Every single day that you eat, if you eat something different, you will have a different microbiome at the end of the day, because bacteria turnover is 20 minutes. They rely on what we send down the pipe. If you eat different things, you'll have a different biome everyday. So whatever day you take that test, you'll have a different result. You eat something, you know, curry chicken, this day, and you send it in you're going to have a different result. You have a vegetarian meal on that day, you're going to have a different result. You're just eating steaks with no seasonings, you're going to have a different result. The microbiome that they've tested in carnivores and in different sorts of people that only eat meat or animal products is actually quite a good profile, very, very diverse. You have all these different sorts of . . . a lot of different bacteria. You're not supposed to have an overgrowth of a few. They seem to be the ones that are correlated with better health. Now, is this because the bacteria themselves play a role in contributing to our health, or is it that what we're eating has a direct has a direct effect on our health and that also has a direct effect on what bacteria are going to be living in our gut? I think he's probably is probably both.
Saturday, April 11, 2026
DR. ANTHONY CHAFFEE: You're not supposed to have an overgrowth of a few [bacteria]. . . . in carnivores, people who only eat meat or animal products, [their microbiome] is actually quite a good profile, very, very diverse [bacteria].
WOW: Doctor talks about autism and Vitamin A connection. "Often in the office...I've had children look at me, talk, act out, and talk back to their mothers." This is fascinating. #MedicalEducation #medicalfreedom #vatimina pic.twitter.com/nJxaoy1wN3
— GoldCare® Health & Wellness (@GoldCare) April 10, 2026
Friday, April 10, 2026
Americans don't really understand the terrible transformation New York City has undergone:
— White Papers Policy Institute (@WhitePapersPol) April 11, 2026
What is now New York City was settled by European Christians 402 years ago. NYC is older than the Russian imperial jewel Saint Petersburg by almost 80 years.
From 1624 to 1980, or 88% of…
Americans don't really understand the terrible transformation New York City has undergone:
What is now New York City was settled by European Christians 402 years ago. NYC is older than the Russian imperial jewel Saint Petersburg by almost 80 years. From 1624 to 1980, or 88% of NYC's existence, a majority of its population were European Christians and their descendants. In fact Whites were 95+% of the city's population until 1930 and 90+% until 1950. Today the American inheritors of those European Christians are perhaps 22-25% of the NYC's population. Now, New York has a Muslim mayor - in fact 23% of all Muslims in the US now live in NYC. Overall 60% of the city's population are first and second generation immigrants, and race-based politics and anti-White animus are mainstream in the city's political, economic, and social life. (see the case of Cea Weaver) The transformation of NYC has effected more than just White Americans, though. Until the 1970s New York City only had one minority above 1% of its population: African Americans, America's other foundational group. Today, though, most Blacks in New York City are not African Americans but instead 55% (over 1 million people) are foreign-born Blacks and their children. As a result of mass immigration many traditional African American neighborhoods and centers of African American culture such as Harlem and Corona are now minority African American and have large Hispanic pluralities or majorities. Perhaps 35% of New York City's current population are the descendants of pre-Hart-Celler Americans (of any race). For comparison Saint Petersburg is 90% Russian and the idea that it would be otherwise is unthinkable. Americans were replaced in their largest city. Americans ought to reclaim their largest city.Cyan Quinn, director of the @WhitePapersPolicy Institute discusses remigration policies and the future of the West.
Harry Robinson speaks with Cyan Quinn, director of the @WhitePapersPolicy Institute to discuss remigration policies and the future of the West.
The White Paper's Policy Institute website: https://whitepaperspolicy.org/
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