Source: University of Maryland Medical Center. |
By Gundhramns Hammer
April 26, 2015
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We have been told over and over about the “wonders” of the famous “Mediterranean Diet”. They tell us that if we eat the “Mediterranean Diet”, we will be healthier and live longer. They tell us that it is a “miracle diet”.
All of this is a bunch of crap. It is a clever gimmick to sell – massive quantities of PAHs-laden industrial olive oil in this case – what they want to sell when they want to sell what they need to sell to live off those who are made via paid media to desire to buy what they want to sell to make a lot of money with what they sell.
Is it or is it not?
If it is, people would be living in a paradise of health. If it is not, they would be in hell, suffering from painful diseases.
And so far, there is plenty of evidence that it is not.
Greeks suffering from rheumatic diseases
If this business of the “Mediterranean Diet” were true, you would expect people who are living in the Mediterranean region to be shining with health. You would see a sea of healthy people.
But you won´t.
Take Greece, for example.
Rheumatic diseases are common all over Greece. Nearly half of the adult population is suffering from this medical problem.
In central Greece, for instance, a quarter of the adult population is rheumatic. Osteoarthritis and gout are the most common joint disorders (Anagnostopoulos et al. 2010).
Basically, you will find the same problem throughout Greece.
And this is just the tip of the iceberg!
Zombies all over the Mediterranean
All over the Mediterranean you will find people galore who are suffering form all kinds of diseases from itchy butts and grape-sized haemorrhoids to heart disease, cancer and diabetes and who keep going like zombies thanks to the pharmaceutical chemicals they must take on a daily basis.
People here look healthy but they ain´t. When you scratch deeper, most of them are fucked up, have been fucked up or are in the process of getting fucked up by disease.
This is no sea of healthy people. It is a sea of drugged zombies!
If you happen to be or live in any big city in the European Mediterranean region, find a drugstore and sit in front of it all day long.
You will be surprised of the large number of people (humans and human-looking aliens, for there are ETs infiltrated in this part of the world) that go in and out of these joints.
And this goes on year round.
We are telling you, the pharmaceutical companies are making a kill in the Mediterranean region!
Mon dieu, mon Capitaine!
Worldwide, in a globalised narco-economy, wherever you find the combination of alcohol+tobacco smoking+pot smoking & allies+industrial oils+alien bread+alien food+zombie meats+zombie dairy products+radioactive fish+franken veggies+franken pulses, etc.,+a fast and hectic life+polluted environment+medications here and there, all sum up to a dangerous molotov which can or will send you to hell, mon ami. Quickly.
Fuck!
References
Alexopoulos E.C., Messolora F. & Tanagra D. (2011). Comparative mortality ratios of cancer among men in Greece across broad occupational groups. Int. Arch. Occup. Environ. Health, 84: 943-949.
Anagnostopoulos I., Zinzaras E., Alexiou I., Papathanasiou A.A., Davas E., Koutroumpas A., Barouta G. & Sakkas L.I. (2010). The prevalence of rheumatic diseases in central Greece: A population survey. BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders 2010, 11: 98.
Andonopoulos A.P., Galanopoulou V., Drosos A.A. & Moutsopoulos H.M. (1987). Rheumatoid arthritis in Greece. Rheumat. Int., 7: 101-105.
Drosos A.A., Alamanos I., Voulgari P.V., Psychos D.N., Katsaraki A., Papadopoulos I., Dimou G. & Siozos C. (1997). Epidemiology of adult rheumatoid arthritis in northwest Greece 1987-1995. J. Rheumatol., 24 (11): 2129-2133.
Tzonou A., Chung-cheng H., Polychronopoulou A., Kaprinis G., Toupadaki N., Trichopoulou A., Karakatsani A. & Trichopoulos D. (1993). Diet and ovarian cancer: a case-control study in Greece. Int. J. Cancer, 55: 411-414.
Tzonqu A., Signorello L.B., Lagiou P., Wuu J., Trichopoulos D. & Trichopoulou A. (1999). Diet and cancer of the prostate: A case-control study in Greece. Int. J. Cancer, 80: 704-708.
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