The Religiosity of Vegetarian "Science"
Posted: Wed Jul 17, 2013 3:26 pm
I don't want to rehash the entire great meat debate we just had a few weeks ago, but this article was jaw dropping.
http://anthonycolpo.com/lies-damned-lie ... ism-part-1
Those who followed our debate know that almost all of the so-called "scientific evidence" to support a vegetarian lifestyle comes from the Seven Day Adventist studies, which claim to show decreased mortality from meat avoidance.
However, it seems that if you actually take the time to look at the raw data in the Seven Day Adventist research, a very different story is told.
The author carefully examines how the Seven Day Adventist researchers have "adjusted" their numbers to support their own religious-based views of what one's diet should be.
You can see a real pattern in the Seven Day Adventist propaganda over the past century. John Harvey Kellogg (1852-1943) was a Seven Day Adventist and did everything in his power to convince the world that we should all be shunning traditional breakfasts (bacon and eggs) and replacing them with his invention of mass-produced breakfast cereal grains.
Kellogg's dream was to convince everyone to convert to a Seven Day Adventist grain-based diet and he made fortune in the process.
We know that Vegetarianism started as a religious movement, but it would appear that the religious powers behind its continued support have cloaked their legitimate religious-based opinions with totally bogus "science."
I highly recommend people read the article to see how the Seven Day Adventists tweaked their results.
http://anthonycolpo.com/lies-damned-lie ... ism-part-1
Those who followed our debate know that almost all of the so-called "scientific evidence" to support a vegetarian lifestyle comes from the Seven Day Adventist studies, which claim to show decreased mortality from meat avoidance.
However, it seems that if you actually take the time to look at the raw data in the Seven Day Adventist research, a very different story is told.
The author carefully examines how the Seven Day Adventist researchers have "adjusted" their numbers to support their own religious-based views of what one's diet should be.
It appears that the Seven Day Adventist studies that vegetarians (and the media) regularly cite to support Vegetarianism don't even support Vegetarianism, when examined closely. The author clearly demonstrates that the so-called "science" to support Vegetarianism is just a statistical lie made up by a biased religious organization!Anthony Colpo wrote:And this elaborate multi-layered wankology, ladies and gentlemen, is how you take a set of raw actual figures and totally transform them into something they’re not. By the time they’re done, the Loma Linda researchers have managed to return 8-19% reductions from overall mortality in the vegetarian groups. Meanwhile, the hapless meat-eaters suddenly find themselves portrayed as having the highest death rate in the study from just about every listed cause!
Again, this wouldn’t be so outrageous if the researchers took pains to emphasize these reductions were purely speculative estimates arising from mathematical exercises. But they do the exact opposite, concluding:
“…vegetarian dietary patterns were associated with lower mortality. The evidence that vegetarian diets, or similar diets with reduced meat consumption, may be associated with a lower risk of death should be considered carefully by individuals as they make dietary choices and by those offering dietary guidance.”?
What the Loma Linda researchers want us to believe is that, despite having the lowest mortality rate in the study, non-vegetarians actually had the highest death rate in the study!
Source: Lies, Damned Lies, and Vegetarianism: Part 1
You can see a real pattern in the Seven Day Adventist propaganda over the past century. John Harvey Kellogg (1852-1943) was a Seven Day Adventist and did everything in his power to convince the world that we should all be shunning traditional breakfasts (bacon and eggs) and replacing them with his invention of mass-produced breakfast cereal grains.
Kellogg's dream was to convince everyone to convert to a Seven Day Adventist grain-based diet and he made fortune in the process.
We know that Vegetarianism started as a religious movement, but it would appear that the religious powers behind its continued support have cloaked their legitimate religious-based opinions with totally bogus "science."
I highly recommend people read the article to see how the Seven Day Adventists tweaked their results.