Though it is actually only a minority of controlled studies on Atkins-like diets that have shown such an effect,[358-371] it is important to note that the type of HDL increase sometimes seen on these diets is not necessarily healthful.[372] When one eats more garbage (saturated fat and cholesterol) one may need more metabolic garbage trucks (like HDL) to get rid of it. Eating a stick of butter may raise one's HDL, but that doesn't mean chewing one down is good for one's heart. In any case, significantly lowering one's LDL seems more important than significantly raising one's HDL,[373] though the studies done on low carb diets typically show neither. Because of these "well-known hazards," when Atkins' book was originally published the Chair of the Nutrition Department at Harvard warned physicians that recommending the Atkins Diet "borders on malpractice."[374] http://www.atkinsexposed.org/atkins/...ethod=allWords |
#55
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Rodney Long" wrote in message ...
Rodney Long wrote: Why are you not condemning, them along with meat ? Because you don't want man to utilize animals, your looking for anything to help further your cause, YOU COULD CARE LESS, ABOUT THE HEALTH OF MANKIND !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! NOW,,,, ADMIT THAT !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! You are the one promoting an unhealthy diet, not me. 'Am J Clin Nutr 1999 Sep;70(3 Suppl):532S-538S Associations between diet and cancer, ischemic heart disease, and all-cause mortality in non-Hispanic white California Seventh-day Adventists. Fraser GE. Center for Health Research and the Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Loma Linda University, CA USA. Results associating diet with chronic disease in a cohort of 34192 California Seventh-day Adventists are summarized. Most Seventh-day Adventists do not smoke cigarettes or drink alcohol, and there is a wide range of dietary exposures within the population. About 50% of those studied ate meat products 1 time/wk or not at all, and vegetarians consumed more tomatoes, legumes, nuts, and fruit, but less coffee, doughnuts, and eggs than did nonvegetarians. Multivariate analyses showed significant associations between beef consumption and fatal ischemic heart disease (IHD) in men [relative risk (RR) = 2.31 for subjects who ate beef or =3 times/wk compared with vegetarians], significant protective associations between nut consumption and fatal and nonfatal IHD in both sexes (RR approximately 0.5 for subjects who ate nuts or =5 times/wk compared with those who ate nuts 1 time/wk), and reduced risk of IHD in subjects preferring whole-grain to white bread. The lifetime risk of IHD was reduced by approximately 31% in those who consumed nuts frequently and by 37% in male vegetarians compared with nonvegetarians. Cancers of the colon and prostate were significantly more likely in nonvegetarians (RR of 1.88 and 1.54, respectively), and frequent beef consumers also had higher risk of bladder cancer. Intake of legumes was negatively associated with risk of colon cancer in nonvegetarians and risk of pancreatic cancer. Higher consumption of all fruit or dried fruit was associated with lower risks of lung, prostate, and pancreatic cancers. Cross-sectional data suggest vegetarian Seventh-day Adventists have lower risks of diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and arthritis than nonvegetarians. Thus, among Seventh-day Adventists, vegetarians are healthier than nonvegetarians but this cannot be ascribed only to the absence of meat. - PMID: 10479227' That ended this cholesterol "crap", and if it didn't, I am well armed , Obesity is the number one cause of heart disease, diabetes, and many cancers. 'New Scientific Review Shows Vegetarian Diets Cause Major Weight Loss Without Exercise or Calorie Counting 31-03-2006 05:01 WASHINGTON, March 31 /PRNewswire/ -- - Controlled Research Trials Prove Diet's Efficacy A scientific review in April's Nutrition Reviews shows that a vegetarian diet is highly effective for weight loss. Vegetarian populations tend to be slimmer than meat-eaters, and they experience lower rates of heart disease, diabetes, high blood pressure, and other life-threatening conditions linked to overweight and obesity. The new review, compiling data from 87 previous studies, shows the weight-loss effect does not depend on exercise or calorie-counting, and it occurs at a rate of approximately 1 pound per week. Rates of obesity in the general population are skyrocketing, while in vegetarians, obesity prevalence ranges from 0 percent to 6 percent, note study authors Susan E. Berkow, Ph.D., C.N.S., and Neal D. Barnard, M.D., of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM). The authors found that the body weight of both male and female vegetarians is, on average, 3 percent to 20 percent lower than that of meat-eaters. Vegetarian and vegan diets have also been put to the test in clinical studies, as the review notes. The best of these clinical studies isolated the effects of diet by keeping exercise constant. The researchers found that a low-fat vegan diet leads to weight loss of about 1 pound per week, even without additional exercise or limits on portion sizes, calories, or carbohydrates. "Our research reveals that people can enjoy unlimited portions of high-fiber foods such as fruits, vegetables, and whole grains to achieve or maintain a healthy body weight without feeling hungry," says Dr. Berkow, the lead author. "There is evidence that a vegan diet causes an increased calorie burn after meals, meaning plant-based foods are being used more efficiently as fuel for the body, as opposed to being stored as fat," says Dr. Barnard. Insulin sensitivity is increased by a vegan diet, allowing nutrients to more rapidly enter the cells of the body to be converted to heat rather than to fat. Earlier this month, a team of researchers led by Tim Key of Oxford University found that meat-eaters who switched to a plant-based diet gained less weight over a period of five years. Papers reviewed by Drs. Berkow and Barnard include several published by Dr. Key and his colleagues, as well as a recent study of more than 55,000 Swedish women showing that meat-eaters are more likely to be overweight than vegetarians and vegans. ... http://media.netpr.pl/notatka_54444.html Plants, and the way they are processed into food that people eat "CAUSE obesity", many plants increase cholesterol levels in humans, because humans "produce" cholesterol from "plant products they eat", even if they eat "ZERO" animal fat. Nonsense. Hydrogenated fats (made from plants) are the most dangerous fat people can eat. 'Scientific evidence shows that consumption of saturated fat, trans fat, and dietary cholesterol raises low-density lipoprotein (LDL), or "bad cholesterol," levels, which increases the risk of coronary heart disease (CHD). According to the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health, more than 12.5 million Americans have CHD, and more than 500,000 die each year. That makes CHD one of the leading causes of death in the United States. ... Trans fat, like saturated fat and dietary cholesterol, raises the LDL cholesterol that increases your risk for CHD. Americans consume on average 4 to 5 times as much saturated fat as trans fat in their diets. Although saturated fat is the main dietary culprit that raises LDL, trans fat and dietary cholesterol also contribute significantly. ....' http://www.fda.gov/fdac/features/2003/503_fats.html 'January 27, 2005 Scientists discover molecular "switch" in liver that triggers harmful effects of saturated and trans fats ......' http://www.dfci.harvard.edu/abo/news...2005-01-27.asp There are thousands of research studies on these facts, and they are accepted by 99% of the doctors. But not by you. lol. H'mmmm maybe we need to eat nothing but meat, like the "old" Eskimo diet, they sure didn't have the diet related medical problems people have today "Really now. Virtually every credible account you will ever read that describes the Eskimo way of life will describe them eating vegetable matter and great efforts they go to in collecting it during the months when it is available. (Plants) made up a *significant* portion of the diet in all Arctic and sub-Arctic regions. Specifically they made up a significant portion of Eskimo diets. There is one small area in central Canada where that was less true than in all other areas, and the main point to consider is that even in that area Eskimos did eat vegetable matter on a regular basis. You've never seen berries preserved in seal oil, or dried leaves to make tea, or eaten soup made from a mouse nest, or picked rose hips in the winter, or seen willows on the tundra, or eaten salmon berries with Pilot Bread?" - Written by Floyd L. Davidson, Ukpeagvik (Barrow, Alaska). Whale blubber, anyone ? :-) That would certainly explain a lot. 'Pibloktoq (hysteria) and Inuit nutrition: possible implication of hypervitaminosis A. Landy D. The hysterical reaction among Eskimo peoples known as pibloktoq, one of a group of aberrant behaviors occurring among Arctic and Circumarctic societies termed 'arctic hysterias', has been explained by a variety of theories: ecological, nutritional, biological-physiological, psychological- psychoanalytic, social structural and cultural. This study hypothesizes the possible implication of vitamin intoxication, namely, hypervitaminosis A, in the etiology of some cases of pibloktoq. Its biocultural approach implicates elements of several explanatory classes, which are not mutually exclusive. Experimental and clinical studies of nonhumans and humans reveal somatic and behavioral effects of hypervitaminosis A which closely parallel many of the symptoms reported for Western patients diagnosed as hysterical and Inuit sufferers of pibloktoq. Eskimo nutrition provides abundant sources of vitamin A and lays the probable basis in some individuals for hypervitaminosis A through ingestion of livers, kidneys, and fat of arctic fish and mammals, where the vitamin often is stored in poisonous quantities. Possible connections between pibloktoq and hypervitamonosis A are explored. A multifactorial framework may yield a more compelling model of some cases of pibloktoq than those that are mainly unicausal, since, among other things, the disturbance has been reported for males and females, adults and children, and dogs. PMID: 4049004 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE] http://tinyurl.com/5qw7 |
#56
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Rodney Long" wrote in message:
You can't reason with a vegetarian, they have lost the protein in their diet, that allows their brains to function properly. Prime example, they complain about people killing animals, yet they can no longer, see animals killing animals, animals even torturing other animals.... (etc., from earlier message) and (to pearl); You have convinced no one on these fishing groups, not a single person, I have convinced no one on your nut case groups, because you can't reason with those who's brains fail to function properly due to the lack on animal protein in their diets, they suffer from a chemical imbalance and the Prozac, Zanax, and other drugs "all" of you take, can't cure that. ------------------------------------- But what about the "lacto-ovo" vegetarians? Unlike the vegans, they do get animal protein in their diets. So according to what you say their brains will not fail to function properly and will not have this "chemical imbalance" from lack of animal protein in their diets, since they do eat dairy products and eggs, both good sources of animal proteins - yet these people still refuse to eat meat. How could that possibly be, if what you say is correct? -dr "Nothing will benefit human health and increase the chances for survival of life on Earth as much as the evolution to a vegetarian diet." -Albert Einstein http://www.quotationspage.com/quote/38115.html |
#57
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"dangrang" wrote
But what about the "lacto-ovo" vegetarians? They aren't vegetarians, except according to a sloppy, self-serving misnomer. |
#58
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Dutch" wrote in message
... "dangrang" wrote But what about the "lacto-ovo" vegetarians? They aren't vegetarians, except according to a sloppy, self-serving misnomer. ---------------------------- For Dutch's sake, my original message (to Rodney) is restated below.... --------------- "Rodney Long" wrote in message: You can't reason with a vegetarian, they have lost the protein in their diet, that allows their brains to function properly. Prime example, they complain about people killing animals, yet they can no longer, see animals killing animals, animals even torturing other animals.... (etc., from earlier message) and (to pearl); You have convinced no one on these fishing groups, not a single person, I have convinced no one on your nut case groups, because you can't reason with those who's brains fail to function properly due to the lack on animal protein in their diets, they suffer from a chemical imbalance and the Prozac, Zanax, and other drugs "all" of you take, can't cure that. ------------------------------------- But what about those who follow a meatless diet, yet still consume dairy products and eggs? Unlike the vegans, they do get animal protein in their diets. So according to what you say their brains will not fail to function properly and will not have this "chemical imbalance" from lack of animal protein in their diets, since they do eat dairy products and eggs, both good sources of animal proteins - yet these people still refuse to eat meat. How could that possibly be, if what you say is correct? -dr "Nothing will benefit human health and increase the chances for survival of life on Earth as much as the evolution to a vegetarian diet." -Albert Einstein http://www.quotationspage.com/quote/38115.html |
#59
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
dangrang wrote:
But what about the "lacto-ovo" vegetarians? Unlike the vegans, they do get animal protein in their diets. So according to what you say their brains will not fail to function properly and will not have this "chemical imbalance" from lack of animal protein in their diets, since they do eat dairy products and eggs, both good sources of animal proteins - yet these people still refuse to eat meat. How could that possibly be, if what you say is correct? Lacking animal fat, in your diet, is not the only reason for mental illness, yet it is a major cause of it, among those who don't eat meat -- Rodney Long, Inventor of the Mojo SpecTastic "WIGGLE" rig, SpecTastic Thread, Boomerang Fishing Pro. ,Stand Out Hooks ,Stand Out Lures, Mojo's Rock Hopper & Rig Saver weights, and the EZKnot http://www.ezknot.com |
#60
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Rodney Long" wrote in message ...
dangrang wrote: But what about the "lacto-ovo" vegetarians? Unlike the vegans, they do get animal protein in their diets. So according to what you say their brains will not fail to function properly and will not have this "chemical imbalance" from lack of animal protein in their diets, since they do eat dairy products and eggs, both good sources of animal proteins - yet these people still refuse to eat meat. How could that possibly be, if what you say is correct? Lacking animal fat, in your diet, is not the only reason for mental illness, yet it is a major cause of it, among those who don't eat meat How many times a week do you recommend that people eat an average portion of meat (animal protein and fat), in order to enjoy maximum benefit to brain function and mental health, and avoid mental illness? |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Tuna salad anyone? Death of a Tuna and Deathof a Whale | Rodney Long | General Discussion | 71 | November 24th, 2006 11:54 AM |
Blackfin Tuna | Kevin Hynes | Saltwater Fishing | 2 | September 2nd, 2004 01:08 PM |
TUNA! | Wolfgang | Fly Fishing | 138 | April 6th, 2004 07:32 AM |
Canned Tuna in UK | TchWrtrMcf | UK Coarse Fishing | 3 | January 31st, 2004 07:46 PM |
ALBACORE TUNA | John Lindsey | Fly Fishing | 3 | January 24th, 2004 12:23 AM |