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@ekremacikel Olum dogal bir olay, herkes olecek, sen de bir gun oleceksin Ekrem. Olmek hayatta yaptiklarinin cezasi degildir. Cok sapsalca bir yorum yapmissin. Adami sevmeyebilirsin, ama olumunu celebrate yapmana gerek yoktu.
250,000 white British girls have been raped predominantly by Pakistani Muslim men. Labour voted against an inquiry 3 times in fear of being called Islamophobic.
Denby is a reminder that English-made heritage does not survive on nostalgia alone.
Founded in Derbyshire in 1809, now in administration, with manufacturing reportedly stopped — but still trading.
Much of their stock is now on sale. If you’ve ever wanted to buy Denby, this is probably the moment to support them through their website.
If we value these brands, we have to buy from them while they’re still here.
Twenty years before Atkins, fifteen years before the Mediterranean diet, and forty years before anyone in the NHS would utter the phrase "low-carb without flinching", a Hampshire physician was treating obesity, asthma, migraine and gout with butter, bacon and steak. He sold two million books and was politely forgotten.
Richard Mackarness ran Britain's first clinical obesity and food allergy clinic at Basingstoke District Hospital from 1958 to 1983. He had read Banting. He had read Stefansson. He tried the low-carbohydrate approach on himself, lost weight without hunger, and decided it was time a British doctor put it into a book.
He called it Eat Fat and Grow Slim. The title was a deliberate provocation, in a country where rising American influence insisted that fat would kill you.
The protocol: meat, fish, eggs, cheese, butter and green vegetables freely. Carbohydrates under 60 grams a day. Eat fat to satiety. Do not restrict calories.
Across 25 years he kept meticulous records. Average weight loss 14-20 pounds in the first three months. Sustained weight loss at 12 months in approximately 60% of patients. At five years, approximately 40%, which is remarkably high for any dietary intervention.
Other outcomes: resolution of asthma in roughly one-third of affected patients, reduction in migraine in roughly half, and complete resolution of gout in nearly all who adhered to the protocol.
His 1976 second book, Not All in the Mind, documented hundreds of cases in which chronic symptoms resolved completely when specific food triggers were removed. The most common triggers: wheat, refined sugar, pasteurised dairy, industrial seed oils, caffeine.
His clinic was closed in 1983 when Basingstoke District Hospital was reorganised. His approach, which had treated thousands of patients successfully, was not institutionalised anywhere in the NHS.
He retired and emigrated to Australia. He died in 1996, aged 80. His books are out of print in Britain.
Current NHS obesity treatment costs: £6.5 billion a year.
Mackarness's clinic treated 3,500 patients for under £50,000 a year in 1960s pounds.
The cost-benefit analysis has not been run. The result would be too uncomfortable to publish.
He was right. He was British. He was ignored in Britain. Then exported to Australia, where he died in quiet retirement.
This is how Britain handles its medical heretics.
It has not improved.
@2_sayfaofficial Igneyle verenlerde iskelet yapisi cokuyor cunku kemikleri de eritiyor. Bir kac yila kadar yasak gelecek bu ignelere pharma sirketleri biraz cebini doldursun diye bekliyorlar.
@anonimuhabir "acikladi" ne demek? Sanki gercek bir olayi ortaya cikariyor gibi. Kicindan bir fikir sallamis. Pandemiden sonra maske dustu; kimse bilim adi altinda yapilan pazarlamalara inanmiyor. Istedigi kadar beyaz onlukle poz versin.