I had a Panasonic crystal clear b&w tv until 2004... I loved that TV.
I watched most of star trek in black and white with a high pitched whine only I could hear
I had a Panasonic crystal clear b&w tv until 2004... I loved that TV.
I watched most of star trek in black and white with a high pitched whine only I could hear
I've summerized the video for you. So the conversation is accessible to people who don't want to watch it. Please don't just drop video posts without some text to help build the conversation
summerizer
Michaela Reigns and Reddit snark communities
Echo-chamber mechanics
Monetization and corporate control
Politics, regulation, and platform reach
References
I didn't narrow it down, I suspect it was fdroid
I've also had a app refuse to start if another app is installed (not running, just installed). My gos workaround was putting that opinionated app in its own profile.
meet the general scientific consensus?
sees a lot of conflicting nutrition and medical info
You can't have one without the other. Nutritional research is severely lacking in the literature. any of the cited studies that make the vast bulk of the scientific flotilla are just observational epidemiology... Which is very noisy.
I've done a bunch of reading, a massive amount really, and the only thing everyone agrees about is processed foods are bad... Except not all processed foods (the ones that further some other agenda)
Pick your flavor of opinion and people can suggest good creators in that vertical.
Personally - After all my reading I've settled on keto/carnivore, but to say there isn't consensus is a understatement. There are many people who make their diet their identify and feel personally attacked if you eat differently than them. The best thing I can say for keto is their evidence is consistent, lines up across domains, and individuals following it see immediate improvements in their health metrics
I can recommend the low carb down under YouTube channel for medical lectures on the keto, very clear about the quality and limitations of their evidence.
Also, still can't block communities we've been banned from on the community page. What a joke.
It would be a nice improvement! Currently you can go to settings -> blocks and you can add a block.
Voyager let's you block a community by a long press on the community name
800 words and no mention of the main driver of modern blood glucose levels.
Ahh! let's talk about ought!
Since humans store fat, one could see mechanistically we are setup to run on the energy we store: fat
When humans go more then 4 hours without eating glucose (skipping a meal, keto, fasting, or sleeping) they are running on fat, including the brain. If you want to prevent your brain from using fat you need to drip feed glucose all day (which some people try really hard to do), but when you sleep some of that fat will finally get to be used by the brain. One could reasonably argue the default energy of the human body is fat, hence why it's used during sleep.
Both short-term PET and arterio-venous difference studies in humans show that brain glucose consumption decreases as ketone availability to the brain increases. These results suggest that ketones are actually the preferred energy substrate for the brain because they enter the brain in proportion to their plasma concentration irrespective of glucose availability; if the energy needs of the brain are being increasingly met by ketones, glucose uptake decreases accordingly. This decrease in brain glucose uptake when both ketones and glucose are available supports the notion that ketones are the brain’s preferred fuel.
The body will use glucose when available, because glucose is so damaging to cells - glycation happens rapidly. As soon as any glucose elevations are seen in the blood stream insulin is immediately released to push glucose into fat cells and get blood glucose levels back to the low normal.
However, I'm open to being wrong: Why 'ought' the brain use glucose instead of fat?
Sure, humans are lipvores we store fat we run on fat, stored fat is often seen as weight.
Regardless if a person is skinny, fat, or in between their brain can run on fat.
I'm not talking about your weight, I'm talking about the fuel source for the brain. The body runs on fat, the brain runs on fat. It can, when available, also use glucose - but the entire metabolic system tries to keep glucose levels low and consistent rather then spiked and high.
Starches and carbs feed the brain.
Turns into blood glucose, which the body can use in the brain, but works as hard as it possibly can to put into fat cells. The brain also runs perfectly well on fat, humans store fat not glucose for long term energy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Edx9D2yaOGs