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The truth about food

May 17, 2018 By administrator

The truth about food

Are cow’s milk and wheat unhealthy? Complete nonsense, says nutritionist Martijn Katan. He unmasked to DW the biggest myths and false claims about our food.

People who don’t feel well, usually blame it on food, says Martijn Katan. “We all eat at least three times a day. Anyone who doesn’t feel so good can always say, “This must be because of something I’ve eaten.” Conversely, there are hundreds of theories about which type of diet is the best and protects against diseases and allergies.

Nutritionist Martijn Katan has taken a close look at the circulating horror stories and hype about food, from superfoods, to the best diets, to the supposedly biggest dangers on supermarket shelves.

Myth 1: Organic food is healthier than conventionally produced food

Organic agriculture, for example, is very good for soil health. But unfortunately, organic products are no healthier than food produced by conventional agriculture. The amount of pesticides in food is generally so tiny that it does not matter. Organic vegetables contain less nitrate than non-organic vegetables, but it is not yet clear whether this is an advantage.

It used to be thought that nitrate in the body would react to nitrite and nitrosamines and was therefore carcinogenic. Today we know that this is not true. It may be that nitrate even lowers blood pressure, which would not be so bad.

Nevertheless, there are enough reasons to support organic farming. For example, organic farmers use less antibiotics in animal husbandry than conventional farmers. The overuse of antibiotics can lead to the development of resistant bacteria, which can be dangerous for all of us.

Myth 2: Raw food is healthiest because nutrients are lost during cooking.

Vegetables do not contain high levels of many nutrients. However, they do contain a lot of vitamin C and folic acid. The vitamin C content is reduced during cooking, but that doesn’t matter: Vitamin C deficiency is no longer an issue in our society.

Cooking vegetables, on the other hand, has advantages. Cooked vegetables are more compact, so you can eat more of them. And during cooking, any germs are destroyed, for example E.coli O157 bacteria, which are currently causing problems with raw vegetables and salads in the US.

Myth 3: Cow’s milk is unhealthy and triggers allergies

Milk fat is not really healthy. It increases cholesterol in the blood and the risk of cardiovascular disease. It is better to eat milk and dairy products with reduced fat content. They do not contain anything bad, but do contain a lot of good things: Vitamin B12, iodine, potassium, zinc, and some B vitamins. Milk is also a good source of protein for vegetarians.

One to two percent of young children are allergic to milk protein, but this usually goes away by itself as they grow up. And yes, lactose is sometimes not tolerated by people from Africa, Asia and southern Europe, but this is usually only noticeable if they drink large amounts of milk.

However, milk has one disadvantage. It is likely, to a small degree, to promote the development of prostate cancer in men. However, there is even stronger evidence that milk inhibits bowel cancer.

Myth 4: If you want to lose weight, you shouldn’t eat carbohydrates. They increase blood sugar levels and cause the release of insulin, which inhibits fat burning.

Every diet works, whether you eat fewer carbohydrates, less fat or simply less food whose names begin with the letters A to L. With a diet, you eat less because you are not spontaneously allowed to eat what you want, and anything that interrupts our routine, lowers our normal calorie intake.

Over three billion years of life, humans have become specialized in not losing calories. Whatever enters the mouth is either used and burned by muscles, or stored.

Nothing is discarded, whether it is a carbohydrate, protein or fat. It’s like a savings account: It makes no difference at which bank I deposit money, it only depends on how much. Everything ends up in my savings account, or in my stomach.

Myth 5: In general, wheat should be avoided as it is unhealthy.

There are people who cannot tolerate gluten and become very ill from wheat protein. This is called celiac disease, a serious disease that affects about one to five people in every 1,000. But most people have no problem processing wheat.

Nevertheless, the idea has spread that wheat is responsible for many of our health problems. Of course, we all have health problems. We are in pain, tired, flaccid, depressed. Millions of women suffer from irritable bowel syndrome, a condition that is very susceptible to placebo effects.

Wheat then quickly becomes the supposed culprit. But there is almost no evidence to show that there is anything in wheat that would make a large number of people sick.

Myth 6: Vitamin C prevents colds. Better to swallow too much than too little.

This theory has been extensively tested. The results show that vitamin C does not protect against colds. If you swallow a large amount of vitamin C every day before you get a cold, the next cold does not last 5 days, but 4.5 days. But you’d have to swallow 1,000 mg of vitamin C every day. It’s certainly not healthy. Two large studies have shown that a lot of vitamin C can cause kidney stones. Vitamin C is partly converted into oxalate, a component of kidney stones. You can’t swallow large amounts of vitamins without being punished.

Myth No. 7: Sugar causes ADHD in children

This theory was developed in the US 50 years ago, but has been shown to be untrue. Later there was a theory that it was not sugar but artificial dyes that trigger ADHD. There is no strong evidence to support this theory. It could be that a small number of children become hyperactive, but most children are simply being children: They are very active, and in our society, there is less and less room for this. If children live on a farm, they can be as hyperactive as they want, and that doesn’t do any harm.

And what, then, do we really have to watch out for?

The real dangers are smoking, alcohol and obesity. As far as food in industrial nations like Germany is concerned, the biggest problem is that there is too much. And obesity causes many diseases, including cancer.

Martijn Katan is Emeritus Professor of Nutritional Sciences at the Free University (Vrije Universiteit) in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. He writes a column for the Dutch daily NRC Handelsblad and is the author of the book, “Why bread does not harm us and microwaves do not destroy vitamins.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: about food, the, truth

VIDEO: U.S. Amb. Evans Sacrificing diplomatic Career by telling the truth, Armenian Genocide

November 22, 2016 By administrator

Ambassador John Evans’s Truth Held Hostage

Ambassador John Evans’s Truth Held Hostage

Truth Held Hostage: America and the Armenian Genocide – What Then? What Now? To order please contact books@gomidas.org

By Dr. Dickran Kouymjian,

Ambassador John Evans’s Truth Held Hostage is the most important work about the Armenian genocide by a US diplomat since Henry Morgenthau’s groundbreaking Ambassador Morgenthau’s Story in 1918. Evans writes with an elegant clarity that allows us to experience his journey into a major personal and political ethical dilemma concerning the truth of history and the untruth of US government protocol in the name of foreign policy politics.
…This is a must read with implications for all histories of mass violence and trauma.”
—PETER BALAKIAN, author of The Burning Tigris: The Armenian Genocide and America’s Response”Evans is a remarkable man who was an unusual American diplomat. A principled man steeped in history, he wrestled with the moral issue of whether to defy his own government’s increasingly awkward position on the Armenian Genocide. Evans’ tale of how he came to be involved in Armenia, his term as ambassador in Yerevan and his decision to break the US government’s genocide taboo is a compelling, page-turning read. It is fascinating not just for anyone interested in Armenian issues but as an inside story of international diplomacy and politics of recent times.”
—THOMAS DE WAAL, Senior Associate at Carnegie Europe and author of Black Garden: Armenia and Azerbaijan Through Peace and War”This is a book from which one learns a great deal about the Armenian Genocide. It is also a poignant and uplifting book by and about an American ambassador, John Evans, who bravely placed ethical principles over the requirements of a diplomatic post.”
—ISRAEL W. CHARNY, Executive Director of the Institute on the Holocaust and Genocide in Jerusalem, a co-founder and past-president of the International Association of Genocide Scholars
“An informative, even-handed account of a matter of international importance.”
—PAUL IGNATIUS, former Secretary of the Navy
John Evans, formerly U.S. Ambassador to Armenia, gained notoriety in 2005 by publicly dissenting from the stated policy of the Bush and previous Administrations on the 90-year-old issue of the Armenian Genocide. A veteran of the U.S. Foreign Service, Ambassador Evans had no Armenian ancestors or family connections, but over the course of his historical studies and diplomatic career, became convinced that a gross  injustice was being perpetrated against the Armenians through the denialist policies of the Turkish Government and the U.S. Government’s tacit acceptance of them. He decided to take a measured public stand, but then paid for his “heresy” by being dismissed from his post and forced into early retirement, although not without a fight over the issue in the U.S. Congress.
Over the course of his thirty-five-year career, Ambassador Evans  served with distinction in diplomatic posts in Tehran, Prague, Moscow, Brussels (NATO), St. Petersburg and Washington, reaching the rank of Minister-Counselor. A native of Williamsburg, Virginia, educated at Yale and Columbia, he is an avid student of Russian history who devoted a sabbatical year to investigating the decline of the Ottoman Empire, the setting in which the tragic events of 1915 occurred.
Now retired from the Foreign Service, Mr. Evans makes his home in  Washington with his wife, the former Donna Chamberlain.
Order Book:
London: Gomidas Institute, 2016,
xxx + 170 pages, maps, photos, index,
ISBN 978-1-909382-26-8, hardback,
Price: UK£22.00 / US$32.00
To order please contact books@gomidas.org

Filed Under: Books, Genocide, News Tagged With: Ambassador, Held, hostage, John Evans’s, truth

Demand Truth + Justice for the Armenian Genocide

March 25, 2016 By administrator

genocide_justice_actionUrge Passage of Senate and House Armenian Genocide Resolutions

Ask your Senators and U.S. Representative to work for a truthful and just resolution of the Armenian Genocide by supporting the adoption of S.Res.140 and H.Res.154

This is the right time to act, during the Armenian Genocide Centennial year and in the wake of the vast global awareness raised around April 24th by Pope Francis and so many others.

H.Res.154, a bipartisan measure spearheaded by Congressional Armenian Caucus Co-Chairman Robert

http://cqrcengage.com/anca/app/write-a-letter?0&engagementId=103633#action

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, demand, Justice, truth

Armenian Genocide: Let Truth Triumph

May 5, 2015 By administrator

By Jagdish N. Singh

March-for-Armenian-Genocide-e1430831309831I admire Pope Francis.  He is not just spiritual or religious. He is   courageous too and does not believe in refraining from calling a spade a spade . The Pope has now referred to the 20th century mass killings of Armenians as the first genocide of the 20th century. During a mass in Saint Peter’s Basilica the other day to commemorate the 100th anniversary of those heinous killings, the Pope said, “In the past century our human family has lived through three massive and unprecedented tragedies.  The first…struck your own Armenian people.”  Report Jewish press

Branding  the tragedy as a “senseless slaughter,” the Pope preached , “It is necessary, and indeed a duty, to honor their memory, for whenever memory fades, it means that evil allows wounds to fester.  Concealing or denying evil is like allowing a wound to keep bleeding without bandaging it.”  Pope Francis also recalled  other mass killings of the 20th century – in Cambodia, Rwanda, Burundi and Bosnia. 

Significantly, in his message to mark Holocaust Memorial Day (January 27) in 2011 then Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams  too had  spoken of the need to remember the atrocities committed against the Jewish people in the Holocaust and even in Britain’s own history. He had stressed the need to remember also the other victims of genocide .  Williams was quoted as saying that the works of poets such as Holocaust survivor Paul Celan and Etty Hillesum served to remind the world of the “loss of humanity that remains in our midst to this day…Although other  poets have spoken for those killed in Armenia, Cambodia and Darfur, many stories from these and other genocidal events remain untold. Testimony, poetry and autobiography allow us to attend to the distinct stories of individuals rather than trying to comprehend the statistics of different genocides of recent history.”  

Pertinently, Archbishop Williams noted that events in medieval Britain, such as the blood libel case against Jews following the mysterious death of William of Norwich in the 12th century or King Edward’s expulsion of all Jews from England were “almost completely lost to public awareness”. He warned , “If the stories are not told over and again, we lose the memory of those who suffered and we risk losing something that protects our humanity.” 

It is heartening to learn that more than 20 nations, including Russia , France and Germany,  have now come recognize the Armenian genocide. At a ceremony in Armenia, Russian President Vladmin Putin reportedly referred to “mass” killings and   used the word “genocide.” Putin said, “ There cannot be any justification for mass murder of people. Today we mourn together with the Armenian people.” French President Francois Hollande said, “ We will never forget the tragedies your people have endured. Important words have already been said in Turkey, but others are still expected so that shared grief can become shared destiny.” German President Joachim Gauck condemned the 1915 killings as genocide and acknowledged that Germany bore partial blame for the bloodletting.   

I wonder why American President Barack Obama and some other leaders in the democratic world  still shy away from branding the Armenian killings as genocide.  In 2006 then Senator  Obama had said,  “The Armenian genocide is not an allegation, a personal opinion, or a point of view, but rather a widely documented fact supported by an overwhelming body of historical evidence.” It is time the American President retained his courage of conviction, spoke the truth in the case and  acted in the great American spirit that stands against all kinds of injustice the world over. 

Moreover, there is no confusion as to the nature of the Armenian killings.  The 1948 UN Geneva Convention clearly defines genocide as “systematic destruction, in whole or part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group.” President Obama could invoke this definition very well . Over 1.5 million Armenians were estimated to have perished under the  Ottoman Empire during World War I. (http://www.nytimes.com/ref/timestopics/topics_armeniangenocide.html  ) .  This crime cannot be overlooked . 

About the Author: Jagdish N. Singh is an Indian journalist based in New Delhi.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, Genocide, Let, triumph, truth

Where is the truth? is it false flag operation?

June 13, 2014 By administrator

 who is telling the truth Baghdad, or Ankara? 

12/06/2014 22:40:00

Iraqi National  News Agency reporting: 

Turkish Consul is free and practice his consular functions from a house in Mosul
Mosul / NINA / Eyewitnesses in the city of Mosul, said on Friday that the Turkish Consul in Nineveh province (Ozturk Yilmaz) is free and practice his consulate functions naturally from a house downtown Mosul.

The eyewitnesses told the National Iraqi News Agency / NINA/ that the Consul, accompanied by a group of staff of the Turkish consulate was seen in a house in al-Zuhour neighborhood and he practices his duties to grant visas to Turkey, naturally nothing to do with the gunmen who occupy the city.

Yet Turkish media and Government reporting the militant ISIL kidnaping Turkish consulate and staff:

 Hurriyet Forty-nine Turkish citizens, including the consul general in Mosul and several members of the Turkish special forces, were taken hostage by ISIL and transferred to an undisclosed place on June 11.

 One hostage posted a message on an Internet forum used by Turkish special forces members, daily Vatan reported. The message states that ISIL besieged the compound with “900 specially trained commandos” as Turks in the compound positioned snipers on rooftops to resist.

“They had mortars, DShK and PK-type heavy machine guns, RPGs and four tanks that they stole from the Iraqi army. We told the Foreign Ministry that we would clash until we ran out of ammunition, but the Foreign

 

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: false flag operation, Mosul, truth

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