Cholesterol-lowering drugs cause heart attacks, rapid aging, and brain damage. Instead, use these two foods (FIRST COMMENT)

Statins are one of the main cholesterol-lowering drugs and, statistically, one in four American citizens over the age of 45 takes them to lower their cholesterol levels.

This industry is worth approximately $30 billion, but it is also associated with countless side effects such as chronic fatigue, anemia, liver dysfunction, Parkinson's disease, diabetes, Alzheimer's disease, acidosis, thyroid disorders, and cancer.

There is a film, "29 Billion Reasons to Lie About Cholesterol" by Justin Smith, in which he reported:

"Between 1994 and 2006, men aged 65 to 74 who faced an increase in cholesterol levels lowered them from 87% to 54%, but this same group began to suffer from heart disease, and the rate of coronary heart disease remained the same. There were also other groups where people with high cholesterol levels had decreased while the rate of heart disease had increased."

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