But wait a minute, that would contradict research that has claimed for quite a while now that chocolate is GOOD for cardiovascular health. This is exactly the problem I mentioned in my earlier post. Medical “research” has become so corrupted by grant money that almost nothing they claim can be trusted.
Need proof? Look no further than the recent revelations about the FRAUD that was committed in the foundational “research” that guided for decades not only the general medical understanding about what causes Alzheimer’s disease, but also the standard treatment for it. Now we find out that ALL OF IT WAS BASED UPON A LIE! The “researchers” had flat out falsified the data, and their conclusions have now been found to be completely wrong! So now we’re back to square one with Alzheimer’s and drugs to treat it. And that’s not all. We also recently had the release of a research paper that claimed that, contrary to the long-held belief that clinical depression is caused by low seratonin levels, that seratonin does not affect depression at all. This also means (if true) that antidepressants do nothing therapeutic (though they can have very real adverse effects). Of course, in the current corrupt and unreliable medical atmosphere, who know if this “research” is correct either? It’s become a total clown show, but unfortunately these clowns have people’s lives in their hands.
So the next time they tell you something like, “Red meat causes heart disease”, remember how cock-sure the entire industry was that “sticky plaques” caused Alzheimer’s, or that low seratonin caused depression, or for that matter that mRNA COVID “vaccines” worked.
Chocolate would help until it causes excess iron. Consuming chocolate won’t cause excess iron if you remove iron from your body.
You shouldn’t believe statements about health without evidence.
You can evaluate statements about health by reading about experiments. You also have to evaluate whether the publication you are reading is fraud.
I think the stataments I made are indisputable. Nobody serious denies that if one consumes more iron than one needs, the body accumulates it.
“Replication crisis”
The replication crisis (also called the replicability crisis and the reproducibility crisis) is an ongoing methodological crisis in which it has been found that the results of many scientific studies are difficult or impossible to reproduce. Because the reproducibility of empirical results is an essential ...See more