Saturday, October 30, 2021

Middle Eastern Food

I love middle eastern food. It's not that hard to make hummus if you have a vitamix - chick peas, lemon juice, garlic, enough water to make it creamy.

Never made baba ghanoush but found a vegan recipe, looks pretty easy. The olive oil is a garnish, could leave it out, you'd never notice.

How bad could oily foods be? Here's a few things to think about. Why do many vegan docs and researchers call for SOS free foods? (No sugar, oil, or salt).

In practice it's close to impossible to eliminate all refined fats and carbs (oil and sugar) unless you NEVER go to a restaurant. Who does that? Not me. But it's GOOD to know how much is in your (hopefully better) choices.

SOS free vegans and Paleo's are achieving the same goal - elimination of insulin resistance, the condition that is at the root of diet induced diseases.

A high fat diet causes insulin resistance when high calorie carbs are eaten. Paleo can eat all the kale (greens) they want, calories on a bulk basis are very low, and nutrition to calorie ratio is very high. If you only ate kale how much would it take to get enough calories to maintain health? More than your stomach will hold.

On the other hand a WFPB diet (high in WHOLE FOOD CARBS, which are good for us) causes insulin resistance when fats are eaten (all fats are high in calories on a bulk basis). On a completely empty stomach how much oil would it take to get the calories you need in a day? 20 tablespoons of oil is 2000 calories. Here's what 500 cals looks like in the stomach
image.png

So both WFPB vegan and paleo are primarily preventing insulin resistance. You have to get into the weeds a little to explain the biomechanical reasons for insulin resistance:

What is generally unappreciated is all whole foods have all three macros, fat, carbs, and proteins, in varying proportions. What is also not generally appreciated is our bodies are adapted to the conditions of 100,000 years ago, and significant evolutionary anatomical/biological changes in mammals (including humans) takes about 100,000 years. So when we eat concentrated (refined food) calories (table sugar and oil) it throws our system off. We can tolerate moderate amounts of it, but we are designed for whole foods.

What is dessert? Sugar and fat with a flavor or two added (chocolate raspberry ice cream anyone?). Fat gives density, sugar makes it addictive, flavor makes it "a thing". It's not complicated.

Humans can burn two types of fuel, carbs and fat. We are adapted to both of them. Whole food paleo and whole food vegan are both way better than SAD. Which is better? The science is kept very blurry on this question to protect big established industries that developed world economies depend on for revenue. Which is a big part of the reason so many people are sick with chronic diseases.

Pretty ironic that the health of the economy depends on the sickness of the population. We're fucked coming and going. First we are sold addictive foods that cause diseases, and then "health care" makes another few trillion a year managing (not reversing!) those conditions.

Big P will never be able to reverse those conditions! Why? OK, here, eat these toxins every day, and we'll come up with expensive chemical cocktails to take care of that. Toxins on top of toxins is NOT the cause of health!

Not that there are no benefit to drugs, if you have malaria you want quinine and antibiotics. But at least 80% of what BigP is peddling these days is bullshit. Over the hill and around the bend, so far from reality we can't even see them anymore. Modern day snake oil salesmen. Yep, BigP hates the whole food movement. And BigP is BIG.

How bad is this problem of a healthy economy depending on a sick population? Self evident really, but let's compare it to that other "evil" industry, big oil. Fossil fuels are fucking up the biosphere, but at least we need them for our advanced technological lifestyle. In 200 years we've gone from relatively primitive to highly advanced technological societies. Ever stop to think what a miracle it is that almost everyone in the developed world has a frickin car?

Here's a short digression on the very very recent and rapid development of technology from an unpublished blog on the difference between evolution and progress. These very different concepts are massively conflated in the modern world, and that leads to all kinds of stupid and destructive assumptions. I've not published it because it needs editing and trimming, and haven't gotten around to it yet. Sneak peek preview:

https://davewavehealthway.blogspot.com/2021/10/you-sir-are-one-ignoring-science.html

Anyway, if you just ignored the questions of paleo vs vegan and just stuck to whole foods (which means no oil - no sugar - no refined grains) how much of the benefit of the "purist" diets would be gained? Well there's no science on that exact question that I'm aware of, so we'll have to guess. I'd say somewhere between 50 to 75 percent. Since we're very unlikely going to eliminate concentrated energy sources (oil and sugar) entirely let's dial that back to 35 to 60 percent. Pretty damn good compared to SAD.

Can we do better? Always, right to the end.

Monday, October 25, 2021

A Diagnosis of High Cholesterol

This is something that happens quite often. I became interested in what percent of the population has high cholesterol and searching on "which country has the highest cholesterol?" returned this (click for larger):


Humm, that means the cold countries with higher income levels (that eat the most animal products) have the the greatest incidence of high cholesterol and the warm countries with lower income levels (that eat more plants) have the lowest. How about that, epidemiological evidence at our finger tips.

Countries with the highest standards of living consume the most meat per capita as a result of several factors, including:

1) industrialized mass production (factory farming of animals) creating greater access.

2) the incorrect idea "we need more protein", when in fact the opposite is true. We eat too much protein in the developed world, particularly animal protein, which contributes to the chronic diseases problem.

https://www.wri.org/data/people-are-eating-more-protein-they-need-especially-wealthy-regions

3) a line from the above link says: "In 2009, the average person in more than 90 percent of the world’s countries and territories consumed more protein than estimated requirements". (In addition many nutritional biologists believe "estimated requirements" are too high to begin with.)

4) consumption of animals have become the cultural norm, which is resistant to change.

Ironic isn't it that high standard of living countries have the highest levels of chronic disease. Ironic because those diseases are caused by poor diet choices which are easily reversed with proper diet. Perhaps it's also no accident than that in the "Happiest Countries in the World" surveys the happiest countries tend to be the the least wealthy. Less chronic illness may have something to do with that...it's difficult to be happy when we do not feel good.

Why do we do this to ourselves? The answer is not all that obvious and has to do with psychology (as opposed to intelligence). Briefly, we are driven by instinct not reason, but that's a different (and very interesting) topic. Another way of putting it is we (humans) are not stupid, but we are also not as "smart" as we think we are. And that is the direct cause of all kinds of stupid mistakes.

Anyway...

A good friend had a diagnosis of high cholesterol recently and is debating with himself whether to take the recommended statins or try to lower levels with a dietary change. The standard recommendation from cardiologists is (of course) to take the statins. The standard explanation is "it's not your diet, it's your genes. The only treatment that works is statins". And statins do work to reduce cholesterol and cardiovascular disease mortality, but they also cause negative side effects, which according to the Mayo Clinic are muscle pain and damage, liver damage, increased blood sugar or type 2 diabetes, and last but certainly not least, neurological side effects.

Statin side effects: Weigh the benefits and risks

And it's also true that diet alone can reduce cholesterol and cardiovascular mortality, and the only side effects are dramatic improvements to or elimination of other chronic diseases. A very specific diet, the Esselstyn Protocol, reverses heart disease.

Dr. Esselstyn, who spent his career as an accomplished surgeon at the Cleveland Clinic, published a paper (link below) after his second study, where he lays out the case for how and why a low fat whole food plant based diet reverses cardio vascular diseases.


We need non toxic-inputs to the body for health, in order of priority, clean air, clean water, and clean food. How long we can survive without air? A few minutes. Water? A few days. Food? A few months.

Scientific studies of nutrition and health are very complicated, an entire topic of its own. A comprehensive look at the history of this "little problem" by the nutritional biochemist T. Colin Campbell is quite illuminating in this era of "soundbite science".


Even in the best case (no bias leaking unconsciously or deliberately into model construction) we are looking for single mechanisms with all confounders eliminated or accounted for. Otherwise we are back to epidemiological, which is not considered hard science.

Conflicting studies are the rule not the exception.

Campbell makes a very compelling case that single mechanism studies of nutrition have led us down the wrong path. They are based on an incorrect assumption that individual components work in isolation as they would in concert with other components.

But guess what, we don't need to know exact mechanisms to have a very good idea about outcomes.

So what is common sense anyway? Some define it as not knowing, a form of ignorance. That is the wrong definition. The correct definition is "an innate aptitude for logic and deductive reasoning". This is also the definition that infers that common sense is "uncommon". If it were common there would likely be far fewer individuals dying prematurely from culturally uninformed diet choices (which is probably roughly 80% of the population).

Science and art are both important, one without the other is a rudderless ship. This is true on cultural and individual levels.

So yes by all means be as informed as possible, but don't exclude the obvious because it can't be proven yet.

Here's a google search on "a plant-based diet and cardiovascular disease":



Tuesday, October 19, 2021

Nebraska AG Says Doctors Can Legally Prescribe Ivermectin

Now we're getting somewhere, BigP's egregious overstepping the bounds of ethics are beginning to catch up to them.  I'll quote the key part of the story (written by Megan Redshaw) referred to in the post title, and provide the link to the article page below.

                        ------------------------------------

Few subjects have been more controversial than ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine — two long-established, inexpensive medications widely and successfully used in many parts of the world for the prevention and treatment of COVID.

By contrast, the use of both medications against COVID has been largely suppressed in the U.S, where doctors have been threatened and punished for prescribing them.

On Oct. 15, Nebraska Attorney General (AG) Doug Peterson issued a legal opinion that Nebraska healthcare providers can legally prescribe off-label medications like ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine for the treatment of COVID, so long as they obtain informed consent from the patient.

However, if they did neglect to obtain consent, deceive, prescribe excessively high doses or other misconduct, they could be subject to discipline, Peterson wrote.

The AG’s office emphasized it was not recommending any specific treatment for COVID. “That is not our role,” Peterson wrote. “Rather, we address only the off-label early treatment options discussed in this opinion and conclude that the available evidence suggests they might work for some people.”

Peterson said allowing physicians to consider early treatments will free them to evaluate additional tools that could save lives, keep patients out of the hospital and provide relief for our already strained healthcare system.

The opinion, based on an assessment of relevant scientific literature, was rendered in response to a request by Dannette Smith, CEO of the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services.

Smith asked the AG’s office to look into whether doctors could face discipline or legal action under Nebraska’s Uniform Credential Act (UCA) — meant to protect public health, safety and welfare — if they prescribed ivermectin or hydroxychloroquine.

“After receiving your question and conducting our investigation, we have found significant controversy and suspect information about potential COVID-19 treatments,” Peterson wrote.

For example, a paper published in the Lancet — one of the most prestigious medical journals in the world — denounced hydroxychloroquine as dangerous, yet the statistics were flawed and the authors refused to provide analyzed data.

The paper was retracted, but not before countries stopped using the drug and trials were cancelled or interrupted.

“The Lancet’s own editor-in-chief admitted that the paper was a ‘fabrication,’ a ‘monumental fraud’ and a ‘shocking example of research misconduct’ in the middle of a global health emergency,” Peterson wrote in the opinion.

A recently published paper on COVID recognized that “for reasons that are yet to be clarified,” early treatment has not been emphasized despite numerous U.S. healthcare providers advocating for early treatment and “scores of treating and academic physicians” — who have published papers in well respected journals — urging early interventions.

Peterson cited numerous studies showing ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine reduced mortality by up to 75% or more when used as a preventative or prophylaxis for COVID, suggesting hundreds of thousands of lives could have been saved had the drugs been widely used in America.

Although the AG’s office did not rule out the possibility that other off-label drugs might show promise — either now or in the future — as a prophylaxis or treatment against COVID, it confined its opinion to ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine for the sake of brevity.

Nebraska AG highlights science on ivermectin

In his legal opinion, Peterson concluded evidence showed ivermectin demonstrated striking effectiveness in preventing and treating COVID, and any side effects were primarily minor and transient. “Thus, the UCA does not preclude physicians from considering ivermectin for the prevention or treatment of COVID,” Peterson wrote.

In the decade leading up to the COVID pandemic, Peterson found numerous studies showing ivermectin’s antiviral acti­vity against several RNA viruses by blocking the nuclear trafficking of viral proteins, adding to 50 years of research confirming ivermectin’s antiviral effects.

In addition, safety data for ivermectin showed side effects were “vanishingly small.” The latest statistics available through VigiAccess reported only 5,674 adverse drug reac­tions to ivermectin between 1992 and October 13, 2021, an “incredibly low” number given that 3.7 billion doses have been administered since the 1980s, Peterson wrote.

Peterson cited several studies showing ivermectin led to improvement of COVID outcomes when used in early treatment or as a prophylaxis, while noting many studies with negative findings about ivermectin “excluded most available evidence,” cherry picked data within studies, misreported data, made unsupported assertions of adverse reactions to ivermectin and had “conclusions that did not follow from evidence.”

Peterson also found that epidemiological evidence for ivermectin’s effectiveness, derived by analyzing COVID-related data from various states, countries or regions is instructive in the context of a global pandemic.

In one instance, a group of scholars analyzed data comparing COVID rates of countries that routinely administer ivermectin as a prophylaxis and countries that did not. The research showed “countries with routine mass drug administration of pro­phylactic … ivermectin have a significantly lower incidence of COVID-19.”

Nebraska AG calls out FDA, Fauci on hypocrisy on ivermectin

Many U.S. health agencies have now addressed the use of ivermectin for COVID. The National Institutes of Health (NIH) has adopted a neutral position, choosing not to recommend for or against the use of ivermectin — a change from its position in January 2021 where it discouraged use of the drug for treatment of COVID.

Peterson wrote:

“The reason for the change is the NIH recognized several randomized trials and retrospective cohort studies of ivermectin use in patients with COVID-19 have been published in peer-reviewed journals. And some of those studies reported positive outcomes, including shorter time to resolution of disease manifestations that were attributed to COVID-19, greater reduction in inflammatory marker levels, shorter time to viral clearance, [and] lower mortality rates in patients who received ivermectin than in patients who received comparator drugs or placebo.”

Yet, on Aug. 29, Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases within the NIH, went on CNN and announced “there is no clinical evidence” that ivermectin works for the prevention or treatment of COVID. Fauci went on to reiterate that “there is no evidence whatsoever” that it works.

“This definitive claim directly contradicts the NIH’s recognition that ‘several randomized trials … published in peer-reviewed journals’ have reported data indicating that ivermectin is effective as a COVI D-19 treatment,” Peterson wrote.

In March 2021, the FDA posted a webpage, “Why You Should Not Use lvermectin to Treat or Prevent COVID-19.”

“Although the FDA’s concern was stories of some people using the animal form of ivermectin or excessive doses of the human form, the title broadly condemned any use of ivermectin in connection with COVID-19,” Peterson wrote. “Yet, there was no basis for its sweeping condemnation.”

Peterson wrote:

“Indeed, the FDA itself acknowledged on that very webpage (and continued to do so until the page changed on September 3, 2021) that the agency had not even ‘reviewed data to support use of ivermectin in COVID-19 patients to treat or to prevent COVID-19.’ But without reviewing the available data, which had long since been available and accumulating, it is unclear what basis the FDA had for denouncing ivermectin as a treatment or prophylaxis for COVID-19.

“On that same webpage, the FDA also declared that ‘[i]vermectin is not an anti-viral (a drug for treating viruses).’ It did so while another one of its webpages simultaneously cited a study in Antiviral Research that identified ivermectin as a medicine ‘previously shown to have broad-spectrum anti-viral activity.’”

“It is telling that the FDA deleted the line about ivermectin not being ‘anti-viral’ when it amended the first webpage on September 3, 2021,” Peterson noted.

Peterson said the FDA’s most controversial statement on ivermectin was made on Aug. 21, when it posted a link on Twitter to its “Why You Should Not Use lvermectin” webpage with this statement: “You are not a horse. You are not a cow. Seriously, y’all. Stop it.”

“This message is troubling not only because it makes light of a serious matter but also because it inaccurately implies that ivermectin is only for horses or cows,” Peterson wrote.

Peterson said the FDA has assailed ivermectin’s safety while ignoring the fact that physicians routinely prescribe medications for off-label use and that ivermectin is a “particularly well-tolerated medicine with an established safety record.”

Peterson added the FDA is ignoring several randomized controlled trials and at least one meta­analysis suggesting ivermectin is effective against COVID. He pointed out the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention has adopted a similar stance — unsupported by scientific evidence — and the media has fueled confusion and misinformation on the drug.

Peterson questions professional associations’ stance on ivermectin

Professional associations in the U.S. and internationally have adopted conflicting positions on ivermectin and COVID. The American Medical Association (AMA), American Pharmacists Association (APhA) and American Society of Health-System Pharmacists (ASHP) issued a statement in September strongly opposing the ordering, prescribing or dispensing of ivermectin to prevent or treat COVID outside of a clinical trial.

But their statement relied solely on the FDA’s and CDC’s suspect positions.

The AMA, APhA and ASHP also mentioned a statement by Merck — the original patent-holder — opposing the use of ivermectin for COVID because of a “concerning lack of safety data in the majority of studies.”

“But Merck, of all sources, knows that ivermectin is exceedingly safe, so the absence of safety data in recent studies should not be concerning to the company,” Peterson wrote.

Peterson called into question the objectivity of Merck in providing an opinion on ivermectin that U.S. health agencies are relying upon. “Why would ivermectin’s original patent holder go out of its way to question this medicine by creating the impression that it might not be safe?” Peterson asked. “There are at least two plausible reasons.”

Peterson explained:

“First, ivermectin is no longer under patent, so Merck does not profit from it anymore. That likely explains why Merck declined to ‘conduct clinical trials’ on ivermectin and COVID-19 when given the chance.

“Second, Merck has a significant financial interest in the medical profession rejecting ivermectin as an early treatment for COVID-19. [T]he U.S. government has agreed to pay [Merck] about $1.2 billion for 1.7 million courses of its experimental COVID-19 treatment, if it is proven to work in an ongoing large trial and authorized by U.S. regulators.”

Merck’s treatment is known as “molnupiravir,” and aims to stop COVID from progressing when given early in the course of disease. When Merck announced Oct. 1, that preliminary studies indicated molnupiravir reduced hospitalizations and deaths by half, the drug maker’s stock price immediately jumped to 12.3%.

“Thus, if low-cost ivermectin works better than, or even the same as molnupiravir, that could cost Merck billions of dollars,” Peterson wrote.

Peterson takes on science of hydroxychloroquine

Peterson said based on his review of the evidence, his office did not find clear and convin­cing evidence that would warrant disciplining physicians who prescribe hydroxychloroquine for the prevention or early treatment of COVID after first obtaining informed patient consent.

Peterson pointed to similar findings with hydroxychloroquine — a less toxic derivative of a medicine named chloroquine — widely used since it was approved by the FDA in 1955 for treatment of malaria.

Peterson noted that as early as 2004, a lab study revealed chloroquine was “an effective inhibitor of the replication of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV) in vitro” and should “be considered for immediate use in the prevention and treatment of SARS-CoV infections.”

In 2005, another study showed chloroquine had strong antiviral effects on SARS-CoV infection and was effective in preventing the spread of SARS-CoV in cell cultures.

Other studies showed hydroxychloroquine exhibited antiviral properties that can inhibit SARS-CoV-2 virus entry, transmission and replication, and contains anti-inflammatory properties that help regulate pro-inflammatory cytokines.

Peterson wrote, “many large observational studies suggest that hydroxychloroquine significantly reduces the risk of hospitalization and death when administered to ­particularly high-risk outpatients as part of early COVID-19 treatment.”

Peterson said the drug is considered to be so safe it can be prescribed for pregnant women, yet during the pandemic, the FDA raised questions about hydroxychloroquine and adverse cardiac events.

These concerns prompted one group of researchers to conduct a systematic review of the hydroxychloroquine safety literature pre-COVID. Their review indicated people taking hydroxychloroquine in appropriate doses “are at very low risk of experiencing cardiac [adverse events], particularly with short-term administration” of the drug.

Researchers noted COVID itself can cause cardiac problems, and there was no reason “to think the medication itself had changed after 70 years of widespread use,” Peterson wrote.

Peterson said one piece of key flawed data had substantially contributed to safety concerns surrounding the drug — the admittedly fraudulent Lancet study that falsely claimed hydroxychloroquine increased frequency of ventricular arrhythmias when used for treatment of COVID.

The findings were so startling that major drug trials involving hydroxychloroquine “were immediately halted” and the World Health Organization pressured countries like Indonesia that were widely using hydroxychloroquine to ban it. Some countries, including France, Italy and Belgium, stopped using it for COVID altogether.

Peterson wrote:

“The problem, however, is that the study was based on false data from a company named Surgisphere, whose founder and CEO Sapan Desai was a co-author on the published paper.

“The data were so obviously flawed that journalists and outside researchers began raising concerns within days of the paper’s publication. Even the Lancet’s editor in chief, Dr. Richard Horton, admitted that the paper was a fabrication, a monumental fraud and a shocking example of research misconduct in the middle of a global health emergency.”

Despite calls for the Lancet to provide a full expansion of what happened, the publication declined to provide details for the retraction.

As with ivermectin, the FDA and NIH adopted positions against the use of hydroxychloroquine for COVID — making assertions that were unsupported by data. The AMA, APhA and ASHP, which opposed ivermectin, also resisted hydroxychloroquine for the treatment of COVID.

By contrast, the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons, and other physician groups, support the use of both ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine as an early treatment option for COVID. Peterson cited an article co-authored by more than 50 doctors in Reviews in Cardiovascular Medicine who advocated an early treatment protocol that includes hydroxychloroquine as a key component.

Governing law allows physicians to prescribe ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine, AG says

Neb. Rev. Stat. § 38-179 generally defines unprofessional conduct as a “departure from or failure to conform to the standards of acceptable and prevailing practice of a profession or the ethics of the profession, regardless of whether a person, consumer or entity is injured, or conduct that is likely to deceive or defraud the public or is detrimental to the public interest.”

The regulation governing physicians states that unprofessional conduct includes:

“[c]onduct or practice outside the normal standard of care in the State of Nebraska which is or might be harmful or dangerous to the health of the patient or the public, not to include a single act of ordinary negligence.”

Peterson said healthcare providers do not violate the standard of care when they choose between two reasonable approaches to medicine.

“Regulations also indicate that physicians may utilize reasonable investigative or unproven therapies that reflect a reasonable approach to medicine so long as physicians obtain written informed patient consent,” Peterson wrote.

“Informed consent concerns a doctor’s duty to inform his or her patient, and it includes telling patients about the nature of the pertinent ailment or condition, the risks of the proposed treatment or procedure and the risks of any alternative methods of treatment, including the risks of failing to undergo any treatment at all.”

Peterson said this applies to prescribing medicine for purposes other than uses approved by the FDA, and that doing so falls within the standard of care repeatedly recognized by the courts.

Peterson said the U.S. Supreme Court has also affirmed that “off-label usage of medical devices” is an “accepted and necessary” practice, and the FDA has held the position for decades that “a physician may prescribe [a drug] for uses or in treatment regimens or patient populations that are not included in approved labeling.”

Peterson said the FDA has stated “healthcare providers generally may prescribe [a] drug for an unapproved use when they judge that it is medically appropriate for their patient, and nothing in the federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act (“FDCA”) limit[s] the manner in which a physician may use an approved drug.”

In a statement to KETV NewsWatch 7, Nebraska’s Department of Health and Human Services said:

“The Department of Health and Human Services appreciates the AG’s office delivering an opinion on this matter. The document is posted and available to medical providers as they determine appropriate course of treatment for their patients.”

                    --------------------------------------------------------------

https://childrenshealthdefense.org/defender/nebraska-ag-doug-peterson-legal-opinion-ivermectin-hcq-covid/


In conclusion I'd (Dave) like to pose a question: Has BigP changed it's stripes even a little since the opioid crisis (finally) landed on it's doorstep?

I would say the answer is egregiously and obviously no. Agriculture, food science, chemical, pharmaceutical, medical, and health insurance industries are all complicit in putting profit before health.

Educate yourself, our authorities are not going to do it, and take charge of your own health. You have the right to decide what goes into your own body.


Friday, October 15, 2021

BBC Debunks Invermectin

An excellent example of the sort of shoddy "information" we see and hear every day via mass media.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zy7c_FHiEac




Sunday, October 10, 2021

Saturday, October 9, 2021

Winning the War Against Therapeutic Nihilism

What the heck is therapeutic Nihilism anyway? This presentation given to the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons covers it nicely.

I know some of my readers may simply not watch this because of Unconscious Biases (or even conscious biases:), but I say lets be fair and listen with an open mind to both sides of a debate that features accredited experts on both sides. We're not talking about people who drink bleach or show up in public in a flagrant display of lethal firearms, etc etc. Yes those are problems, but are we going to allow "crazies" keep us from needed and legitimate scientific debate? What kind of countries censor scientific debate? Do we really want the USA to be that?

Now I am happy to admit I may not relate to the degree to which people are triggered currently at the mere mention of "that other" political party. Even though I am a registered democrat I am APOLITICAL. I do not view the world though a political lens, I view it through what might be called a "socionomic" lens, or a cycles of history lens. The peaks and nadirs of these socionomic cycles can be deeply uncomfortable periods, and we are in the peaking phase of a large cycle that is roughly 200 years in duration to this point. The fact social agitation is so acute presently may be an indication that the top of the peaking phase is near.

I am also a social progressive: women should be in control of their own bodies, and choose their own medical decisions, as everyone should have the right to control their own bodies and choose their own medical decisions.

And it bears repeating, "science" where debate between experts is censored is not science!!! Scientific process not only "allows" for debate, it is encouraged, and needed.

link to the presentation

Winning the War Against Therapeutic Nihilism & Trusted Treatments vs Untested Novel Therapies

Tuesday, October 5, 2021

Why is the CDC so insistent that natural immunity is not sufficient?

Science on natural immunity before this pandemic has shown better immunity than vaccine immunity, and that trend continues in studies during this pandemic.

The scientists at the CDC have to be aware of this data, I mean for crying out loud I personally saw dozens of epidemiologists talking about this publicly quite early in this epidemic. Most living in the US won't know this unless they spend more time scouring the internet for health related information than watching TV "news programs" and reading mainstream media. I've been doing just that for years, and this pandemic did nothing to change that, but I did begin to notice marked discrepancies in what accredited public health scientists were saying online with what we saw "reported" on TV.

Let's put this in the context of the level of advertising Big Pharma puts on mainstream "news" channels.

So you may be interested by an analysis of Dr. John Campbell, a British doctor I've found to have a balanced perspective. He is very strongly in favor of vaccines, but not to the exclusion of other relevant information.

Here he analysis the epidemiological study on covid-19 immunity produced by the Israeli government. It is also interesting to note that Israel is the only county in the world that has reached 100% vaccination.

https://youtu.be/9bamaEMftg4




Saturday, October 2, 2021

You Sir, Are The One Ignoring Science

Why not stop judging people by political affiliation and actually listen to what they have to say. And of course feel free to judge them on that.

When experts disagree the science isn't "settled", which can (and frequently does) take decades. Are we too impatient, hubristic and profit-centric to avoid a rush to judgement and consequent disasters? Let's also stop the censorship of the other half of the debate. "Science" without legitimate debate is not real science.

So "science" is not just a marketing tool? Nope, it's a political and economic tool also. Let's also remember science is not an instant gratification binary on/off switch. It's a process that takes time and patience.

https://youtu.be/MI_Dm3pj3dQ