What Made US Fat?



It’s true that most of you don’t know why, but trust me, it started way back, grew up as a common culture to all. You know you can’t just fatten from no where, with in one day, month but after just a continuous practice.



 I reveal it all. Part in this blog post and the top secrets in a free eBook privately sent to your email.



Out of time or you want to even continue reading later, drop your email in the sign up form below and I’ll deliver a full detailed eBook inform of pdf.



Here I start, I’ve made this compilation out of very deep research, even in the dark web and the very low-end historical facts. I may be wrong some where or no where.


Weight loss, fat, what is Obesity thing? What causes it? Where did it begin from? Who started it?



Those are the commonest questions asked by the ones who have just realised they are true victims. It always happen, many things happen to our lives with less or completely no consent from ourselves. And after we realise that they happened we start to take action.




Obesity;

Obesity is a medical condition in which excess body fat has accumulated to the extent that it may have a negative effect on health...............says the big Wikipedia.



People are generally considered obese when their body mass index (BMI), a measurement obtained by dividing a person's weight by the square of the person's height, is over 30 kg/m2, with the range 25–30 kg/m2 defined as overweight.
For more definition and calculation, visit the web.




Are you a Tofi? (That's thin on the outside, fat inside)?

Scientists are increasingly beginning to think of fat as an organ, in the way that it produces chemicals and hormones affecting our moods, our ability to think clearly and even a woman's chances of reproduction. But the problem is that it has evolved to become bigger than it need be for evolutionary reasons, as it was common thousands of years ago to go through periods of starvation when abundant fat was essential for survival.






The fat just underneath the skin is subcutaneous fat. The fat in the abdomen and surrounding vital organs is visceral fat. The latter is the kind which is metabolised by the liver, which transforms it into cholesterol that circulates in the blood. 'Bad' cholesterol, called low-density lipoproteins, collects in the arteries where it forms plaque that narrows the arteries






Fat cells are rather like chemical factories producing other substances which can cause huge long-term harm. They contribute to diabetes, heart disease, high blood pressure, strokes and other illnesses, including some cancers. As you put on more weight, the cells grow bigger, sending out messages to nearby cells which start to divide to produce more fat cells. A lean adult has 40bn fat cells, an obese one two to three times that.






Body shape is often governed by genetic factors. People shaped like apples, carrying excess weight in the abdomen, are more at risk than those built like pears, who deposit fat in the hips, thighs and backsides. Women tend to fall into the latter category. Constant dieting may interfere with the way the body lays down fat, and there is evidence that this will increase visceral fat.





The general American Obese;

Obesity has continued to grow within the United States. Two of every three American men are considered to be overweight or obese, but the rates for women are far higher. The United States contains one of the highest percentages of obese people in the world.
From 23% obesity in 1962, estimates have steadily increased.


 The following statistics comprise adults age 20 and over. The overweight percentages for the overall US population are higher reaching 39.4% in 1997, 44.5% in 2004, 56.6% in 2007, and 63.8% (adults) and 17% (children) in 2008. In 2010, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported higher numbers once more, counting 65.7% of American adults as overweight, and 17% of American children, and according to the CDC, 63% of teenage girls become overweight by age 11. In 2013 the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) found that 57.6% of American citizens were obese. The organization estimates that 3/4 of the American population will likely be overweight or obese by 2020.


Are you among them?

I can’t spell the bean about what happened for those percentages to happen, not in this public blog post but I’ll render it via the email.

A certain blog/website writer says;
“If I had known about this weight loss secret the food industry doesn’t want you to know about – I would have saved myself a ton of heartache, frustration and yo-yo dieting. It makes me incredibly sad that people out there are doing whatever it takes to get healthy, thin and look their best – but instead are facing an uphill battle because of what the food industry has done to our food and the way they are marketing it to us...............................” Very sad story.

It’s that time of year when millions of Americans struggle to once again lose some unwanted pounds. And the weight loss business is booming. From pills, potions and programs to gadgets, diet food and drinks, we’re gobbling them up, seeking an easy solution to our weight problems.
Before you open your wallet or dive into a new program, consider this: Of the 50 million Americans who will go on some kind of diet program, a slim percentage will successfully shed the weight and keep it off.

Only 5 to 10 percent of us succeed, but we all contribute to the staggering $40 billion in revenue amassed by the weight-loss industry annually. By the year 2006, revenues are estimated to top $48 billion.

Millions of us succumb to quick-fix claims such as “Eat all you want and still lose weight” or “Melt away fat while you sleep.” We find it hard to believe in this age of scientific breakthroughs and medical miracles that an effortless weight-loss method doesn’t exist. But it doesn’t.
To help you sort through the claims, avoid the scams and become a more educated consumer, here are 

3 things the weight-loss companies don’t want you to know.

1. Most weight-loss product ads are deceiving, so don’t believe everything you read.
A lot of the weight-loss advertisements need some toning of their own, according to a report from the Federal Trade Commission.
“False and misleading claims in weight-loss ads are widespread,” declares Richard Cleland, a lawyer with the FTC and lead author of the report.

An FTC review of more than 300 ads from radio, television, magazines and newspapers that ran during 2001-2002 found that a whopping 55 percent made claims promising more than the product or service could likely deliver.
“Consumers really need to read these ads with a big dollop of skepticism,” says Cleland.
“Deceptive ads do nothing to address an individual’s weight problem. If anything, they compound an already serious national health crisis by steering consumers away from weight-loss methods that have demonstrated benefits.”

Claims such as “rapid weight loss,” “no diet or exercise required,” “eat whatever you want” and “take it off and keep it off” are all hot buttons that advertisers use to get consumers to buy their products and services, he says. “If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.”
2. ‘Scientifically proven’ or ‘doctor-endorsed’ doesn’t mean it works.
Many products claim to be tested at “respected,” “major” or “leading” medical centers or universities. Yet, rarely is the information provided on where the study was conducted, by whom or where it was published to help consumers assess the validity of such claims.
Plus, when a product claims to be “recommended” or “approved” or “discovered” by a health professional, what does that really mean?

“Often there’s no scientific evidence behind Dr. X’s claims,” notes Dr. George Blackburn, a member of the government-sponsored Partnership for Healthy Weight Management and assistant director of nutrition medicine at the Harvard Medical School.

And often the endorsements fail to disclose that the health professional doing the recommending has a financial interest in the product, or that he or she may not have reviewed the scientific evidence. Even if it was reviewed, he or she may not have used acceptable review standards. And, says Cleland, “The ‘professionals’ can be fictitious.”

3. Testimonials are not a good indicator of a product’s success. You know what advertisements are, the majority are too deceptive.

Lets do not waste a lot of time on this theory, the ones who want to know it, you’ll read it in the pdf that I’ll send.


What’s really the solution?

Its a very simple equation: Good Diet + Physical Exercise = A safe weight loss. A safe fully organic natural supplement is like rocket fuel in the process, I mean, it’s not bad to use safe, fully natural supplements wisely for your weight loss process because from plants we have all herbs and even complex medicines.


So What’s the thing? 

2018 is real losing weight, real fighting Obesity.
Am making a subscriber’s gift, An email series of almost all the thing you need to reset your health.

Do you know why Chinese, Africans, Italians,............(those others) are not obese? Yeah, they are the usual things of diet, dies, etc. Here I’ll be precise, present to you all the premium research from the other world and trust me you’ll see a change in your life.

Don’t wait type in your email below now and just sit back, relax and wait for the feedback. It will be a gradual process; this won’t be like the magic ads you see online. It’s the normal way. You’ll see for yourself and appreciate later. Feel free to share this to your loved ones and friends, that’s it. See you there.





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