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| Big Macs are made of cancer-causing flesh. | 
Middle-aged people with diets high in animal flesh protein -- such as  meat, poultry, eggs, milk, and cheese -- face a 
dramatically increased risk  of dying from cancer compared with those who eat low animal protein  diets, according to a 
University of Southern California study published today in the journal 
Cell Metabolism.|  | 
| If only cows lived on a compassionate planet | 
The study found 50 to 65-year-olds who consumed a "high-protein" diet --  meaning they got 20 percent or more of their calories from animal  sources of protein -- were four times more likely to die from cancer, compared with  those who consumed less than 10 percent of their daily calories in  animal protein.
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| Vegan pizza rules (WQ) | 
A press release accompanying the study called that "a  mortality risk factor 
comparable to smoking." The risk of early death from all causes 
soared by 74 percent among the high-protein consumers, researchers found.  
  But the picture changes for those over 65. For them, it appears that a  moderate-to-high protein diet [not necessarily from animal sources] actually reduces cancer and overall  mortality and is helpful in preventing age-dependent weight loss and  malnourishment.  
  Researchers focused their study on a national cross-section of 6,381 people 50 and older who were tracked for nearly 20 years.    

They also found that among all the age groups studied, a diet high in  
animal protein increases insulin production and the risk of dying from 
diabetes-related causes.    
The higher risk of cancer and overall death among the middle-aged and  the increase in diabetes deaths were "either abolished or attenuated 
if  the proteins were plant derived," the study said.    
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| Go veg for bliss (WQ/Larson) | 
Various health agencies recommend  that daily intake of animal protein should be about 0.8 grams per  kilogram. So a 130-pound adult should eat [no more than] between 45 and 50 grams of  animal protein per day. A 160-pound adult should eat between 60 and 65  grams per day.  
How much protein is that? It sounds like a lot. Here is some help in calculating:  
Los Angeles bans e-cigarettes in smoke-free areas               Electronic cigarettes will be  prohibited in L.A. parks, restaurants, and "meat-market" pick up bars under an ordinance  approved today (3-4-14) by the Los Angeles City Council.
 
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