GLOBAL WARMINGsteria: Best Fake Meat Memes (Don't Eat ze Bugs!)
GLOBAL WARMINGsteria: Best Fake Meat Memes (Don't Eat ze Bugs!)
Eating ze bugs is "conspiracy theory" (but they keep talking about it), you don't want to know what is in plant-based fake meat, live longer by eating real meat and more fake meat memes!
Its starting again - Just like with Ivermectin and Hydroxychloroquine competing with the sacred COVID vaccines, more corporate interests need a return on their investments in fake meat by getting rid of the competition - REAL MEAT… And they will do it by forcing tagging and then culling farm animals over another virus…:
See how that’s going???
And now for some fake meat memes…
They say eating ze bugs is conspiracy theory and yet they keep talking about eating ze bugs:
FYI:
I wonder why…:
In February of last year, the International Journal of General Medicine published a study that was easy to miss, as no major media publication reported on “Total Meat Intake is Associated with Life Expectancy: A Cross-Sectional Data Analysis of 175 Contemporary Populations,” by Wenpeng You and his team of researchers.
For years we have heard that the secret to a long life is to cut back on meat consumption and increase our intake of carbs—advice that is enshrined in the USDA’s Dietary Guidelines for Americans. But that’s not what these researchers found.
Blue Zones and Meat Consumption
You may be wondering about the “blue zone” areas of the world—those with a high percentage of centenarians. According to Dan Buettner, author of “The Blue Zones, Lessons for Living Longer From the People Who’ve Lived the Longest,” the key to a long life is to minimize meat consumption and eat plenty of vegetables.
Don’t the long-lived people living in the blue zones eat a mostly plant-based diet?
Well, actually, no. For example, in Sardinia, Mr. Buettner’s first noted blue zone, meat consumption is higher among the long-lived peasants living in the mountains than those living in the valleys, according to a 2015 study published in the European Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
Don’t ask questions:
Signs of resistance:
The final word:
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