Paul Saladino· MD
look at this red line going across massively increasing that is vegetable oils my friends again this is all correlational from which we generate hypotheses which we then test in interventional studies that i've already talked about
The evidence is convergent. Multiple independent sources reach the same conclusion, the underlying mechanism is well-characterized, and even the field's most cautious voices treat it as worth doing.
look at this red line going across massively increasing that is vegetable oils my friends again this is all correlational from which we generate hypotheses which we then test in interventional studies that i've already talked about
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so we again it's a correlation we see the instruction of seed oils in the last 100 years especially in the last 50 years we know things have gone down the toilet
seed oils are the single greatest driver of chronic disease in humans
the temporal Association of increased seed oil consumption with a significant rise in obesity asthma diabetes chronic illness is real
and the increased incidence of disease in humans over the last 100 years because what is difficult to debate in any way shape or form is that humans have gotten much less healthy in the last 100 years
I think seed oils are certainly one thing to consider
I believe strongly that these soils ever in the human Diet before 100 years ago first introduced as machine lubricants are one of the single greatest causes if not the single greatest cause of increased obesity diabetes and chronic illness in the US population