So doctors, nutritionists, health advocates, trainers, dietitians, etc. all claim the same stuff and we are all wrong?
The only people claiming otherwise are fat people. At the same time they have diabetes, low testosterone, heart problems, etc. Yet they just continue to stuff their fat face, breed more fat children, and speak non-sense.
It's like me saying to provide concrete evidence that being overweight does not cause these things. You can't so technically you cannot disprove our "theory".
Here, right from your sciencedaily site which you admire so greatly.
Male obesity linked to low testosterone levels, study shows -- ScienceDaily
Go step on an elliptical now.
Male obesity linked to low testosterone levels, study shows -- ScienceDaily
Go step on an elliptical now.
According to mac fat ass here they would have had the disease anyways, regardless of spiking their insulin levels through the roof 24/7 to the point where their insulin level's are so fu**** that they cannot produce enough of it anymore.
So ya, you can pretty much eat 19 king size snicker bars a day with ZERO side effects, other than weight gain. Anything else, nope, not the side effect of weight gain, you were pretty much genetically "predisposed" to this in the first place.
So ya, you can pretty much eat 19 king size snicker bars a day with ZERO side effects, other than weight gain. Anything else, nope, not the side effect of weight gain, you were pretty much genetically "predisposed" to this in the first place.
Also, that's the last study I am going to post for this deep breathing sweaty forehead human water balloon.
Results of a study published online ahead of print in the journal Diabetes Care, conducted by University at Buffalo endocrinologists, showed that 40 percent of obese participants involved in the Hypogonadism in Males (HIM) study had lower-than-normal testosterone readings.
The percentage rose to 50 percent among obese men with diabetes. Results also revealed that as body mass index (BMI) -- a relationship of weight-to-height -- increased, testosterone levels fell.
"The effect of diabetes on lowering testosterone levels was similar to that of a weight gain of approximately 20 pounds,"
The percentage rose to 50 percent among obese men with diabetes. Results also revealed that as body mass index (BMI) -- a relationship of weight-to-height -- increased, testosterone levels fell.
"The effect of diabetes on lowering testosterone levels was similar to that of a weight gain of approximately 20 pounds,"
If you can't accept it, then you are just in pure denial. Yet at the same time I doubt you can walk up a flight of stairs without the bridge of your nose having a couple shiny sweat drops when you reached the top. Pretty healthy bro...
That doesn't seem like a claim at all to me.
Anway check out dr. Neal Barnards work for some info in that.
He has video's too since you seem to have difficulty reading.
Anway check out dr. Neal Barnards work for some info in that.
He has video's too since you seem to have difficulty reading.