The Gary Null Show - 11.09.22
The Gary Null Show - A podcast by Progressive Radio Network
VIDEO: No Bill Maher, Democracy Is NOT On The Ballot (5:00) Michael Moore’s Nonstop Lies & Gaslighting For Democrats – Jimmy Dore Dem Party Turns On Anti-War Democratic Primary Winner (2:16 to 5:28) Society is going to COLLAPSE -Neil Oliver ( 5:24) Fear Psychosis and the Cult of Safety – Why are People so Afraid? – Academy of Ideas (13:25) The Great Reset and Transhumanism | Beyond the Cover (17:50) Study shows eating prunes daily can help prevent bone lossPenn State University, November 3, 2022 People often eat prunes to boost their digestive health, but a study published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition shows that consuming a handful of prunes a day may also help prevent bone loss when you are older. Researchers from Penn State University reported that women in their 60s who consumed prunes had significantly less bone loss in their hips in a year compared to those who didn’t eat the dried fruits. This suggests that prunes can help reduce inflammation in the body, which is a key driver of bone loss. The researchers recruited 235 women for the study. The volunteers had an average age of 62 and had already gone through menopause. The participants were split into three equal groups: One group didn’t consume prunes.Another group consumed at least 50 grams (g) of prunes a day, or four to six pieces daily.The last group consumed 100g of prunes, or 10 to 12 pieces daily.The volunteers ate the “Improved French” prune variety. All of their diet included calcium and vitamin D3 supplements, which can also help prevent bone loss. The research team used scans to measure bone density in the hip, neck and hip socket at the start of the study, after six months and after one year. They found that the hips of the non-eaters had an estimated 1.1 percent loss of bone density a year after the study began. Meanwhile, the bone density of those who consumed four to six prunes a day barely shifted. The result was similar for the group that ate more prunes, but the researchers noted that any protective effect could be masked because of its much higher dropout rate. Blood tests also showed that the women who consumed prunes had significantly lower inflammation levels than those who did not. There was no significant documented difference in bone mass in the spine or hip socket between the groups one year after the study began. Tracing tomatoes’ health benefits to gut microbesOhio State University, November 7, 2022 Two weeks of eating a diet heavy in tomatoes increased the diversity of gut microbes and altered gut bacteria toward a more favorable profile in young pigs, researchers found. After observing these results with a short-term intervention, the research team plans to progress to similar studies in people, looking for health-related links between tomatoes in the diet and changes to the human gut microbiome – the community of microorganisms living in the gastrointestinal tract. “It’s possible that tomatoes impart benefits through their modulation of the gut microbiome,” said senior author Jessica Cooperstone, assistant professor at The Ohio State University. The tomatoes used in the study were developed by Ohio State plant breeder, tand co-author David Francis, and are the type typically found in canned tomato products. Ten recently weaned control pigs were fed a standard diet and 10 pigs were fed the standard diet fine-tuned so that 10% of the food consisted of a freeze-dried powder made from the tomatoes. Fiber, sugar, protein, fat and calories were identical for both diets. The control and study pig populations lived separately, and researchers running the study minimized their time spent with the pigs – a series of precautions designed to ensure that any microbiome changes seen with the study diet could be attributed to chemical compounds in the tomatoes. Results showed two main changes in the microbiomes of pigs fed the tomato-heavy diet – the diversity of microbe species in their guts increased, and the concentrati