I’ve always told you about the benefits of healthy tobacco use… and now even the mainstream researchers can’t ignore the science. I almost did a double take when I read this headline on AOL News:
"Long-Term Smokers Have Reduced Risk of Parkinson’s."
Researchers who studied 305,468 men and women 50 years and older found that those who’ve been smoking for less than a decade had a 4 percent lower risk… but smokers who’ve been lighting up for 30 years or more had a 41 percent lower risk, according to the study published in Neurology.
Surprised? I’m not — it’s perfectly consistent with the body of evidence, including a 2007 study that found smokers were 73 percent less likely to come down with this debilitating degenerative disorder.
The key isn’t how much you smoke each day, but how long you’ve been smoking — so get started now if you hope to lower your risk.
Naturally, the researchers behind the new study are quick to apologize for their work, because of course you’re not allowed to say anything positive about smoking. So they’re urging people not to light up despite the clear benefit they confirmed, saying smoking does more harm than good… which only shows that they simply haven’t studied tobacco enough.
But I have.
Tobacco is burning with health benefits far beyond a lower risk of Parkinson’s, and I have plenty of research to prove it. Click here to learn more — just don’t let the health police know what you’re reading.
Lighting up the way to health,
William Campbell Douglass II, M.D