User:Desirerichard37/sandbox

Eating You Alive After watching the trailer for “eating you alive” is that what you eat is either destroying your body or keeping you healthy, your body needs fuel and that's the foods you're eating every day and that is your eating habits and lifestyle. The many diseases we have in America today are for the most part a direct result of our eating habits and lifestyle and we can change that by changing our diet and eating healthy foods and eating right from a organic plant based diet which will help us reduce the risk for heart disease and diabetes and cholesterol and obesity. We can reverse most of the chronic diseases and health conditions we have in America today if we eat to stay healthy and alive otherwise our bad eating habits will eat us alive and take us to our grave sooner than it needs to happen.

In the same breath, upon watching “What The Health” documentary trailer it is very clear that the government and the drug companies are very much in bed with each other and are not doing anything to prevent, protect and save lives when it comes to the epidemic chronic diseases we face in this country because the pharmaceutical companies are making billions of dollars of this health epidemic and lobbying our government officials to grossly neglect the health crisis we face in America.

There have been efforts made to share light on the subject and Planeat is a 2010 British short film and documentary written, produced and directed by Or Shilomy Shelley Lee Davies released in April 15 by the Newport Beach Film Festival, starring T. Collin Campbell and others, discussing possible nutritional and environmental benefits of a whole food and plant based diet. The reviews were very mixed and it was even portrayed as fanatical by some, instead of paying attention to the overall message that was delivered and its critical warnings.

Another effort of the same nature that was created was the “Forks Over Knives” a 2011 advocacy film and documentary, starring again T. Collin Campbell, promoting a low fat, whole food, plant based diet as a mean of reversing and or avoiding this health epidemic we face. Again this effort received mixed and average reviews and was seen by a few as greatly informative yet repetitive without any serious commitment to implement nor improve the proposed solutions presented in the documentary.

Desire, Richardson