@Teghead Seems a little presumtuous to suggest I am saying people are sick
for marketing/ideological needs. When i help people i get paid yes.
Ideologically i like to help sick people because if gives me satisfaction
and a living. But people dont come to me to find out if they are well or
not - they know they are not when they search for my number! They dont care
about the rest of the population. Also in europe life time risk of cancer
in 1900 ~ 2% now its ~ 50% - controlling for age. Sick pop.
@Teghead You are excused by all means I had the same dogmatic response.
However, life expectancy in some parts of the states is falling PLoS
Medicine: published 22 Apr 2008 10.1371/journal.pmed.0050066. Save for
calorific nutrition we are most certianly eating the poorest nutrition we
have for years. Sexual infectious disease are increasing, along with their
influences on comorbidity with heart disease and certain cancers and oter
chronic inflammatory conditions. But yes infant mortality down
@firefly4772 No sorry that dosn't make any sense, because nerves are
nothing like rubber bands, they don't stretch and even if they did it'd
have nothing to do with how they work.. I'm pretty flummoxed by this,
because I can't find any reference to these kinds of reactions to metal
crowns anywhere, apart from AltMed youtube videos... but I'd be flying in
the face of Occam's razor to say this video was a hoax, it seems pretty
genuine. I'd want more solid evidence to believe the crowns causedit
Here are some facts: millions of crowns have been placed on people's teeth.
If every person, or a large number of people would suddenly have physical
problems then it would be obvious that dental crowns are a serious concern
for your health.10% of people are allergic to nickel, a metal which is
sometimes used by CHEAP dentists and dental labs, found in NON PRECIOUS
PORCELAIN FUSED TO METAL CROWNS. All high nobel alloys and semi-precious
alloys do not have this allergenic nickel material.
yes millions of people have crowns. millions of people also thought smoking
was good for you. the romans thought led was fine for their water piping
needs. We are the sickest the population has ever been. So when you say it
would be obvious if dental crowns are a serious concern - yes i think it is
obvious - isnt it? the problem is people dont look for the obvious most of
the time. How many people drove your car before and after you bought your
car - bet it didnt seem the same number :)
Sceptical as i am i decided to screen all my chronic long term patients
with musculoskeletal pain and dysfunction, and found a handful that did
indeed have reproducible objective weakness that was negated by pressure
over the tooth with fillings. I even got two colleges i work with to assess
the patient blinded from the aim or my outcome, so suprised was I. Both
doctors found the same findings of weakness and even when blinded from the
intervention found the same increase in strength.
@siking1962 " I haven't asked the ADA but I can predict their response."
Isn't that a bit cynical? Who knows, if you were to contact them with a
series of well-documented case studies (such things are published in
medical journals occaisionally), they might fund some research elsewhere,
providing you and us and everyone with answers. You could pull the absence
of evidence card on them and challenge them to disprove the causal
relationship, rather than remaining in the unproven limbo.
Also, some dental labs outsource their work to other countried who add LEAD
to the crowns. This can totally cause serious problems!!! Solution: ask
your dentist if he uses high noble alloy for your porcelain fused to metal
crowns, or ask him to make a non-metal zirconia crown. Also ask him if the
dental work is made in USA and make sure the dental lab sends a report of
the type of metals placed into your crowns. Properly done dental crowns
work extremly well, don't get swaid by this!
@rhodesdarcy Well if you are selective about what time period you're
refering to, and selective (or vague) about what constitutes malnutrition,
then maybe you can make the stats fit the idea that "we are the sickest the
population has ever been"; but I don't think that is a justified statement.
And to say thus, dental crowns -> this condition is 'obvious' is also the
kinda thing you ought to be incredulous about. Causal relationships are
hard to find and proove, and easy to imagine!
That's fine. Obviously, in many people's minds nothing is true until it's
puslished but with up to 40% of medical journal articles writen by ghost
writers for pharmaceutical companies, I prefer to see the evidence for
myself. If you wish to contact me off Youtube, I can put you in touch with
the dentist who has worked with me on most of these cases. I'm glad we're
both seeking the truth to help our patients. Let me know what you would
consider convincing evidence.
@Teghead infectious disease i would agree with you, life expectancy
actually no....infant mortality has gone down so the over all average
shoots up massively, but if you look at life expentacy of people who
wouldnt have died in infancy then in the last decade its gone down.
Malnutrition really is terrible look at all the chronic inflammatory
diseases that plague our health care that are in general are nutritional in
origin. And i have no marketing needs.
Nope, statistics require clinical trials which I don't have the ability to
fund. Based on over 700 metal removal observations I recommend no new metal
in the mouth and removal of metal proven to cause proprioceptive irritation
(muscle weakness) but do not recommend wholesale metal removal. No, if I
was a dentist, trained to believe that all I needed to do was fix teeth, I
could never have discovered this. Likewise if I was a doctor. I am a
chiropractor.
Clinical trials are a technology. They are useful to determine the best
treatments for a population but of no use to decide the best treatment for
any individual. Your faith in dental suppliers is mind-boggling. Where are
the tests for amalgam safety. Dentists can shove anything in your mouth.
When you get sick you go to the doctor who never looks in your mouth and
dentists never accept responsibility for your illness.
Beyoncé - BEYONCE - 01. Pretty Hurts (Audio)
[Verse 1] Mama said, you're a pretty girl What's in your head it doesn't matter Brush your hair, fix your teeth What you wear is all that matters [Pre-Chorus] Just ...
+Yourichi San Personally I think this song is different - messages are given out saying that being ugly is upsetting and it's depressing, although the message is correct and many people relate to it. But Bey is saying here that it's not just "ugly" people who hurt. And even if this album isn't exactly "memorable", she still has four previous ones that are, so she'll still be known in 50 years. I dunno, I love this song and its lyrics. Maybe the chord progression and drum beat is standard for a pop song, but then again I don't really listen to pop so I wouldn't exactly know if it is cliché.
+Kayleigh Middleton i disagree, i can think of a lot of songs with a similar message. that wasnt even what i was reffering to though, i think the drum beat, the chord progression and the vocals are super standard for a pop song. i feel like beyonce really wants to be an artist that will be remembered in 50 years but like, idk with music like this she just seems to sink back into the mix, she doesnt stand out. this song isnt bad, just not good either
This song is about loving yourself and being happy in your own skin. Mediocre? Really? Cliché? What, so it's cliché to make a song about society's standards? No. It's not.