Dear Cluesforumers,
Some of you might think this is stretching too far and I know many of you have different views on how medicine and nutrition are being distorted by the Nutwork. And I respect different views but also hope you respect mine which are the results of many years of looking into medicine.
In my view, Statins and cholesterol lowering drugs is a medical hoax that has been carefully designed through the decades. Statins are not only ineffective, but a slow acting poison that can induce the very thing it’s supposed to cure – heart disease (among many other problems like cancer, dementia and diabetes). The way this works is that Statins impairs one of our most crucial bodily functions – The ability to produce cholesterol. Cholesterol is needed for cell repair and hormone production, and without it we will suffer all kinds of problems.
The cholesterol hoax was introduced in two steps by the Nutwork that began in the sixties:
1. Establish a false connection between cholesterol and heart disease in the medical community and public mind.
2. Introduce Statins, and show via studies that it (correctly) lowers serum (blood) cholesterol and because of step one they can be assumed to be effective against heart disease.
But as you may have understood, the Nutwork are very skilled in the business of lies and hoaxes and are often cleverly bringing down their own hoaxes and uses the credibility they gain from that to sell other lies - “The best lies are the ones that are 80% true”, and that is what I would like to bring attention to here:
https://spacedoc.com/Here we have an astronaut ( astronot to Cluesforumers :-) that was righteously fighting the Statin and cholesterol hoax. A real American hero. How could anyone dare claim we did not go to the moon?
Of course this could be a false accusation on my behalf. Dr. Duane Graveline did not participate very long in the Apollo program and might have been unaware it was a hoax or might have chosen to leave it because of it. But it's notable, at least to me, that he chose to advertise his criticism of Statins as “Spacedoc”.