Low grade dog food 🏋️🐭. . . 🐰🕳️

14K posts

Low grade dog food 🏋️🐭. . . 🐰🕳️ banner
Low grade dog food 🏋️🐭. . . 🐰🕳️

Low grade dog food 🏋️🐭. . . 🐰🕳️

@carnivoremouse

Carnivore, lift, run, bike, swim. Patriot.

Wisconsin, USA Katılım Mayıs 2015
633 Takip Edilen443 Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
Low grade dog food 🏋️🐭. . . 🐰🕳️
"Early in life I had noticed that no event is ever correctly reported in a newspaper, but in Spain, for the first time, I saw newspaper reports which did not bear any relation to the facts, not even the relationship which is implied in an ordinary lie....
English
4
1
31
4.1K
Low grade dog food 🏋️🐭. . . 🐰🕳️
I certainly hope that you are accessing Fake Book with a burner device. FB has circumvented Android's sandbox and has full access to any and everything on your mobile device. Apple is suspect to have been compromised. Samsung has Fake book as system app that can't be uninstalled that has kernal access. Best to use your guest network for FB. Install a "pi-hole" on your main network. Block FB on your main network.
English
1
0
0
81
🇺🇸 Do Not Comply 💯
🇺🇸 Do Not Comply 💯@DoNotComply23·
My account is anon… so why the fuck are some of you showing up in my Facebook “people you may know”….
English
7
0
22
786
Dan
Dan@countrycyclist·
@Mangan150 .41 waist to height ratio at 59. 12% body fat according to my Renpho scale. Doing my best to give the middle finger to aging, Sun, steak and steal. Keep healing…
English
2
0
5
131
P.D. Mangan Health & Freedom Maximalist 🇺🇸
The normal range for BMI is too generous and doesn't account for body composition. That's why waist-to-height ratio and body fat % are more meaningful indicators than BMI. You can have a "normal" weight and still be out of shape, metabolically speaking.
English
3
6
72
4.6K
Stock Talk
Stock Talk@stocktalkweekly·
A month ago we had an AI bull market, declining inflation, falling gas prices & impending rate cuts. One miscalculation later, we have an AI bear market, rising inflation, rising gas prices, potential rate hikes, and Americans killed in action. A fumble of epic proportions...
English
113
113
1.3K
75.6K
Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
Doctors told pregnant women that smoking was fine. Doctors told parents to put babies to sleep on their stomachs. Doctors told patients that thalidomide was a safe sedative. Doctors told people dealing with chronic pain that OxyContin was non-addictive. Doctors told everyone that margarine was safer than butter. Doctors told patients that lobotomies were a legitimate treatment for depression. Doctors told the public that DDT was safe to spray directly on children to control lice. Doctors endorsed specific cigarette brands in medical journals. Doctors told patients with stomach ulcers it was stress, for decades, while Barry Marshall was being laughed out of conferences for suggesting it was a bacterium. Doctors told millions of people that dietary fat caused heart disease, based on a study that excluded the fifteen countries whose data didn't fit. And now a doctor is going to tell you that seed oils are fine. You decide how much weight to give that.
English
61
567
2.2K
47.1K
Andrew Bridgen
Andrew Bridgen@ABridgen·
China is throwing away fields of electric cars and EV bicycles due to get Government subsidy and an absence of viable recycling methods! Is this really environmentally friendly ? This can only happen when markets are distorted - creating products people don’t want to buy.
English
75
743
1.8K
62.4K
Michelle K Wood
Michelle K Wood@bewellmichelle·
@newstart_2024 Scam. I can't recall his name, but the man who 'uncovered' the relationship between high cholesterol & heart disease tested people in 21 countries. There was a relationship in only 7, so he dumped the research from the other 14 and published High Cholesterol Causes Heart Disease!
English
3
1
9
650
Camus
Camus@newstart_2024·
Dr. Rachel Marynowski shared a perspective on cholesterol history that makes you pause. In the 1970s, doctors weren’t aggressively screening for high cholesterol because levels up to around 300 mg/dL were often still considered within a normal range. Cholesterol is something the body produces and needs for many essential functions, including cell membranes and hormone production. Then in 1984, the National Institutes of Health launched the National Cholesterol Education Program. This coincided with pharmaceutical companies developing the first statin drugs (the first one, lovastatin, was approved in 1987). Over time, guidelines from groups like the American Heart Association and American College of Cardiology lowered the thresholds for what was considered “high” cholesterol. The result? Millions more people became candidates for cholesterol-lowering medication. Dr. Marynowski, an integrative physician, points out that this shift happened alongside heavy pharmaceutical involvement in research, education, and guideline development — raising questions about how much science versus commercial interests shaped the narrative that cholesterol is primarily a villain. Science nugget: Cholesterol is vital for human physiology. The body synthesizes most of what it needs (about 75–80% in the liver), and it plays critical roles in producing steroid hormones (like cortisol, estrogen, and testosterone), vitamin D, and bile acids for digestion. Extremely low cholesterol levels have been associated in some studies with higher risks of certain health issues, though optimal ranges remain debated. It’s a reminder that medical guidelines and “standard care” can evolve — sometimes influenced by more than just pure science. What are your thoughts on how cholesterol guidelines have changed over the decades, or how much weight you give to the role of pharmaceutical funding in shaping them?
English
42
276
746
56.4K
Mark Bski🇺🇸Ruggedly Individualistic 🐶 olllllllo
A rampant persuasive fraud is the use of the word "may." The conclusion below states "high dietary fiber intake may reduce the risk of total mortality." It's equally accurate to claim "high dietary fiber intake may not reduce the risk of total mortality." It's also could state "there is no measurable correlation between fiber & mortality." But the purpose is to persuade, not to be honest.
Mark Bski🇺🇸Ruggedly Individualistic 🐶 olllllllo tweet media
English
1
0
1
42
Nick Jikomes
Nick Jikomes@trikomes·
Clinical research shows that CRP drops significantly after a reduction in dietary omega-6 polyunsaturated fat intake (“seed oil fat”). Despite this observation, there are review papers that cite RCTs showing a drop in CRP following reduction in PUFA intake… but then state that they show seed oils reduce inflammation. Why? Because the RCT compares a very high PUFA seed oil (sunflower oil) to a low-PUFA seed oil (canola). One of many examples of how language games are used by researchers to push their preferred narrative. More detail here: x.com/trikomes/statu…
David Sinclair@davidasinclair

Elevated CRP predicts cardiovascular events. Reduce inflammation.

English
3
6
30
2.2K
Nick Jikomes
Nick Jikomes@trikomes·
That’s weird, given that breast cancer is on the rise in younger age cohorts, even though they have lower cholesterol levels than previous generations and have been consuming more “healthy” PUFAs from and earlier age. It’s also weird given that “healthy” dietary PUFAs known to lower seem cholesterol causally drive breast cancer in animals. Probably just a coincidence, right? 🤷‍♂️
Nick Jikomes tweet mediaNick Jikomes tweet media
Michael Greger, M.D.@nutrition_facts

Cholesterol appears to stimulate the growth of human breast cancer cells, which may explain why phytosterol-rich foods, such as pumpkin seeds, are associated with reduced breast cancer risk. bit.ly/2JzwnSH

English
7
3
45
1.9K
AJAC
AJAC@AJA_Cortes·
Hilarious when you look up a chemical company, they sell billons worth of products a year Their IG page has 80 followers You've never heard of them of course but they're a lynchpin for US food security for decades
English
11
10
291
13.6K
MrGarbage
MrGarbage@GarbageDudes·
@AJA_Cortes Why would someone follow an ig account of a chemical company?
English
1
0
0
4.1K
Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
"The science is settled." They said that about lobotomies. Drilled into the skull, severed the frontal lobe, sent the patient home quieter. Twenty thousand performed in the US alone. The surgeon got a Nobel Prize. They said it about radium. Sold in toothpaste. In face cream. In water tonics for "vitality." The factories that made it left a radioactive legacy that required federal cleanup eighty years later. The women who painted the watch dials were told to lick the brush to keep a fine point. They said it about smoking during pregnancy. Doctors endorsed specific brands. Camel ran ads with physician testimonials. "More doctors smoke Camels than any other cigarette." The settled science of the 1940s. They said it about mercury for syphilis. Rub it on the skin. Inhale the vapour. The cure was frequently worse than the disease. The disease, at least, took years. The mercury took weeks. They said it about bloodletting. For two thousand years. Every major illness. Every fever. Every infection. Open the vein, release the corruption. George Washington was bled of roughly forty percent of his blood in twelve hours on his deathbed. By doctors. Who were certain. They said it about margarine. Heart-healthy. Scientifically proven. Cardiologist-approved. The trans fat content was not discussed, because the people funding the studies were not in the business of discussing trans fat content. They are now saying it about red meat. About saturated fat. About cholesterol. About the LDL hypothesis that has never survived a randomised controlled trial with all-cause mortality as the endpoint. Settled science is where investigation stops. It is also, reliably, where the funding starts.
English
104
1.2K
4.4K
60.4K
Gays For Trump
Gays For Trump@GaysForTrump·
All I hear is how every Conservative is against Trump, Israel, and the Iran War. Yet at the biggest conservative convention CPAC, that couldn't be further from the truth. 🤷🏻
Gays For Trump tweet media
Aberdeen, WA 🇺🇸 English
2
6
37
506
Carnivore Aurelius ©🥩 ☀️🦙
How many you got? - not on birth control - doesn’t drink tap water - never watches news - uses flip phone - knows what is really in Antarctica - goes commando - doesn’t get blackout drunk - regrown virginity (been celibate at some point for > year) - drinks raw milk - 20g collagen a day - eats liver weekly - not on pharmaceuticals - tracks cycle (male or female) - makes sourdough - owns chickens - has 4+ babies - homeschools kids - morning sunlight daily - asleep by 10pm - loves cows - doesn’t live in a major city - weirdest person in your friend group and family
English
36
8
251
17.5K