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To: Yorikke who wrote (12902)10/25/2015 10:41:12 PM
From: E. Charters  Respond to of 17057
 
Yes, Washington/Ottawa/London/Bonn/Tokyo/Peking are sources of powerful Voodoo incantations. It would not surprise me if entry into the club requires some mentality shrinkage, surrender of the will and total suspension of disbelief.

Here is a pop press blurb about the meat controversy. Encourage our friend baise mon queue to consume copious plenitude of carrion. It appears to be just what the medic ordered.

mic.com



To: Yorikke who wrote (12902)10/26/2015 1:42:38 PM
From: Pogeu Mahone  Respond to of 17057
 
Saudi Royal Detained After 2 Tons of Drugs Found on Private Jet
TIME - ?56 minutes ago?

A member of the Saudi royal family and four others were detained after authorities discovered two tons of drugs on a private jet in Beirut on Monday, according to Lebanon's state-run news agency and a government official.

Involving two tons of Captagon pills, it was the largest-ever smuggling operation uncovered at Beirut's Rafik Hariri International Airport

A member of the Saudi royal family and four others were detained after authorities discovered two tons of drugs on a private jet in Beirut on Monday, according to Lebanon’s state-run news agency and a government official.

===========

Captagon: the amphetamine fuelling Syria's civil war | World ...

www.theguardian.com › World › Syria

The Guardian

Jan 13, 2014 - Col Ghassan Chamseddine, head of the drug enforcement unit in Lebanon, where more than 12m Captagon tablets were seized last year, said that most of the illicit pills are hidden in trucks passing from Syria to Lebanese ports, from where they are shipped to the Gulf.



To: Yorikke who wrote (12902)10/27/2015 10:19:55 AM
From: Pogeu Mahone  Respond to of 17057
 
Cutting sugar improves obese children's health in 10 days
.
A new study found decreasing sugar, regardless of changes to caloric intake, can improve children's health.


By Stephen Feller | Oct. 27, 2015 at 10:00 AM

Researchers found that decreasing sugar alone made children feel full faster, even though they were eating the same amount of food each day. Photo by PathDoc/Shutterstock

SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 27 (UPI) -- Decreasing the amount of sugar in obese children's diets reduced several metabolic diseases in a recent study in as little as 10 days, suggesting parents pay more attention to sugar intake than calories when making changes to their kids' diets.

Metabolic syndrome is a group of diseases that occur together, including high blood pressure, high glucose, excess fat around the waist, and abnormal cholesterol levels, that can lead to heart disease, stroke and diabetes.

Fatty liver disease and type 2 diabetes, diseases associated with metabolic syndrome, are now also being found in children, researchers said, because of obesity and other conditions potentially caused by poor diets.
Researchers sought to find whether the cumulative results of metabolic disease could be blamed on obesity, calories or something else in the diet, finding that restricting sugar among children but maintaining their normal daily caloric intake reduced symptoms of metabolic disease and even resulted in weight loss.

"When we took the sugar out, the kids started responding to their satiety cues," said Dr. Jean-Marc Schwarz, a researcher at Touro University California, in a press release. "They told us it felt like so much more food, even though they were consuming the same number of calories as before, just with significantly less sugar. Some said we were overwhelming them with food."

The researchers worked with 44 children between the ages of 9 and 18, 27 were Hispanic and 16 were black, and all were obese and showed symptoms of metabolic syndrome. Participants were asked to consume a specific diet for nine days that maintained protein, fat, and carbohydrates but reduced dietary sugar from 28 percent of their diet to 10 percent.

The sugar taken out of the children's diets was replaced with starches such as bagels, cereal and pasta, though they were still permitted to eat fruit. The researchers also note the diets were intentionally dominated with "kid food" -- turkey hot dogs, potato chips and pizza -- bought at local supermarkets.

Throughout the nine-day study, participants weighed themselves and underwent testing on day 0 and day 10, or before and after started the diet. Following the diet, researchers reported decreases in blood pressure, triglycerides, bad cholesterol, fasting glucose and insulin levels, and improvement in liver function.

Although some children also exhibited weight loss, on average 1 percent of body weight throughout the study, researchers increased caloric intake to maintain weight during the study.

"All of the surrogate measures of metabolic health got better, just by substituting starch for sugar in their processed food -- all without changing calories or weight or exercise," said Dr. Robert Lustig, a pediatric endocrinologist at UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital San Francisco. "This study demonstrates that 'a calorie is not a calorie.' Where those calories come from determines where in the body they go. Sugar calories are the worst, because they turn to fat in the liver, driving insulin resistance, and driving risk for diabetes, heart, and liver disease. This has enormous implications for the food industry, chronic disease, and health care costs."

The study is published in the journal Obesity.