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About Glyn and Liz

Writer Liz wainwright and Independent Researcher Glyn Wainwright

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On Friday I shall be recording Sophie Rosa who will be soloist with with the Leeds Symphony Orchestra. Being an honorary Recording Engineer has its moments!

St. Chad’s Church, Headingley, Friday 16th November 2012 at 7.30 pm

Sophie Rosa

Sophie Rosa with Leeds Symphony Orchestra

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Duane Graveline MD MPH (Author) & Glyn Wainwright MSc (Introduction and Guest Chapter)

Try to imagine a drug possessing the ability to cause DNA mutations using the same mechanisms that have evolved for natural aging. When confronted with a patient experiencing weakness and unsteadiness, muscle aches and pains, memory loss and depression, the quite natural response from most doctors is, “You have to expect this kind of thing now; you are over 50”. Most doctors do not have a clue as to the truth. It is not natural aging that has depleted you so. This is premature aging – aging in months according to many statin victims – and this entire complex of symptoms from a drug so safe that many doctors feel it should be put in the drinking water. The class of drugs is called statins, simple reductase inhibitors capable not only of lowering cholesterol but also CoQ10 and dolichols as well, leading directly to mitochondrial damage and mutation. No, this is not impossible. It is happening today to thousands of us.

Sapcedoc

The Dark Side of Statins

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CholesterolCholesterol

Vitamin D3 Vitamin D3

Spot the difference Cholesterol + sunlight -> Vitamin D3

Visit Dr Stephanie Seneff’s blog essay for the full story

– Eat a low-fat diet,
– Avoid the damaging rays of the sun

These two tenets, taken together, are extremely bad medical advice, and that the consequences of our government’s success in selling this well-intended but misguided recommendation to the American public are devastating and long-lasting, particularly to our nation’s children.

Sunscreen and Low-fat Diet: A Recipe for Disaster

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Earlier this year I attended a the London WAPF conference in support of Dr Stephanie Seneff and we were fortunate enough to meet Dr Natasha Campbell-McBride. Once Dr Natasha C-M explains what happens to the food you eat and how it affects your health you are empowered to improve your health. She asks you to consider the community that lives within us digesting our food and protecting us from infection and harm.  Once you understand your symbiotic relationship with this microbial community you will respect it, nurture it and take much greater care of what you put in your mouth.

e.g. If food manufacturers treat food to extend its shelf-life (the spoilage bugs can’t survive on it) you have to consider what that does to your internal community of microbial friends when you eat it!

Put You Heart In Your Mouth!

‘Put your Heart in Your Mouth’ – Dr Campbell-McBride

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Why is it news that full dairy products and milk intended to provide the full nutritional requirements of any active growing mammal are really good for you?  Celebrate all meats, full fat dairy products, eggs, and fish as being exactly right nutritionally. I have been reading biochemistry papers since the 1960’s and have yet to find any evidence that these foods have ever caused disease.  On the other hand refined carbohydrates (sugar-damaged proteins aka AGE) are ultimately quite dangerous for our health.  Advanced glycaemic end-products accumulate and cause disease when we spend decades over-indulging our sweet tooth!

Excellent foods!

Cheese ‘could reduce diabetes risk’ – Daily Telegraph

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I think Kate was shocked by what she was reporting – Fat is actually a good thing to eat!  If only people new how much fat and fat soluble nutrients we need to consume from animal sources, and how alien plant oils are to our biochemical systems. If only the medical profession and population at large could speak and understand the basics of biochemistry.

I was hovering over the nuts display in the supermarket, wondering which to buy. I had just interviewed Oliver Selway, a radical diet-and-fitness coach and proponent of a food regimen that does not fear fats. He had told me macadamias were by far the most nutritious nuts to eat, a nut that any dieter will know is forbidden as it is astonishingly calorific. “They’re the fattiest nuts, you know,” a woman next to me said. “They are so bad.” Cheerily, I repeated Selway’s nutritional proposition: that animal and other natural saturated fats from whole foods are good for us. They are what human bodies have known for millions of years…….All natural fats have functions for health: they are not inherently bad…….margarine ‘the devil’s semen’……..told for decades to cut saturated fat from their diet, they replace have replaced it with what some studies suggest is more harmful: refined carbohydrates. 

Fat lot of good by Kate Spicer – Sunday Times UK

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Lynda Collins is a 1960s teenager who dreams of a better life, and of being loved. Not much to ask, is it? Both wealthy Ellen Heywood and snobbish Sheila Stanworth think that Lynda, brought up in a run-down pub in the poorest part of Milfield, isnt good enough to marry their son. Ellen forces her son, Daniel, to give up Lynda, but Dans best friend, John Stanworth defies his Mother and marries the girl Sheila describes as a cheap imitation Marilyn Monroe with no cooking skills.

The Girl who wasn’t Good Enough (eBook) by Liz Wainwright 9781476479903 | WHSmith.co.uk

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MILLIONS who take statins to ward off heart attacks and strokes must cut their dose over fears they are at risk of serious side-effects.

The fact that the raised blood lipids (LDL) associated with CVD is caused by sugar-damaged to the LDL   (Fructose & Glucose) is still a big secret. Cholesterol was never the guilty party but everyone (including many in the medical profession) still hold this myth about cholesterol and completely miss the cause being dietary sugars!

Statins are bad for you!

STATINS IN NEW HEALTH ALERT

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quoted from Zoe Harcombe’s Blog on Traffic Light Food Labelling

All real foods in the table above have at least one red/amber traffic light warning and olives and cheese have three. The former being a good source of natural fat – especially the much eulogised mono-unsaturated fat – and the latter being an excellent source of calcium and the other bone nutrients vitamin D and phosphorus.

With one exception, all processed foods in the table above have green lights for fat, saturated fat and sugar. Multi grain bread gets an amber for fat content – because of the highly nutritious seeds that is contains. White bread scores better than multi grain.

Zoe

The law of unintended consequences