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theaceofthespade
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- Views: 877
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Total: +8
Comments: 1
Favorites: 0
Uploaded: 12/09/11
Spread the word - Views: 939
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Comments: 2
Favorites: 0
Uploaded: 11/22/11
Still asking? - Views: 400
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Comments: 0
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Uploaded: 11/11/11
Too much info - Views: 793
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Comments: 1
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Uploaded: 11/10/11
Rational Explanation - Views: 432
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Comments: 0
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Uploaded: 11/08/11
quicky - Views: 600
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Comments: 5
Favorites: 0
Uploaded: 11/08/11
Nothing but a little OC
Hey but look man, I'm sorry I made you so mad. I really am.
I read your article - I'm not super sold on it. I agree with what they say about babies. But babies should not have a lot of things that it's fine for full grown adults to eat. But most of the other things it sights are correlations, and loose associations.
large blood calcium fluctuation are due to thyroid issues. They shouldn't be altered that much by milk consumption unless you drink a ton. Even then, doctors ask people to stop drinking milk before a calcium/blood test (if they drink a lot) because it has been shown to raise their levels.
The whole article is correlation without causation.
The most valid argument I've heard against milk is the hormones and byproducts of our farming system being bad for you. And that, I can certainly get behind. But other than that, I see no reason why milk would be literally bad for you. Specifically, if you drink organic milk, there is no foreseeable reason that those vitamins wouldn't benefit you.
I read your article - I'm not super sold on it. I agree with what they say about babies. But babies should not have a lot of things that it's fine for full grown adults to eat. But most of the other things it sights are correlations, and loose associations.
large blood calcium fluctuation are due to thyroid issues. They shouldn't be altered that much by milk consumption unless you drink a ton. Even then, doctors ask people to stop drinking milk before a calcium/blood test (if they drink a lot) because it has been shown to raise their levels.
The whole article is correlation without causation.
The most valid argument I've heard against milk is the hormones and byproducts of our farming system being bad for you. And that, I can certainly get behind. But other than that, I see no reason why milk would be literally bad for you. Specifically, if you drink organic milk, there is no foreseeable reason that those vitamins wouldn't benefit you.
Aaaaaannnnndddd you're still wrong. I didn't say anything about milk. You said that nutrition had almost nothing to do with height, and I was saying you're wrong, which you still are. Furthermore, I said that genetics laid out your potential height, but your environment was what determined how much of that "potential" was fulfilled. Read my comment and grow the fuck up.

