Isn’t he the cocksucker who went after some little Chinese banker, after the 08’ financial/mortgage meltdown?
I read a book about that witch-hunt.
Talk about punching down.
Talk about a miscarriage.
I read a lot of righteous anger here.
Can’t disagree with any of your conclusions.
I guess one can try to minimize poison intake.
I’m hoping to find a good used reverse osmosis machine, like the ones that some of us sent to Iraq, after the US liberated Iraq from Saddam, and sanitation.
Never sprayed my landscape.
Lots of dandelions, rhubarb, apples, and pears around.
The bugs, and worms like the apples, so they must be safe(er).
I’ve got a bunch of frozen ground bison, and a few free range birds.
And, a homemade peach pie.
I’ll get by.
I’ve got me a solar powered shack, and a manual typewriter, coffee grinder, and egg beater.
Cast iron, and stainless steel.
I was thinking about making me a distillery, and growing another tomato hedge, again this year.
Drink bloody marys until the osmosis gadget shows up.
Don’t like em at all.
But, the body requires it.
Them AI psychos.
They’re gonna do what they’re gonna do, regardless of what anyone says.
They’re the masters of the universe.
I’m just going to resist their game as best as I can.
You can see, by the level of interest in your postings, that people just don’t give a fuck.
Summer’s coming.
Lots of festivals, and outdoor shows, and beach bunnying to do.
But, leave time to mow the grass.
And,spray the weeds.
Fire up the truck, and take the dead grass for a ride.
It’s a nice day for a ride.
And, take the grass down to the grass mass grave, where the big, big, bulldozer can crush the corpses, like little Rachel Corrie.
Darn, my friend, Toothless in Wisconsin, he gives me insights to his hopeful nature: still send out smoke signals to dysfunctional and disenfranchsing family. He's got meth in there hills, or in those valley in dairy country.
Wisconsin. Cheese. During digestion, casein is broken down into casomorphins, which are thought to have an opiate-like effect.
New research argues that cheese is addictive in a way similar to drugs because of a chemical called casein, which is found in dairy products and can trigger the brain's opioid receptors. Nicole Avena, PhD, assistant professor of pharmacology and systems therapeutics at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, and a co-author on the study, explained the significance of the findings. "This is a first step towards identifying specific foods, and properties of foods, which can trigger this addictive response," she said. "This could help change the way we approach obesity treatment. It may not be a simple matter of 'cutting back' on certain foods, but rather, adopting methods used to curtail smoking, drinking and drug use."
Shit dog, I'd be tarred and feathered in Wisconsin if I put in this tidbit, and I did interview on my radio show two of the filmmakers for Forks Over Knives:
CASOMORPHINS
[In an earlier chapter of The Cheese Trap], I briefly mentioned casein, the protein that is concentrated in cheese. And casein has some secrets to tell.
If you were to look at a protein molecule with a powerful microscope, it would look like a long string of beads. Each “bead” is a protein building block called an amino acid, and, during digestion, the individual amino acids come apart and are absorbed into your bloodstream so that your body can use them to build proteins of its own.
So the calf digests the proteins in milk, breaking apart the chain of beads and using these amino acids to build skin cells, muscle cells, organs, and the other parts of the body.
However, casein is an unusual protein. While it does break apart to release individual beads, it also releases longer fragments—chains that might be four, five, or seven amino acid beads in length. These casein fragments are called casomorphins—that is, casein-derived morphine-like compounds. And they can attach to the same brain receptors that heroin and other narcotics attach to.
In other words, dairy protein has opiate molecules built right into it.
Opiates in dairy products? What the heck are they doing there, you might ask. Well, imagine if a calf did not want to nurse. Or if a human baby was not interested in nursing. They would not do very well. So, along with protein, fat, sugar, and a sprinkling of hormones, milk contains opiates that reward the baby for nursing.
Have you ever looked at a nursing baby’s face? The infant has a look of great intensity and then collapses into sleep. Of course, we imagine that to be the beauty of the mother-infant bond. But the fact is, mother’s milk delivers a mild drug to the child, albeit in a benign and loving way. If that sounds coldly biological, it pays to remember that nature never leaves anything as important as a baby’s survival to chance.
Opiates have a calming effect, and they also cause the brain to release dopamine, leading to a sense of reward and pleasure.
A cup of milk contains about 7.7 grams of protein, 80 percent of which is casein, more or less. Turning it into Cheddar cheese multiplies the protein content seven-fold, to 56 grams. It is the most concentrated form of casein in any food in the grocery store.
Call it dairy crack. Just as cocaine manufacturers have found ways to turn an addictive drug (cocaine) into an extremely addictive one (crack), dairy producers have found their own ways to keep you coming back. In the Middle Ages, cheese makers had no idea that cheese might concentrate milk’s addictive qualities. But today’s cheese industry knows all about cheese craving and is eager to exploit it. It is doing its level best to trigger cheese craving in vulnerable people.
Shit, dog, now all those fentynal and meth and crack and booze addicts, well, it's not just in the water, but in the cheese!
Toothless in Wisconsin, the man, has gone through many an addiction treatment, far and wide. WHat's he say about that fun fact?
“The effect of dietary protein on carcinogenesis of aflatoxin”. Aflatoxin is a carcinogen that the lab rats were exposed to in the study. The rats were then divided into two groups; one group was fed five percent casein while the other group was fed twenty percent casein. According to the film, the study found that the rats that were fed twenty percent casein had many cancerous growths and tumors. However, the rats fed only five percent casein either did not have any cancerous growths or they had very limited amount of cancerous growths.
Vance.
Isn’t he the cocksucker who went after some little Chinese banker, after the 08’ financial/mortgage meltdown?
I read a book about that witch-hunt.
Talk about punching down.
Talk about a miscarriage.
I read a lot of righteous anger here.
Can’t disagree with any of your conclusions.
I guess one can try to minimize poison intake.
I’m hoping to find a good used reverse osmosis machine, like the ones that some of us sent to Iraq, after the US liberated Iraq from Saddam, and sanitation.
Never sprayed my landscape.
Lots of dandelions, rhubarb, apples, and pears around.
The bugs, and worms like the apples, so they must be safe(er).
I’ve got a bunch of frozen ground bison, and a few free range birds.
And, a homemade peach pie.
I’ll get by.
I’ve got me a solar powered shack, and a manual typewriter, coffee grinder, and egg beater.
Cast iron, and stainless steel.
I was thinking about making me a distillery, and growing another tomato hedge, again this year.
Drink bloody marys until the osmosis gadget shows up.
Don’t like em at all.
But, the body requires it.
Them AI psychos.
They’re gonna do what they’re gonna do, regardless of what anyone says.
They’re the masters of the universe.
I’m just going to resist their game as best as I can.
You can see, by the level of interest in your postings, that people just don’t give a fuck.
Summer’s coming.
Lots of festivals, and outdoor shows, and beach bunnying to do.
But, leave time to mow the grass.
And,spray the weeds.
Fire up the truck, and take the dead grass for a ride.
It’s a nice day for a ride.
And, take the grass down to the grass mass grave, where the big, big, bulldozer can crush the corpses, like little Rachel Corrie.
Save the planet?
lol
Save humanity.
Too late.
Darn, my friend, Toothless in Wisconsin, he gives me insights to his hopeful nature: still send out smoke signals to dysfunctional and disenfranchsing family. He's got meth in there hills, or in those valley in dairy country.
Wisconsin. Cheese. During digestion, casein is broken down into casomorphins, which are thought to have an opiate-like effect.
New research argues that cheese is addictive in a way similar to drugs because of a chemical called casein, which is found in dairy products and can trigger the brain's opioid receptors. Nicole Avena, PhD, assistant professor of pharmacology and systems therapeutics at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, and a co-author on the study, explained the significance of the findings. "This is a first step towards identifying specific foods, and properties of foods, which can trigger this addictive response," she said. "This could help change the way we approach obesity treatment. It may not be a simple matter of 'cutting back' on certain foods, but rather, adopting methods used to curtail smoking, drinking and drug use."
Shit dog, I'd be tarred and feathered in Wisconsin if I put in this tidbit, and I did interview on my radio show two of the filmmakers for Forks Over Knives:
CASOMORPHINS
[In an earlier chapter of The Cheese Trap], I briefly mentioned casein, the protein that is concentrated in cheese. And casein has some secrets to tell.
If you were to look at a protein molecule with a powerful microscope, it would look like a long string of beads. Each “bead” is a protein building block called an amino acid, and, during digestion, the individual amino acids come apart and are absorbed into your bloodstream so that your body can use them to build proteins of its own.
So the calf digests the proteins in milk, breaking apart the chain of beads and using these amino acids to build skin cells, muscle cells, organs, and the other parts of the body.
However, casein is an unusual protein. While it does break apart to release individual beads, it also releases longer fragments—chains that might be four, five, or seven amino acid beads in length. These casein fragments are called casomorphins—that is, casein-derived morphine-like compounds. And they can attach to the same brain receptors that heroin and other narcotics attach to.
In other words, dairy protein has opiate molecules built right into it.
Opiates in dairy products? What the heck are they doing there, you might ask. Well, imagine if a calf did not want to nurse. Or if a human baby was not interested in nursing. They would not do very well. So, along with protein, fat, sugar, and a sprinkling of hormones, milk contains opiates that reward the baby for nursing.
Have you ever looked at a nursing baby’s face? The infant has a look of great intensity and then collapses into sleep. Of course, we imagine that to be the beauty of the mother-infant bond. But the fact is, mother’s milk delivers a mild drug to the child, albeit in a benign and loving way. If that sounds coldly biological, it pays to remember that nature never leaves anything as important as a baby’s survival to chance.
Opiates have a calming effect, and they also cause the brain to release dopamine, leading to a sense of reward and pleasure.
A cup of milk contains about 7.7 grams of protein, 80 percent of which is casein, more or less. Turning it into Cheddar cheese multiplies the protein content seven-fold, to 56 grams. It is the most concentrated form of casein in any food in the grocery store.
Call it dairy crack. Just as cocaine manufacturers have found ways to turn an addictive drug (cocaine) into an extremely addictive one (crack), dairy producers have found their own ways to keep you coming back. In the Middle Ages, cheese makers had no idea that cheese might concentrate milk’s addictive qualities. But today’s cheese industry knows all about cheese craving and is eager to exploit it. It is doing its level best to trigger cheese craving in vulnerable people.
https://www.forksoverknives.com/wellness/addictive-food-cheese-pizza/
+--+
Shit, dog, now all those fentynal and meth and crack and booze addicts, well, it's not just in the water, but in the cheese!
Toothless in Wisconsin, the man, has gone through many an addiction treatment, far and wide. WHat's he say about that fun fact?
“The effect of dietary protein on carcinogenesis of aflatoxin”. Aflatoxin is a carcinogen that the lab rats were exposed to in the study. The rats were then divided into two groups; one group was fed five percent casein while the other group was fed twenty percent casein. According to the film, the study found that the rats that were fed twenty percent casein had many cancerous growths and tumors. However, the rats fed only five percent casein either did not have any cancerous growths or they had very limited amount of cancerous growths.
Yeah, you should probably stay away from the dairy state.
Didn’t you almost get yourself shot, taking photographs there?
I’m wondering, did you advertise as a communist while visiting?
Have many conversations about assault weapons, or tribal rights and treaties?
Immigration?
Education?
Whales, and marine life?
Capitalism?
Domestic violence and rape culture?
I’m going to go out on a limb here and guess....not really.
Fish out of water?
Even a world traveler can go a lifetime, and never experience the quaint charms, of Wisconsin.
Good of you to throw that man a bone.
Sounds like he’s got some steep trail to circumvent.
Thanks to the both of you for working so hard.