tv Documentary RT July 14, 2024 4:30pm-5:01pm EDT
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by the untruths postage, we've seen from the by 4 showed. so russian force is opening up with a tremendous bar. ours protection potentially moving a 100 rockets impacting the china almost simultaneously with those then so a so troops on the bikes as well as an infantry infantry fighting vehicles storming through. right. what i was trying to job through ukrainian position, seemingly unopposed, perhaps because of the off as i mentioned bars. but again, what i was trying that was one of the locations the ukraine captain during its failed counter offensive loss did made a big show. that was one of the few, few things that you great had to show of the expenditure for the waste. all the bits of tens of thousands of its troops during that couch were offensive. but again, the loss of what i was writing is a double blow for you. okay. they made
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a huge show of capturing it. one of the few successes of it failed. 2022 towns were offensive, and now with its loss, is along with the law says a villages and settlements right and left. it is going to be much more difficult for ukraine to show or to, to, to, to convince even its own population. that the boy is going well. well that's the update. now see you again with more stories at the top of the hour by now the the
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i was about to travel to texas. and unfortunately, our entire family had come down and you know, in large families it just travels down from one child to the next to that and this time that was here it, it hung on a little bit longer than the other. so we took her pediatrician and he took a look at her and he said, she's fine. it's just a bad flu this year. don't worry about it. and the next day she got worse. everything had changed with her daughter. she was completely lent. she was having trouble breathing. i called my husband. i was in total panic. when jamie arrived at the or later that morning, one of the charge nurse has to one look is here. it didn't even process paperwork.
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took her out of jamie's arms and we started working on they told me they were ordering medical transport, taking her to the best children's hospital the they did a few tests and pretty quickly they came back and they told jamie, your daughter is having a diabetic ketoacidosis those words meant nothing to me. i never heard it. i didn't know what it meant. my initial reaction is, well, that's fine, but she's not diabetic. and the response to that is what she is now. when you see your child sitting there lifeless, and all the tubes hooked up in the monitor, sleeping all you can think a spring summer season because it's fair bring her back to the
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the word diabetes comes from the ancient greek word for funnel because was so much drinking and urinating a diabetic seemingly funneled out. anything that they drank. the world has been studying the disease ever since. and after all of this time, there is still not an exact noun cause. and there is still no noun tour for type one diabetes. what we know is that for some reason, your body attacks itself, your immune system mistakenly destroys all of the beta cells that make your body's natural insulin leaving you unable to make any diagnosis. type one diabetes. the general guidelines from the diabetes association to the diabetes community is that a person with diabetes does not need to change their diet. as long as they practice
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their recommended method for controlling the disease by counting carbohydrates. imagine with a dose of insulin, the, this fallacy has been perpetuated by major diabetes organizations, pharmaceutical corporations, and foods manufacturer. for profit, for over 50 years, the people have not been told the full truth on how to manage the diabetes and what, what the consequences are partisans, cancer diabetic proofing, or obviously it affects every part and organ system needs to amputations, heart attacks. it decreases the life expectancy on average 11 to 14 years just with a diagnosis alone of type one diabetes. so once somebody is diagnosed the clocks take
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so i think we're going to have some chemistry kids. i'm going to show you the model of the molecule for which substances are made. here we are now, this is a molecule of what substance fairs fucking thing is that really? well, it'd be a kind of a hydrogen called glucose, correct? find the healthy human body is an extremely efficient machine, and it is fueled by the food, the carbohydrates like bread, cereal, and pasta. get broken down in our digestive system and turned into sugar called glucose. that glucose enters our bloodstream and travels throughout the body to provide energy and to ourselves for that's not the whole storage. glucose cannot enter cells on its own instance. when we eat a healthy body,
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increase the appropriate amount of insulin to the glucose. and that insulin is what unlocks the sales for the glucose. without insulin, glucose will stay in the blood, entered in the thick and syrupy damaging internal organs and dehydrating the body, causing starvation. and eventually, dest type one diabetic, don't buy cancel them, they have to add this one for time. i bet it's never the insulin because they're paying for so makes plenty of minutes to diabetics. pay francis heading to work all the time because they're eating are too many carbohydrates in the guy of the i personally, don't even think that type 2 diabetes should be called diabetes. it should be called what it actually is when he has carbohydrate overdose syndrome. one carbohydrate toxicity general so my son dave,
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she was on a really good football team and his playing just dropped off the class. he could barely throw a pass and we didn't know what was wrong. we took him to the doctor's again. the doctor said that he had some kind of flu and it keep, make sure he keeps eating and he'll get better. and she looked like a bag of moms and we took him back to the pediatrician and she finally agreed to do tests. the next day when the test results came in, we got an emergency call from her name needs to immediately reports of the emergency a healthy, non diabetic active fig. get this going to have blood sugars in the eighty's and ninety's. and i would jeff day have a meal that we had been instructed on how to compose from the dietician and within
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a half an hour. his blood sugar would be $280.00. and i went and checked him with insulin to get the blood sugar back down, and with an hour an hour and a half, his blood sugar would be down to 40 milligrams per deciliter, and he'd be feeling here. my numbers were like this all the time. and i just, i wasn't feeling good because i was in low or just sky rocketed it was like a friday night and he finally started to feel like himself again. and we went over to my mom's house and we had a big family dinner. and then that night he woke up at 3 in the morning throwing up and, and he was, he had lost some way. and so i finally, it's like i've had to take him in. so i took him into the are, they admitted him right away. and he had a blood sugar close to 700 and his a wency was 13 somewhere between 13 and 15 at the time.
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those numbers to mean anything to me. i didn't, i didn't know they were really a member watch in the hospital. i remember sleeping for like 2 days, but i woke up and i thought it was like saturday, what is your sunday? my son was diagnosed 5 years ago. his type one diabetes. and for the 1st 3 years after his diagnosis, we floundered the i didn't feel very good at my average blood sugar, then was like 170 and we tried to do everything by the books as we were taught in the hospital. you are always given more insulin giving more sugar, giving more insulin to try and achieve a flat line. and it's, it's not possible. neither of us have type one diabetes in our family medicine jack at the age of 2, he turned to an october and he was diagnosed december of that same year completely
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caught us off guard. we thought maybe he had the flu or some type of viral infection. so we weren't even told what normal blood sugars were. we were sent home with instruction to keep his blood sugar at 150. the he was presumed that he would need a lot of car riders that would require a lot of those one, specifically large doses and very fast acting as one of the after years of research, a small group at the university of toronto was able to isolate insulin by experimenting on a dog's pancreas in 1921. shortly after a patent on insulin was awarded to the group, but they sold it to the university for $1.00. sir frederick advancing one of those scientists justified the $1.00 sail noting insulin belongs to the world,
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not to me. this will lead to the university of toronto, partnering with eli lilly and company to become the 1st to manufacturer and so much as a life saving treatment of diabetes. the today much of the world's insulin production comes from one of 3 companies. eli lilly saying that fee or novo, nor disk, i like to call april garcia and insolent overdose. right? so if you're eating a high car, you need a high dose. eventually you're playing a balancing act between his high car inside those of insulin. and sometimes you roll the dice and you, you hit it, but most of the time you're going to be off one way or the other. you know, this isn't an option on medicine. this isn't a vitamin or something that will help with allergies. this is light saving. if our children don't have insulin, they die. that's what happened to kids. before,
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insulin came around, you did your best to limit carbohydrates, but their blood sugars were high, they wasted away and they died. when i was diagnosed at 9 years old, i remember i was about 35 pounds. if you see any of those pictures that going way back to right before insulin. and then after insulin, you have these kids that were skin and bones. that was me. what i do remember is probably every 15 to 30 minutes, i was drinking 1620 ounces of water. and following that up. but you know, basically cutting it out just as fast. the 2 months after my diagnosis, we got a phone call about this one that she had just been diagnosed and that she needed a foster family. so i followed the diet that they had told me, you know,
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to 6 to 860 cards breakfast, lunch and dinner, take x amount of insulin. and then in between each meal $815.00 carbs was no insulin. and so i thought okay, if i do exactly what they say, even like, i'll have success and i'll have to blood sugar because i'm following the paper and i'm an a student. so i'm going to do exactly what they say. these guidelines were given to hospitals and physicians and dieticians by the american diabetes association. it's the guiding force behind how people with diabetes are treated the
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the american diabetes association does the pre eminence organization for diabetes guidelines in the united states. through research from various organizations, they provide recommendations to hospitals, doctors, and practitioners to in turn, gave them to their patients with diabetes, to build their grocery list and fill their prescriptions. they are funded by grants and donations. the largest of these donors, ironically called bantering donors after sir frederick advancing. include the 3 largest insolent manufacturers diabetics and the american diabetes association. it said that the american diabetes association just been bought off by the millions of dollars that they pharmaceutical corp. every year. millions of dollars
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a year from multiple big manufacturers like pepsi, coca cola and crap jello. in order to keep large donors heavy database and say manage it as a crime. progressive disease thing like nor did ibex and the guy who suffer from iris and his role. i just felt sick and nauseous, and i mean, there just aren't words to describe like the fear that comes with blood sugar going up and down writing roller coaster. the people don't know that there is another option out there or another way of management. i was diagnosed my freshman year in college. i was about ready to turn 18 and i thought that the freshman 15 was totally a fallacy. i was losing the way i was sleeping great sleeping on lot. i could eat
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anything i wanted for anything i wanted and i was losing weight. finally, somebody said, you look like from diagnosis through pretty much when i graduated from high school, it was just ups and downs. and i, you know, you missed very personalized, 40 percent of high school. the, you know, blood sugars were never, they were just, you know, the roller coasters that you see on tgm grass. now we didn't have c gm's back. that kind of that's, that's what my blood sugar did. and i just, i didn't, i just didn't feel that. i just didn't feel great, but it just became normal to not feel good. the when i was 20, i was pregnant with my 1st child and i was told that i had just ation diabetes.
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by the time i had my 4th child, they said, well, it's designed it to just stay your diabetic. i started noticing my health deteriorating. my. i feel like my pancreas was sort of sputtering at that point. so sometimes it would work and sometimes it wouldn't. but it was really unpredictable . first i have the cataracts, and then i started having retinal bleeds. i developed a lot of skin issues, cystic acne. i also have gastroparesis, which is the nausea, the fun meeting, and then some subsequent digestive issues. i have trouble controlling my thought cop diabetic diarrhea knew rob a cma, the rob to see in my feet. it was up to my niece at one point, and then about 7 years ago, for mother's day, i got a pedicure,
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the to to flip. it was injected lots and lots of, you know, why did they make bathroom tiles? white? i was always leaving a little red footprint because it would open and i would leak. and i was told that blood glucose up to 180 perfectly fine. every complication because that's true. i was told to avoid fact i was told to not have a lot of red be try to have lots of fish and chicken and to otherwise just
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count my cards and inject the insulin appropriately. i wasn't given a specific diet i just told to inject and test. so i wish i could go back and change the the buildings of president eisenhower may just afford his heart attack. dramatic evidence of a something most of the illness that shot the nation. the heart attack of president dwight eisenhower in 1955 would start a chain of events that would change the american diet for the next 65 years. was a general rise in heart attacks throughout the country and the 1950s ice heart
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attack had the nation scrambling for answers the one she's the ologist. and so keys declared that saturated fats with the corporate even though as scientific methods were found to be flawed, and as a result, his outcomes were incorrect. this was an answer that the country could latch onto the, the american heart association then pushed out their low fat diet which led to the food pyramid, a recommendation to eat a low fat, heavy carbohydrate diet. the, i think the fundamental problem is that the doctors are using 19 seventies style nutrition for reasons that were never correct. these must have persisted for many decades now. you know, really during that time, uh, you know, from my diagnosis in 1977 through to 95 was really the time period where the,
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where the food pyramid was actually turned upside down. and that's when all the car bo was be starting to be pushed. and the low fat basically is okay to eat bread or, you know, rice or this or that was part of my meals every single day, the floor ages, certain foods have been sought to contribute to good health. now, yesterday has determined the scientific like between nutrients and certain diseases . the connection between diet and health has never been so well defined about to make the link even the clearer the federal government has designed this food during it. it's built around 5 food groups added to base our foods like bridge and pasta. that should be eaten in greatest quantity foods that should be eaten sparingly, like those containing fats boils and sugar are at the top. mathematically,
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if you look at the food pair man, and if you try and make us a food plan for a child, if you get rid of saturated fat from protein, so that's like meat and cheese and eggs. you got rid of all the caloric needs of the time, so there's only one place to go to fill in those floor needs. and that's by putting in a lot of reins and vegetable oils. i would either 1st buy rocket and then probably crash or reverse of it fresh 1st and then eat a lot of sugar along with the bread and then skyrocket. the day that brooklyn was diagnosed, we were actually a disney world. she started vomiting on our 17 hour trip down there. we just assumed it was cursing this or the flu because it was november this flu season. she had just play the world series
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a few months before this in breathing so that i can hear it in their office. they i, i grabber underneath her remedies her back and i say what the, the, she's looking at me. she's not that her eyes are glassed over. hey, we not got in brooklyn to the e r. when we did, she would have done the what she did finally wake them. and they felt that it was safe to feed my child. they federal cakes, applesauce. she hey, you know the meetings the car, so they just put into her, she's only installations really big. it is, wizard was not keeping her blood sugar day on because they're feeding her so many calls. when they move this out of i see you into
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a regular room. the nurse has brought one of her 1st meals and then shock at what they were going to feed, or it was a personal pepperoni pizza, a container of ice cream, a juice box, and some fruit. it was over 90 carbs for very 1st meal. the 2nd meal that they brought was french toast, fruit and orange juice, the next week. and then after that was a grilled cheese, mashed potatoes, and another juice box. for a type one diabetic th here try it again. okay, 8 the yeah. you have it the,
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it didn't make any sense. if you're feeding a ton of carbohydrate food, it's only gonna send the blood sugar side of carbohydrate is the most potent determiner of your blood sugar. okay. if you have type one of your kids have type one. everybody knows that that blood sugars can be affected by many things. but carbohydrate is the big to the patient as the doctor aren't the complications caused by high blood sugar. so yes, what 1st caused by blood sugar is carbohydrate. then what should i eat? carbohydrate does that make sense? doesn't make sense, but you're in the state of this. you see my son, he's almost dead. you're in a state of tear, so it doesn't make sense, but you don't know what's going on, you disoriented? why would we pump our kids full of food that challenges their body, their bodies that are already not able to make insulin?
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probably do that. to them. the i have friends who have severe not allergies. they would never dream of going. you're in us. my daughter is essentially allergic to carbs. she can not process the carbohydrates. she cannot just like all other type one diabetic. yes, the overall medical community is telling me the opposite, lactose intolerant. people that don't, you know, diabetic should not be that many context. so when the nutritionist came in and she said, you know, he can have orange juice and he can have the pancakes and you can still take them to pizza. hut was never told the sugar raisins, blood sugar, more rapid leave than other food. and i didn't have that previous knowledge, so if i would have left the hospital that information,
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i would have felt so much more ready to take on this disease. eventually i met my end to chronologist. she was going over how to count cards and dos. my in so inappropriately and everything was about carbs, and insolent cards and insulin. i said to her, do you want me to just not eat those cards? and she said, no, it won't do you any good. and you need those cars. and what those statements couldn't be any more untrue. i know. i know now the the 22nd 1943 during the great petrie. i'll take the shots and bunch of fatality and 118 fun down the belly mercy. and for that you have caught scene around the ship of some person who funded the you wish to be loaded in the fitness center? yes. the previous to this one,
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most of the rooms to pony it to you. 149 people died including 75 children of age was practically wiped off the face of the la new blue loves of the orchard and couldn't. charlie was noisy and were you porter? suppose oh shoot. was hot really? i really usually don't you feeling, you know? so the infamous battalion responsible for the atrocity included over 100 ukranian nationalists from west to new bryan. for the day i thought it was clicked to find some simple guidance versus the new e phone that so long as you guys pursuing your up or show up with them. us customers, declassified criminal cases from the central archive of the k g, b, a better rules shed light on the atrocity. and on so numerous questions that have
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remained an onset for many years. watch on c the take a look what happens the following, develop in story you don't, sobs devise on the fascination depends while addressing thousands of his support as a rally in pennsylvania. we saw yesterday, our constitutional republic come within a breath of being delta, a significant blow with the near killing near assassination of donald trump. support as of the former us president. yeah, that'd be a good some time in new york city to express the backing for the targeted politician the.
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