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“Eating foods that contain any
cholesterol above 0 mg is unhealthy.”
— T. Colin Campbell, PhD, author of The China Study.
The medical establishment is waging a war against cholesterol. Yet cholesterol is a health-promoting nutrient that just could save your
life! Think this is an exaggeration? Consider the following.
The War on
Cholesterol
According to Michael Brown and Joseph Goldstein, winners of the Nobel
Prize in 1985 for their discovery of the receptor that brings cholesterol into
cells, the debate about the role of cholesterol in health and disease is a war.
They wrote the foreword to a recent book by Daniel Steinberg, MD, PhD,
called The Cholesterol Wars. In it, they call themselves and others "who condemn cholesterol as
the culprit" the "anti-cholesterol forces." They liken
scientific advances in our understanding of this vital nutrient to
"powerful new weapons" that have aided the "anti-cholesterol
forces" just "like modern armies."
The War on
Good Food
According to Brown and Goldstein, the next "battle" of the
"Cholesterol Wars" will be fought over what age someone should be
before they start cholesterol-lowering therapy. The ideal therapy, they say, is
a low-fat, low-cholesterol diet rich in polyunsaturated fatty acids. That means the following: no butter, no eggs, no liver or other organ
meats. A diet of dry plant foods, with small amounts of corn oil, soybean oil,
and perhaps a few capsules of fish oil. As you will learn on this site, this diet is not only bland and boring,
but it is missing the most nutritious and health-promoting foods the earth has
to offer! Not only that, but it is actually polyunsaturated fats, not saturated
fats or cholesterol, that contribute to heart disease, cancer, liver damage,
and aging.
The War on
Your Brain
Short of dramatic changes in diet, these anti-cholesterol warriors
recommend starting cholesterol-lowering statin drugs between the ages of 20 and
40 — although other experts are now recommending these drugs be given to
children as young as eight years old. One of cholesterol's most important
functions is to support learning and memory — that is why the brain is so rich
in cholesterol, and that is probably why statin drugs can cause a disorder
called transient global amnesia. In low-risk populations, over 600 people need to take a statin to save
one from a heart attack. In high-risk populations, over 60 people need to take
one. Yet the rate of side effects like muscle pain is much higher, and the
worst side effects — failing memory, depression, irritability — are chalked up
to personality or age and never recorded.
The War on
Your Wallet
These drugs cost a lot of money. Who is going to pay for it? Either you,
your insurance company, or the government. Whichever way, your wallet gets
hurt. If health insurance companies start paying for everyone to go on statins
in their teenage years, the cost of health care will go up. If the federal prescription drug plan pays for it, tens of billions of
dollars per year will be added to the national debt, which in the U.S. now
already totals over $9.5 trillion. The government will borrow this money from
the Federal Reserve, a privately owned monopoly bank that will create money out
of thin air to loan to the government. As that extra money leaks into the
economy, the purchasing power of your dollar will steadily disappear —
something that has already been happening for decades.
Science is a
Search for Truth, Not a War
Those who wage "war" on cholesterol may have impeccable
scientific credentials but they are not acting like scientists. Science is not
a war against molecules. It is a search for truth. On this site, I look for the truth about cholesterol, and I publish what
I find. I hope you find this search for truth as fascinating as I do, and I
hope you enjoy the site!


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