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population, which corresponded with the combined estimate of both diagnosed and undiagnosedcases of diabetes. (Most documentation on diabetes indicates that one third of all cases areundiagnosed.) According to dated references about 20% of African Americans and 10% of Caucasians carry the type B blood in the US, which is why African Americans are at twice therisk of developing diabetes than Caucasians.The following web site should be referenced for graph and data interpretations:Prevalence of Diagnosed Diabetes by Age, United States, 1980-2004. The graph depicts percentage of the population on the vertical axis and the years 1980 through 2004 on thehorizontal axis. The age groups are color coded lines according to age range. (Since this writing,CDC site was updated to include up to 2005.)
Data Analysis:
Ages 0-64 yrs have a combined rate of about 6.5 to 7.0 %, holding steady from1980 until 1996, when an increase started in the 45-64 yr age group. This coincides with abouttwo thirds of the diabetic population with the other one third being undiagnosed. There is also asignificant increase in the two combined 65+ yrs age groups, starting in 1996-1997. Thecombined percentage indicates that about 1 in 3 individuals aged 65 and older were diagnosedwith diabetes in the year 2004, which may actually be closer to 1 in 2 when the undiagnosedcases are included, indicating the acidic levels have risen in this age group. Note that in the sameyear, 2004, there was a significant increase recorded in the pH level of the alkaline blood types.(Paragraph 3) The significance of this data is as follows:
1)
At some point within the years 1995or 1996, an increased rate of copper depletion began, which started manifesting in the year 1996.
2)
The ratio of type B blood changes from about 1 in 10 in the age range 0-64 yrs to 1 in 2 in theage of 65+ yrs in 2004, after factoring in the undiagnosed cases. This does not mean thatindividuals with the alkaline blood types A and O are changing over to the acidic blood type B, but that many with
the alkaline blood types are now dying in their 40s and 50s.3)
Although ashortened lifespan, individuals with type B blood have a longer life expectancy on average, thanthe alkaline blood types. Note that Alzheimer’s, kidney disease, heart disease, strokes, andamputations are all linked to diabetes, all of which greatly affect quality of life.
4)
Lastly, theincreased death rate in the alkaline blood types will cause a corresponding increase in the percentage of individuals with type B blood in the overall population, as well as an increase inthe percentage of individuals with type AB blood.
The Myth of “Disease”: (See Ref 4,5)
In their multitudes of “scholarly” medical works there isvirtually always mention of missing and “variant” proteins in regards to different diseases.Copper deficiency causes “variant” malformed, missing, damaged DNA/proteins, and isresponsible for virtually EVERY “disease” and symptom manifesting now, accelerating agingand death. Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s, MS, mental depression, diabetes, autism, other neurologicaldiseases, ADD, ADHD, pancreatic & digestive problems, vision problems, hemophilia, bleedingdisorders, anemia, low hormone production, Cystic Fibrosis, many other ‘birth defects’, cancer, bone & muscle degenerative conditions, shortened lifespan, heart/cardiovascular disease, heartattack, stroke, allergies, respiratory illness, kidney disease, hearing and visual problems, and thelist goes on. These things happen gradually over time, so we do not suspect we are slowly being poisoned.
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