Does meat cause cancer?
Last October, the World Health Organization (WHO) released a two-page report entitled “Carcinogenicity of Consumption of Red and Processed Meat,” warning the planet that processed meat definitely causes colorectal cancer in humans, and that red meat “probably” causes colorectal cancer in humans. The report listed a total of 20 scientific references. WHO’s frightening anti-meat proclamation made headlines worldwide and had a major impact on how people think about meat and health. While plenty of pro-meat critiques of the WHO report have been published, the majority of those I read took the WHO’s findings at face value and emphasized that the statistical risk associated with eating processed and red meat is very small.
I strongly disagree. I read the report and all of the experimental studies cited in the report. I found no scientific evidence to support the WHO’s anti-meat cries, and I think it is important to set the record straight.



I am not sure it’s appropriate to share private/government cases, in any public Communities, including Lemmy, since I do believe in government working for people, in the end, but there are open to public cases where schemes got out of control.
For example, though I do operate/move around Europe and Asia, for the most part, yet if am not mistaken governments and/or third-party testing corporations built a mandatory industry around annual smog checks and vehicle certifications. In the following case, Volkswagen, an investigation revealed that multiple other major global automakers utilized a relatively similar bypassing for testing.
I mean, these are just revealed cases, but there’s a chance these were revealed strategically, and another funding was organized to generate money. Since isn’t money an energy that passes where it is streamed.
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Another public cases I had in bookmarks:
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Related:
- Dissecting AI-related Paper Retraction… (LLMs are being used not just for text generation, but for the automated fabrication of entire research programs… We conclude that the only viable long-term defense is a transition from post-publication detection to prospective provenance verification…)
- Pseudoaddiction (…the subject of this review, is a clinical concept that has been influential…)