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THE AGEBEATERS and Their Universal Currency for IMMORTALITY

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In the great scheme of things, the quest for a long and healthful life is a relatively new goal for humans. We know without any doubt, that humans can and do live well beyond 100 years of age. While in fact, we have all the genetic potential to live healthfully well beyond 100- consciously getting there today for the majority, however, requires a profound commitment to a time proven system and a daily call to focused action-becomming a centenarian is a matter of proven universal,proactive, yet simple choices and actions. This book will show the longest live cultures and what they do, the aging process and the universal currency of life. It will also show the religious dietary practices and the common threads of anti-aging. This book also has recipes and supplements for a healthful diet.

484 pages, Paperback

Published December 29, 2008

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Joel D. Wallach

24 books46 followers

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Profile Image for Scott Waldyn.
Author 3 books15 followers
March 1, 2019
In a word? Untrustworthy.

It's not that things like cutting back on carbs & sugars, restricting calories, and supplementing don't work. The way Dr. Wallach conveys this information and touts his method as being one guaranteed to grant the human body 100 years of life is dishonest, especially when he tries to prove why he's right by contrasting his lifestyle against others.

According to Dr. Wallach, we all have the ability to live to 100 (or beyond). Everyone one of us, even those born with genetic predispositions. This takes quite a leap of faith to believe, but let's roll with it. After these claims, Dr. Wallach starts targeting different members of society (billionaires, athletes, vegans, etc.) and cherry-picks health lifestyle advocates within these groups who died before the age of 100. He'll make anecdotes about their lifestyles, as well as wave away their cause of death as a simple "copper deficiency" or some other nutrient deficiency along those lines. Die of a coronary artery anuerysm? Should have supplemented some copper. That'd clear that right up.

I understand people's need to believe in something that could potentially save them from complicated ailments, but beware of those who promise all the answers. The human body is a complicated machine.

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