The (Un)official Royal Carnage forum picture page

hey look at me i'm dum

You are aware that the existence of canned coffee doesn't negate an entire state populous' ability to make coffee, right?

It was a joke you fucking mud-guzzling swine.


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I stenciled the walls of my room. In gold. It's bitchin.
 
LOL @ Susperia using New England as an argument point with someone from......Boston

1) It doesn't say where he's from under his username

2) He looks like he's from the South.

3) I don't care.



Bonus #4) Wasn't going to bother earlier because I didn't want to start shit but now you pissed me off:

"Calcium balance, the relationiship between the intake and loss of calcium, determines bone density, primarily during the growing years and early adulthood. If one has a good bone density by the age of 30, it will usually last a lifetime for those consuming a balanced palnt-based diet and remaining physically active.
Milk and other dairy products, although rich in calcium, are excessively high in animal protein, which has been shown to create calcium loss from the bones through the urinary tract. The evidence for this loss is substantial.
A 1994 National Institutes of Health Consensus Statement formulated by an expert panel concluded that calcium balance and bone density depended at least 30% on the ratio of calcium intake to loss, not on calcium intake alone.
But this isn't a new idea. A report in Science magazine in 1986 stated that evidence was accumulating that calcium intake alone is not related to bone density and osteoperosis.
This may explain why countries with the highest consumption of dairy products also have the highest incidence of osteoperosis [...and bad teeth]----and why bone fracture rates in these societies are more closely tied to excess protein consumption than to inadequate calcium consumption. Exceptions exist, but it's interesting that countries with the highest animal protein consumption are the very countries with a higher than normal recommended daily allowance (RDA) for calcium.
The RDA of calcium in the US is now 1,200mg daily. But the World Health Organization, which concentrates on countries where dairy intake is minimal or nonexistent, recommends just 500 mg for children and 800 mg for adults. Studies among humans have shown that these much lower levels of calcium intake can sustain good calcium balance and good bone health for all age groups.
To further illustrate the relationship of protein consumption to calcium balance, let's consider two cultures at opposite ends of the protein spectrum. Elderly South African Bantu women, who consume very low protein diet (50 grams daily, compared with 91 grams for Americans) and only 450 mg calcium daily, have little or no osteoperosis despite the calcium drain of nursing an average of 10 children.
On the other hand, Eskimos, who are very physically active, consume a very high protein diet (250-400 grams, mostly from fish) and have a calcium intake of over 2,000mg daily. Yet they have the highest rate of osteoperosis in the world! So the high protein content of milk----even skim milk---could well undermine its high calcium content."


So don't act like I know nothing, doctor, when I've spent the last 8 years of my life researching the health positives and negatives of dairy products as well as food in general. While you were only required in school to take what, one semester's worth of overall nutrition??

Your job is to prescribe drugs and to "fix things" when they go wrong. You're not a nutritionist. If you were, you'd know the link between milk and osteoperosis. So FUCK OFF!




edit: Fixed typos in quote because I typed it up quickly from a book without looking at the screen.
 
No... at least not where I'm from. Here in New England we know how to make our own fresh coffee------We actually have little machines that do it. Called, "coffee-makers". Genius, really.

Clever. I am from New England hot shot.

And, others are right, I guess it's more the krazee-espresso-latte-candy-koffee that's in cans.

Monster Java is deeelish though.
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http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/nutritionsource/calcium.html

My first thing that pops up on google. While most of what you are saying has some truth in it, it's so obviously spun into anti milk bullshit, with some half truths.

Yeah that was so totally scientific and not at all backed up by the dairy industry. All it does is say 'drink three glasses of milk a day and you won't get osteoperosis". And most Americans do! We often have more than that! And yet we still have just about the highest rate of osteoperosis in the world. :rolleyes:

So ---care to then explain why it's been found over and over again that countries with the highest intake of milk products have the HIGHEST RATES OF OSTEOPEROSIS and countries in which dairy products are ingested at a minimum to zero amount (China...India...) osteoperosis is damn near non-existent???

Come on, tell me... :Smug: