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London, Ontario

NEWSLETTER
1
August 2014 Volume 10 Issue 08
London Seventh Day Adventist Church, 805 Shelborne Street, London, Ontario N5Z 5C6 Canada, 519.680.1965
Continue page 2

In This Issue
Ecumenism....1

6.5 Notable Facts From the Geneva
Health Conference.....3

$100 Million Gift for Loma Linda's
$1.2 Billion Expansion......4

New Trans European Division Presi-
dent Nominated..4

2nd Global Conference on Health
and Lifestyle....5

christianity today news briefs..6

Essential Tremor and Diet..7

CHIP Fall program 2014..8

Western District schedule of speak-
ers, August..8
On June 24, 2014, Kenneth Copeland, along with James and Betty
Robison and other evangelical church leaders, met with the Pope in Rome
at the Popes request. The visit was a response to the unity appeal made
earlier this year January 21 in Texas (reported in the April issue of this
newsletter). On June 30, 2014, Kenneth Copeland explained to his Partners
and Friends at the Southwest Believers Convention the significance of this
meeting as the fulfilment of Jesus prayer for unity (John 17; and Ephesians
4;1-3).
Besides Copeland there were other prominent Evangelical ministers in
this delegation to Rome, meeting privately for the three hours private lunch-
eon with Pope Francis. James and Betty Robison, co-hosts of the Life To-
day television program; Reverend Geoff Tunnicliff, CEO of the World Evan-
gelical Alliance; Rev. Brian Stiller and Rev. Thomas Schirrmacher, also from
the World Evangelical Alliance; and Rev. John Arnott and his wife, Carol, co-
founders of Partners for Harvest ministries in Toronto, Canada.
In his written statement released after the Papal meeting, Mr. Robison
said he was blessed to be part of perhaps an unprecedented moment be-
tween evangelicals and the Catholic Pope.
Continue page 7
Essential Tremor
and Diet
By Dr. Michael Greger M.D.
Nutrition Facts












Neurotoxins in chicken, such as the beta
-carboline alkaloid harman, may explain
the link between meat consumption and
hand tremor, the most common move-
ment disorder.
Continue on page 3.
Evangelical Christian leaders meeting
Ecumenism
He described the Protestant delega-
tions private meeting with the leader of
the Roman Catholic Church as an inti-
mate circle of prayerful discussion and
lunch to discuss not only seeing















Jesus prayer answered, but that
every believer would become a bold, joy
-filled witnesses for Christ.
In describing the ecumenical gath-
ering as a miracle, Mr. Robison said,












This is something God has done.
God wants his arms around the world.
And he wants Christians to put his arms
around the world by working together.
Mr. Robison, whose ministry digs
water wells and supplies food for impov-
erished people in third-world nations,
recounted that he was christened as a
fatherless boy in an Episcopal Church.
As an adult, he joined the Southern
Baptist Church. In the 1980s, he be-
came one of the first prominent South-
ern Baptist ministers to openly proclaim
he had received the baptism of the Holy
Spirit. Aware that the meeting with the
Pope will be troublesome among
staunch Protestants, Mr. Robison said
he and the other visiting Evangelical
Christian leaders talked about diversity
and their belief that Roman Catholics
and Protestants could work together
without compromising their beliefs.
The world is suffering, said Robi-
son. We as Christians have too much
love to share without fighting one anoth-
er.
Mr. Robison said he and other
respected Evangelical leaders and
Spirit-filled Catholics began meeting
together to pray for Gods will to be
done and to bring true believers togeth-
er in supernatural unity.We have
been commanded to love God with all of
our heart and our neighbors as our-
selves. The enemy has kept many
Christians from loving one another as
Christ loves us and have failed to recog-
nize the importance of supernatural uni-
ty even with all of the unique diversity.
These meetings were organized by
Tony Palmer, an ordained bishop in the
Communion of Evangelical Episcopal
Churches, a break-away alliance of
charismatic Anglican-Episcopal church-
es. He developed a friendship with
Pope Francis when the future Roman
Pontiff was a Catholic official in Argenti-
na. He also served as the director of
the Kenneth Copeland Ministries' office
in South Africa. He married to an Italian
Roman Catholic woman and moved to
Italy where he began working to recon-
cile Roman Catholics and Protestants.
He was famous for his appeal to
Protestants: Luthers protest is over. Is
yours?
Tony Palmer, died in a motorcycle
accident in the U.K. on July 20. He was
scheduled to be with Pope Francis in
Caserta, Italy on July 28, for a visit with
another evangelical protestant Christian
friend, Rev. Giovanni Traettino of the
Evangelical Church of Reconciliation.
The question on the minds of many is
who will continue this work of ecumeni-
cal reconciliation. For it will continue as
prophetically predicted in the 19
th
centu-
ry by the author of Great Controversy
series, Ellwn G. White Protestantism
will yet stretch her hand across the
gulf to grasp the hand of Spiritualism;
she will reach over the abyss to clasp
hands with the Roman power; and un-
der the influence of this threefold un-
ion, our country will follow in the steps
of Rome in trampling on the rights of
conscience. (Spirit of Prophecy, Vol.4,
p.405).




6.5 Notable Facts
From the Geneva
Health Conference
(Reprint from the Adventist review)
July 11, 2014

As you may imagine, a major confer-
ence packed with Adventist leaders and
health professionals is bound to pro-
duce a mind-numbing array of statistics.
The ongoing Global Conference on
Health and Lifestyle is no exception. But
many of the 1,150 participants at the
weeklong conference in Geneva, Swit-
zerland, seemed to find the presenta-
tions largely interesting, despite the oc-
casional flurry of facts that made some
scratch their heads. Here are 6.5 nota-
ble facts that we learned this week.
1. All Americans may be fat one
day.







A senior official from the Pan-American
Health Organization surprised confer-
ence attendees on Tuesday by saying
that Mexico has beaten the U.S. as the
fattest country in the world. But the U.S.
could make a comeback, a doctor said
Thursday.
2 This Newsletter is produced by the Communication department of the London Seventh-day Adventist Church
Continued from page 1.
Kenneth Copeland met with the Pope.
This Newsletter is produced by the Communication department , Email: newsletter@adventistontario.ca 3
Americans are eating so much today that every single one
of them will be overweight by 2045, said Albert Reece,
dean of the School of Medicine at University of Maryland.
Thats right. One hundred percent of Americans will be
overweight in 30 years unless action is taken to reverse
current eating habits. But it gets worse. If nothing changes,
Reece said, 100 percent of Americans will be obese by
2100.

2. Pizza is a vegetable.

Who needs broccoli?.
Kevin Jackson, president
of Adventist-owned Sani-
tarium Foods in Australia,
provoked looks of disbe-
lief on Wednesday when
he declared that the U.S.
government regulates
pizza as a vegetable.
Jackson got it right. But
the story is a bit more nuanced. U.S. lawmakers agreed
several years ago that a single-serving pizza would count
as a vegetable on the daily nutrition chart. The decision
was made during a debate on how to make school lunches
healthier.
The proof that pizza is a vegetable? Two tablespoons of
tomato sauce slathered across the top of each crust.

3. Medicine could be worse.
Having to swallow medicine may
make us want to wrinkle our nos-
es. But our lives are much better
than those of our poor relatives
just a century ago.
Gerald Winslow, vice president
for mission and culture at Loma
Linda University Medical Center,
dug up several alarming exam-
ples of medicine from the turn of
the last century. He showed photos of a bottle of a teething
syrup for babies whose curing ingredients included alcohol
and a drop of morphine, as well as a bottle Bayer aspirin
standing beside a Bayer bottle labeled Heroin.
The company made tens of millions of dollars on heroin,
Winslow said. Suddenly modern-day cough syrup doesnt
seem so bad.
4. A calorie is not always a calorie.
A highly stressed woman
with poor dietary practices
has a higher chance of suf-
fering from poor health than
a woman with low stress and
the same diet, said David
Williams, a professor of pub-
lic health and sociology at
Harvard University. We used to think that a calorie is just a
calorie, Williams said. Its not. Still, he said, Adventists
needed to take a second look at their meals, including what
they ate at church and in school. How do we promote
healthy eating at every potluck and in every school cafete-
ria? he said.
5. Some facts must remain unsaid.
Some fascinating news must remain
untold at the request of Gary Fraser,
principal investigator of the widely
acclaimed Adventist Health Study 2
that shows the benefits of a plant-
based diet.
Fraser, a professsor at the Loma
Linda University School of Public
Health, told the conference from the
start of his speech Wednesday that no one could share or
republish his latest findings. Every slide he used in his
PowerPoint presentation included the caveat: Not for re-
publication. Fraser apologetically explained that if his re-
search were leaked, no scientific journal would publish the
findings once they were finalized.
6. Negative emotions can cause mental disorders.

Nobody likes a Negative
Nancy. But it seems that
people with bad attitudes
also develop mental disor-
ders.
Shekhar Saxena, director of
the department of mental
health and substance abuse
at the World Health Organization, cautioned in a speech
Thursday that mental disorders already account for 10 per-
cent of all diseases and a third of all disabilities. While re-
search is ongoing into their causes, scientists have found
that a positive mindset can keep the brain healthy.
Negative emotions give rise to mental disorders, Saxena
said. After the speech, conference host Peter Landless
drew groans by opining from the lectern: Its almost a plati-
tude to say we need to develop an attitude of gratitude.
6.5. Exercise = baldness.
If attendees took every-
thing that Landless said at
face value, they might
leave the conference be-
lieving that exercise has a
nasty side affect: bald-
ness.
Continue on page 4.

Delbert Baker, a vice president of the
Adventist Church, drew applause on
Wednesday by doing 50 push-ups and
50 sit-ups onstage. Baker, with sweat
glistening on his shaven head, then
urged the audience to engage in regu-
lar exercise.
After Baker returned to his seat, Land-
less, whose own hairline is receding,
declared from the lectern: If you look
at Dr. Baker and myself, youll see that
the more exercise you get, the less
hair you have.

$100 Million Gift
for Loma Linda's
$1.2 Billion Expan-
sion

A record-breaking $100 million gift
to Loma Linda University Health was
announced this week the largest
single gift toward the biggest expan-
sion in Loma Linda's history, dubbed
Vision 2020. The $1.2 billion strategy
will include a new 100-bed children's
hospital tower, a new 276-bed adult
medical center, and a new hub for re-
search and the Wholeness Institute.
The official announcement of the
initiative was made this week in a cel-
ebration attended by more than 2,000
people.
The pledge from Dennis and Carol
Troesh, long-time Riverside, Califor-
nia, residents and business leaders,
brings the total raised so far for Vision
2020 to $149 million, Loma Linda's
press releaseabout the event said.
The $100 million gift, believed to
be the largest single-gift commitment
to health care in the history of the In-
land Empire, provides the cornerstone
for the transformation of Loma Linda
University Health, the release said.
In the 1970s, Dennis Troesh
founded Robertsons Ready Mix,
growing the company into one of the
largest ready-mix and construction
aggregate operations in the western
United States. Writing under the name
of C.A. Hartnell, Carol Troesh has au-
thored four historical fiction books for
children. In 2013, she received the
Moms Choice Silver Award for excel-
lence in family friendly media produtcs
and services. Both are active mem-
bers and supporters of Loma Linda
University Childrens Hospital Founda-
tion Board.
In addition to funding from private
gifts, like the gift from the Troesh fami-
ly, funding for Vision 2020 projects will
come from federal, state, and local
funds; fund raising efforts; and loans.



New Trans European
Division President
Nominated
Raafat Kamal, the field secretary
and assistant to the president of the
Trans European Division, based in St
Albans, United Kingdom. He has been
nominated to serve as the new presi-
dent of the Division in a meeting of the
Division Executive Committee with
General Conference President Ted
N.C. Wilson on June 27. The nomina-
tion was approved on July 10 at a
meeting of the General Conference
Administrative Committee.
Kamal will step into the position
held by Bertil Wiklander (68), who af-
ter nineteen-year tenure (serving since
1995) as the longest serving president
of the TED, decided to retire to Swe-
den, his home country, effective Au-
gust 1.
Kamal is the former executive di-
rector of ADRA UK and ADRA Trans
Europe. With five masters degrees,
including one in education, Kamal has
served the church as an educator in
Norway, and in Pakistan and the Unit-
ed Kingdom in humanitarian aid work.
I am delighted with the choice of
my successor, Wiklander said. We
have worked closely together for sev-
eral years, and I know him as deeply
committed to the church, its message
and mission. . . He combines a brilliant
mind with extraordinary humility. I
know his great burden is to see the
church grow in Europe.
Raafat Kamal, 50, was born in Leba-
non, and holds two bachelor degrees
in business and theology as well as
four masters, in systematic theology,
educational administration courses,
theology and Islamic philosophy and
management. He married Heidi Ken-
del, a Norwegian and a nurse by pro-
fession in 1987, and they had two
daughters.
Reorganized for the seventh time
in 2012 after several areas of the
world, including the Middle East Mis-
sion, South Sudan, Pakistan, and Af-
ghanistan were removed from its juris-
diction in 2011, the Trans European
Division still includes 22 countries
(Albania, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croa-
tia, Denmark, Estonia, Faeroe Islands,
Finland, Greece, Greenland, Hungary,
Iceland, Ireland, Latvia, Lithuania,
Montenegro, Netherlands, Norway,
Poland, Serbia, Slovenia, Sweden,
Macedonia, United Kingdom, southern
part of Cyprus) in which there are
1,166 churches. Europe, the conti-
nent that gave birth to the Protestant
Reformation in 1517, now has become
a mission field, for the first time in a
thousand years said Kamal in an in-
terview. This has important implica-
tions for Adventists, who represent
only 0.01% of the 203 million people
living on this territory, making it 1 per
2,414 people ratio.
This Newsletter is produced by the Communication department of the London Seventh-day Adventist Church
4
Continued from page 3.
Loma Linda University
Raafat Kamal
5 This Newsletter is produced by the Communication department , Email: newsletter@adventistontario.ca

2
nd
Global Conference
on Health and Lifestyle

July 7-12 ,150 Adventists Descend on Geneva, Switzer-
land, for a weeklong conference that aims to create a com-
munity health center in every Seventh-day Adventist
church around the world. Conference opened with ple-
nary speeches by Anselm Hennis, a senior official with the
Pan-American Health Organization, and world church Presi-
dent Ted N.C. Wilson. The conference, titled Non-
Communicable Diseases: Lifelong Lifestyle and Prevention,
Accessible to All, is the second of its kind after an inaugural
forum was held in Geneva in 2009.
Non-communicable diseases which cannot be
passed from person to person and include heart disease,
cancer, respiratory disease and diabetes kill more than
36 million people every year, according to the World Health
Organization. The diseases are largely preventable, with
their roots in tobacco, alcohol, lack of exercise and poor
diet.
This is where the Adventist church has an opportunity to
share its 150-year-old teachings about a healthy diet and
lifestyle to people both in and out of the church. Ellen White
made it clear that the health message was given not only so
we could live longer; as it would just make people longer
living sinners, but to make us fit for service. An Adventist
living a healthy lifestyle is the best possible example to his
or her neighbors.
Anselm Hennis, a senior official with the Pan-American
Health Organization said Mexico passed the U.S. as the
fattest country in the world last year. He added that it was
no coincidence that Mexicans are the worlds biggest con-
sumers of sugary beverages, drinking an average of 163
liters per person annually compared to U.S. citizens in sec-
ond place at 118 liters. But Mexico is taking the global lead
in adopting laws meant to regulate better health, introducing
an 8 percent tax on junk food and a 1 peso per liter tax on
soft drinks in January 2014, he said.

The 1 peso tax alone is expected to reduce soft drink
consumption by 5 percent. However, government regula-
tions were not enough! The outreach, the advocacy, the
mission of our Adventist church is set to do a better job at
changing lives, making the healthy choice.
Among the new initiatives was launch of the Breathe-
Free 2, a New Stop-Smoking Program. Dr. Alan Handy-
sides said many people who quit only succeed after seven
to 10 attempts, and thats why it is important to create a
place where they can smoke outside church.It is my goal
that every one of our churches will reach the point where
they have smoking sections outside the church, he said.
People should be able to feel comfortable coming to a Sev-
enth-day Adventist Church as a smoker.
Were not wanting them to be a smoker, he said. But
we should accept them right where theyre at, and be ready
to work with them so that they can change and have a
healthier lifestyle.

The church that Handysides attends at Loma Linda Uni-
versity does not have a designated smoking area. Indeed,
the entire campus is smoke-free. Handysides said he un-
derstood that some churches might balk at the idea of
smoking areas, and his proposal, in a sense, was metaphor-
ical. "I'm talking more about an attitude shift in which we
allow smokers to come into church facilities without judg-
ment," he said.

Although rare, it is not unheard of for an Adventist
church to create a designated spot for smokers. For exam-
ple, the New Hope Seventh-day Adventist Church in Fulton,
Maryland, has kept a freestanding ashtray outside its main
entrance for years. A church member said he had never
seen it used since he joined seven years ago, but church
leaders do mention it in a standardized greeting to first-time
visitors, which says in part: We dont want anyone strug-
gling with nicotine addition to feel that they are not wel-
come.

After a presentation For want of a T-bone-steak the
biosphere was lost president Ted Wilson made case for
Vegetarianism during the final Sabbath session.




For more reports visit online:
www.adventistreview.org/geneva-dispatch



Were not wanting them to be a smoker,
6
This Newsletter is produced by the Communication department , Email: newsletter@adventistontario.ca

CHRISTIANITY
TODAY NEWS
BRIEFS

Mosul, Iraq, emp-
ty of Christians
'for the first time
in history'
Published 21 July 2014 | Carey Lodge
An empty house of a Christian
family in Mosul with Arabic writing
that reads, "Long live the Islamic
State in Iraq and the Levant. Mus-
lims are happy with the return of
Mujahideen. God is Greater,".

Mosul, situated in the biblical prov-
ince of Ninevah, is entrenched in
Christian history. The Mosque of the
Prohpet Yunas (Jonah) is thought to
house the scriptural figure's grave,
though a video was released earlier
this month in which Islamic State (IS)
militants are shown attacking the tomb.
The insurgents allegedly disturbed Jo-
nas' remains.
Despite the historical presence of
Christians in Mosul, however, loud-
speakers in mosques throughout the
city reportedly rang out ordering Chris-
tians to leave on Friday, July 18. As
the deadline passed for Christians in
Mosul to either flee the city, convert to
Islam or pay a tax, jizya, for the right to
continue to practice their faith those
who refused to comply risk being killed
by "the sword". Nadim Nassar, a Lon-
don-based Anglican priest from Syria
tweeted shaming Christian West for
watching the horror of the events un-
folding in Iraq and Syria and doing
nothing.
Christian families have been ex-
pelled from their houses and their valu-
ables were stolen and ...their houses
and property expropriated in the name
of the Islamic State. Catholic Patriarch
Louis Raphael Sako led a special
church service in Baghdad on Sunday
"This has never happened in Christian
or Islamic history. Even Genghis Khan
or Hulagu didn't do this."
Led by Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, IS
fighters Sunni Muslims are at-
tempting to found a pan-Islamic state
across a stretch of northern Iraq and
Syria. They now control 35 per cent of
Syria, as well as the Iraqi cities of Mo-
sul, Baiji and Fallujah. It is feared that
the insugents will also soon capture
Baghdad. From 1.5 million Christians
living in Iraq in 2003 there are now
thought to be less than 200,000.



Sudanese Chris-
tian Meriam Ibra-
him's plight
Meriam Ibrahim's family filed an-
other lawsuit against her on Friday in a
continued attempt to keep her from
leaving Sudan. The first lawsuit filed
earlier this week sought to prove the
biological link between Ibrahim and her
Muslim father, but the suit was inexpli-
cably dropped by the family. A
new lawsuit now seeks to annul Ibra-
him's marriage to Christian U.S. citizen
Daniel Wani.
Although she was raised by an
Ethiopian Orthodox Christian mother,
Ibrahim is considered Muslim under
Sharia law because that is the faith of
her estranged father. She was arrested
in January for apostasy and sentenced
to 100 lashes and death after her fami-
ly filed charges against her.
The religious freedom case gar-
nered international attention, and U.S.
Secretary of State John Kerrycon-
demned her sentence. Britain's foreign
office called Ibrahim's sentence
"barbaric," and urged Sudanese
Charge d'Affaires Bukhari Afandi to
overturn her conviction. The United
Nations also condemned her sentence,
and tens of thousands of people
signed petitions on BeHeard-
Project.com, GoPetition.com, and oth-
er activist websites. The sentence was
overturned on appeal on June 23.
Ibrahim, her husband, and their
children, Martin, 21-months-old, and
Maya, two-months-old, tried to leave
the country the day after the appeal
decision, but were arrested at the air-
port for allegedly possessing false trav-
el documents. It is unclear if charges
have been filed in that case. The fami-
ly has been living at the U.S. Embassy
in Khartoum awaiting a release from
the Sudanese government.
An annulment of Wani and Ibra-
him's marriage would also mean Martin
and Maya are not recognized as
Wani's children something the New
Hampshire man feared would happen.
"An illegitimate marriage does not re-
sult in legally recognized offspring,
which means that my son and the new
baby are no longer mine," Wani
told CNN in May. A judge will hear
Ibrahim's family's lawsuit on August 4.
7 This Newsletter is produced by the Communication department , Email: newsletter@adventistontario.ca

Essential
Tremor
and Diet
By Dr. Michael Greger M.D. Nutrition
Facts

As documented in the book The Case
of the Frozen Addicts, a bad batch of
so-called synthetic heroin caused,
within days, what appeared to be ad-
vanced stage Parkinsons disease.
Thanks to a chemical contaminant
called MPTP, young men and women
were left trapped inside their bodies,
near complete immobility and rigidity,
in some cases left only able to move
their eyes.
The seminal paper ended with the
silver lining that maybe this will help
us find the culprit in Parkinsons, may-
be theres a similar substance out
there killing off our brain cells. Be-
cause of their structural similarity to
MPTP, attention turned to a class of
chemicals called beta-carboline alka-
loids such as Harman, also spelled
harmane. And indeed higher levels of
these toxins are found in the brain
fluid of Parkinsons patients.
These beta-carboline neurotoxins
have been implicated in a number of
human diseases aside from Parkin-
sons disease, including tremor, ad-
diction, and cancer. I've already
talked about the role of diet in both
preventing, and treating Parkinson's,
but the most common movement dis-
order, isn't Parkinson's, it's what's
called "essential tremor," affecting 1
in 25 adults over 40 and up to 1 in 5
of those in their 90's making it one of
the most common neurological dis-
eases. In addition to the potentially
debilitating hand tremor, there can be
other neuropsychiatric manifestations
of the disease including difficulty
walking and various levels of cogni-
tive impairment.
Might those beta-carboline neurotox-
ins play a role? Harmane is one of the
most potent of the tremor-producing
neurotoxins. You expose people to
these chemicals and they develop a
tremor; you take it away, the tremor
disappears. What if we're exposed
long-term?
Well, this recent study found those
with essential tremor have much high-
er levels of this toxin in their blood-
stream compared to those without
tremor. The highest levels are found
in those who have both essential
tremor and cancer, suggesting har-
mane may be playing a role in both
diseases. And the higher the harmane
levels the worse the tremor.
How did they get exposed to these
chemicals? Primarily through meat:
beef, chicken and porkand fish ac-
tually.
So if this potent, tremor-producing
neurotoxin, is concentrated in cooked
muscle foods, is meat consumption
associated with a higher risk of es-
sential tremor? Men who ate the most
meat in this study had 21 times the
odds of essential tremor
Just to put that in context, you go
back to the original studies on smok-
ing and lung cancer, smoking was
only linked to at most 14 times the
odds, not 21.
Yes, harmane is a potent neurotoxin
linked to human diseases, and
cooked meats are the major source of
exposure, but which meat? Like other
heterocyclic amines, the levels may
be highest in chicken.
Blood levels of this neurotoxin may
shoot up within five minutes of eating
meat, a slice of turkey in this case.
Five minutes? Its not even digested
by then. This rapid uptake is indica-
tive of significant absorption directly
through the mouth straight in the
bloodstream, bypassing the stomach
and most importantly, bypassing the
detoxifying enzymes of the liver. This
may lead to higher exposure levels in
peripheral organs, like the brain.
Due to its high fat solubility, harmane
accumulates in brain tissue, and us-
ing a fancy brain scan called proton
magnetic resonance spectroscopic
imaging, higher harmane levels are
linked to greater metabolic dysfunc-
tion in the brains of essential tremor
sufferers.
Harmane is also found in certain heat-
ed plants, like tobacco. A broiled
chicken breast has about 13 mi-
crograms, and cigarettes average
about 1, so a half pack of cigarettes
could expose us to almost as much of
this neurotoxin as a serving of chick-
en.
Grilled salmon can have as much as
chicken, though fried pork appears to
be the worst, with fried reindeer not
far behind in the top five. Id also sug-
gest not eating too many butterflies.
Harman is created when tobacco is
burned, and also when coffee beans
are roasted, though coffee intake
has not been tied to increased risk
(and neither has tobacco for that mat-
ter), so it may be something else in
the meat thats to blame for the
2,000% increase in odds for this disa-
bling brain disease.
Adventist London SDA
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