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It was perfectly fine for a cholesterol of 300. We considered a cholesterol level of 350 perfectly fine. What are you told today? It can't go over 190. What do they want you down to? 150? Do you know the fattiest organ in the body is the brain? And cholesterol is used to protect the brain against chemicals, heavy metals. The cholesterol lowering medication, its side effect is dementia, muscle wasting, Alzheimer's, breast cancer, vitamin D deficiency because our sex hormones are made from cholesterol. And if we don't have enough vitamin D, we can't get the minerals into our bones to have strong bones. So what do we got now? Osteoporosis. Framingham Heart Study been going for forty years, set up to prove that cholesterol causes heart disease still hasn't forty years later. But you know what it did show? People with high cholesterol levels don't get Alzheimer's.

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Cholesterol happens to be one of the most important things in your body. I can assure you, and I can prove it from the scientific literature in cardiology, that everything that you hear in the advertisements for lowering cholesterol is fraudulent. Cholesterol betcha. 25 to 30% of the brain's made out of cholesterol. How many people need brains? Nobody in politics. They talk about the cholesterol in the arteries. Yeah, that's been studied. What does it turn out to be? 1.5% of the plaque is fat, and of that, point 5% is cholesterol. 90% of it's calcium. So where's the problem? Calcium or cholesterol? Calcium. You bet.

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Cholesterol is not linked to heart disease. Ancel Keys, a researcher, committed scientific fraud by falsely claiming a connection between cholesterol and cardiovascular disease. Despite evidence of this fraud, cardiologists and primary care physicians continue to prescribe statins based on outdated guidelines due to malpractice concerns. In the past, cholesterol levels of 300-350 were considered normal, and people were generally healthier without the focus on cholesterol management. The real cause of cardiovascular disease is damage to the glycocalyx, a crucial but often overlooked organ in the body.

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"Fat, saturated fat and cholesterol are all very healthy things." "Your brain is 25% made of cholesterol." "So imagine blocking cholesterol production in your brain." "What do you think that's going to do, gentlemen?" "Ansel Keys himself started by saying if you eat cholesterol, your cholesterol level will go up." "He did experiments on humans and fed them 10 eggs a day or something." "And what he found is it had absolutely no impact on their blood cholesterol level." "None." "For every one millimole fall in your cholesterol level, the rate of heart disease death went up twenty percent." "Cholesterol is a molecule." "It's found in human beings, so it's hugely important substance in our bodies."

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People with high cholesterol levels purportedly don't get Alzheimer's because the brain loves fat. A good cholesterol level is suggested to be 200-250. It's claimed that many people are on cholesterol-lowering medication and fat-free diets, leading to increased carb consumption due to a lack of satiation. The speaker alleges cholesterol levels have been lowered to get more people on medication and that people are eating margarine. Despite these changes, heart disease is purportedly still the number one killer.

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Alzheimer's disease is caused by the loss of myelin in the brain, leading to memory issues. Myelin, which makes up 75% of the brain weight, is 100% cholesterol. Avoiding cholesterol-rich foods can worsen the condition. If blood cholesterol levels remain high, cholesterol-lowering drugs may be prescribed, potentially exacerbating memory problems. Maintaining myelin in the brain is crucial for memory function.

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Cholesterol is not inherently bad; it's produced by the body and is crucial for nerve sheaths, cell membranes, hormone production (estrogen, progesterone, testosterone), and brain function. The idea that abnormal cholesterol levels are primarily caused by fat, especially saturated fat, is a myth. A recent review in the European Journal of Cardiology challenges the notion of saturated fat as the primary culprit. While saturated fat may be problematic for some individuals, and genetic factors can contribute to cholesterol issues, fat is not the universal cause of cholesterol problems.

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40 years ago, a cholesterol level of 300 was considered fine, but now it's not. Cholesterol protects the brain and is crucial for hormone production. Medications that lower cholesterol can lead to dementia, muscle loss, and other health issues. The Framingham Heart Study aimed to link cholesterol to heart disease but found no connection after 40 years. Surprisingly, high cholesterol levels may protect against Alzheimer's.

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Cholesterol is not dangerous and is needed by the body as an antioxidant and for hormone production, especially LDL cholesterol. There is no bad cholesterol, only what we do to it. 25% of the body's cholesterol is in the brain, which is 60% fat. Lowering cholesterol can increase the risk of heart problems and depression, and numbers under 300 are not dangerous. LDL cholesterol is used to make hormones and is only bad when high carbohydrate intake causes LDL particles to become small and dense. Small dense particles can lodge in arterial walls, while light fluffy particles do not. A healthy diet of moderate protein and higher fat will result in light fluffy LDL particles. When told to lower cholesterol, it's important to know if it's HDL or LDL and whether the LDL is small dense or light fluffy.

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People with high cholesterol levels don't get Alzheimer's because the brain loves fat. A good cholesterol level is probably around 200-250. However, many people are now on cholesterol-lowering medication and fat-free diets, which leads to overconsumption of carbs. This is done to lower cholesterol levels and increase the number of people on medication. Additionally, people are eating margarine instead of fats. Unfortunately, these measures have not reduced heart disease, which remains the number one killer.

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- You do not die of too much cholesterol. You die of not enough. I will say this one more time. You do not die of too much cholesterol. There is no such thing as too much cholesterol. - You die only from not enough because we know only cholesterol builds healthy cells. Every single cell in your system, 87% of the new cell is built from cholesterol. It's completely artificially made up. I have patients that have cholesterol of 600. They're the healthiest people, never been sick. - Statin drugs are dangerous, and please remember your brain is built from cholesterol. Ninety ninety two to 99% of the brain is built from cholesterol. The brain shrinks first. With every statin drug, you start shrinking your brain. And this is what people need to understand. - It's mass murder. It always leads to hardening of the liver. It always cuts off at least twenty years of your lifespan.

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Speaker 0 argues that forty years ago a cholesterol level of 300 was perfectly fine, and suggests that it is perfectly fine today, contrasting this with the contemporary view that you can’t go above 190. He asks what happens if you go above 190, saying you’re told you’ve got to go on cholesterol-lowering medication. He lists alleged side effects of cholesterol-lowering medication: Alzheimer’s, dementia, muscle wasting, memory loss, and adds that a new one is breast issues because sex hormones are made from cholesterol. He references the Framingham Heart Study, claiming it was a study put together "to prove that cholesterol causes heart disease." He asserts that even forty years later the study hasn’t proven that cholesterol causes heart disease, but claims it did show that people with high cholesterol levels don’t get Alzheimer’s. He explains his reasoning by stating that the brain is the fattiest organ in the body and loves fat as fuel, and that depriving the brain of fat is a disaster. He then presents a scenario: if someone is on a fat-free diet while taking cholesterol-lowering medication, has a mouthful of mercury fillings because mercury damages the myelin sheath, and is also eating fish every day, that combination is, in his view, a recipe for brain destruction. He concludes with a directive: if you are on cholesterol-lowering medication, you can stop immediately. He warns that there will be a side effect, namely that your memory will return. He ends with an exhortation to not simply believe what he says and to search it out.

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The most dangerous idea in history is the claim that cholesterol causes heart attacks, which is false and unproven. Cholesterol is essential to animal life and present in every cell membrane; without enough cholesterol, cells die. Humans have historically consumed animal fats, but were told to stop, assuming experts knew best, which was a mistake.

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Statin drugs are considered mass murder and always lead to hardening of the liver, cutting off at least twenty years of lifespan. The claim is that you do not die of too much cholesterol, but from not enough, as cholesterol is essential for building healthy cells. The idea that 250 is the ideal cholesterol level was made up without scientific basis, based on testing people with poor diets. Some patients with cholesterol levels of 600 are healthy and have never been sick. Statin drugs are the most dangerous, useless drugs ever invented. Statin drugs shrink the brain because 92-99% of the brain is built from cholesterol.

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Eating a diet high in cholesterol is not linked to heart disease, contrary to common belief. Cholesterol is vital for the body, and the idea of good and bad cholesterol is a myth. Statin drugs lower cholesterol by causing liver inflammation, potentially leading to brain issues. The rise in Alzheimer's disease cases correlates with the increase in statin drug prescriptions. It is crucial to prioritize brain health by avoiding statin drugs.

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Alzheimer's disease is a leading cause of death in adults over 65 in the US. It is characterized by the deterioration of myelin, the brain's insulation material, which makes up 75% of the brain. When myelin breaks down and isn't replaced, nerve fibers become tangled and memory is affected. Myelin is made up of 100% cholesterol, so following a low-cholesterol diet and taking cholesterol-lowering drugs can worsen Alzheimer's symptoms. Maintaining cholesterol levels below 200 is crucial, as higher levels can lead to memory loss and Alzheimer's disease.

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There is a misconception that high cholesterol is linked to heart disease, but this is not true. Research has shown that there is no relationship between the two. Cholesterol is actually important for the body, and the idea of good and bad cholesterol is a myth. HDL carries cholesterol back to the liver, while LDL takes it to parts of the body that need it. The only concern is if cholesterol levels exceed 450, which indicates an imbalance that needs to be addressed. Statin drugs, which lower cholesterol, actually create inflammation in the liver. So, overall, cholesterol is not a problem and is necessary for the body's functioning.

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Cholesterol is not dangerous and is needed by the body as an antioxidant and for hormone production, especially LDL cholesterol. There is no bad cholesterol, only what we do to it. 25% of the body's cholesterol is in the brain, which is 60% fat. Lowering cholesterol can increase the risk of heart problems and depression. Numbers under 300 are not dangerous, despite the recommendation to be under 200. LDL cholesterol is needed to make hormones and is only bad when carbohydrates cause the particles to become small and dense. Processed, refined carbohydrates make LDL particles dangerous. A healthy diet of moderate protein and higher fat will result in light, fluffy LDL particles, which are good. It's important to know if LDL is small and dense or light and fluffy.

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Cholesterol is essential for brain function, liver health, and hormone production. Surprisingly, more people die from heart disease with normal to low cholesterol levels than with high cholesterol. This misconception stems from decades of misinformation and a fear of dietary fat, known as lipophobia. The statin industry profits significantly from this fear, generating over $10 billion last year. Cholesterol is often misinterpreted as the cause of heart disease; however, it actually helps repair damage and reduce inflammation. Therefore, it’s important to embrace dietary fats, including saturated fats and egg yolks, and to reconsider the reliance on statins prescribed by doctors.

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Forty years ago, a cholesterol level of 300 was considered fine, but now anything above 190 requires cholesterol-lowering medication, which can cause Alzheimer's, dementia, muscle wasting, memory loss, and breast cancer. The Framingham Heart Study, intended to prove cholesterol causes heart disease, instead showed that people with high cholesterol don't get Alzheimer's because the brain, the body's fattiest organ, thrives on fat. Depriving the brain of fat is a disaster. If someone is on a fat-free diet, cholesterol-lowering medication, has mercury fillings, and eats fish daily, it's a recipe for brain damage. If you are on cholesterol-lowering medication, you can stop immediately and your memory will return.

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I can't really help someone that's on stabbing drugs. These are the cholesterol meds that came out in 1987 and screwed up an entire generation. Cholesterol is not the problem. If cholesterol was the problem, then heart disease would've went way down, but it hasn't. In fact, heart disease is the number one killer in America. Yet, there's millions and millions of people on statin drugs, which is a cholesterol lowering medication. It directly inflames the liver and creates a cholesterol deficiency. This ultimately leads to brain conditions like Alzheimer's. If you check the stats, it peaked in the nineteen nineties.

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Cholesterol is a nutrient, not a disease, and is essential for sex hormones, steroid hormones like cortisol, vitamin D synthesis, and bile. It is also needed for every cell membrane. In 2015, the American Heart Association said cholesterol is no longer a nutrient of concern and removed the saturated fat cap of 10%. If we don't eat enough cholesterol, our bodies will make it. The true problem in blood work is triglycerides, which can be reduced by dropping carbs, not with drugs. Lowering carbs and triglycerides will improve heart health.

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Statin drugs are considered mass murder and always lead to hardening of the liver, cutting off at least twenty years of lifespan. The claim is that you do not die of too much cholesterol, but from not enough, as cholesterol is essential for building healthy cells. The idea that 250 is the ideal cholesterol level was made up with no scientific basis, based on testing people eating trash. Some patients with cholesterol of 600 are the healthiest people. Statin drugs are the most dangerous, useless drugs ever invented. Statin drugs shrink the brain because 92 to 99% of the brain is built from cholesterol.

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When someone has a heart problem, they are told to stop eating fats because of cholesterol. However, the truth about cholesterol is that the liver produces it according to the body's needs. 80% of the cholesterol made by the liver comes from glucose, while 20% comes from fat. The problem lies in the misconception that it is the butter on the bread that is the issue, when in fact it is the bread itself. There are two main types of cholesterol: HDL, which is considered good because it carries excess cholesterol back to the liver, and LDL, which is considered bad but actually plays a role in repairing and rebuilding. LDL also delivers cholesterol to the brain, which the brain needs. Interestingly, breast milk in the first month of life contains the highest levels of cholesterol.

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Alzheimer's disease is a condition caused by the deterioration of myelin, the insulation material in the brain. This results in tangled nerve fibers that disrupt memory function. Myelin is made up of cholesterol, which is why some people believe that a cholesterol-restricted diet can help prevent Alzheimer's. However, if blood cholesterol levels cannot be lowered through diet, cholesterol-lowering drugs may be prescribed. The speaker suggests that these drugs can potentially lead to memory loss and Alzheimer's disease.
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