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FBI Tracking Videotapers as Terrorists?
The FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force has recommended for many years that animal activists who carry out undercover investigations on farms could be prosecuted as domestic terrorists.
Video provided by the United States Humane Society shows a Chino, Calif., slaughterhouse worker prodding a downer cow with a forklift, an act that helped spur an overhaul of the state's animal welfare laws. Animal rights groups are under attack for using such images as part of their investigations into alleged animal abuse. New documents suggest that some such investigations may violate animal enterprise terrorism laws. (AP/Humane Society of the United States) New documents obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request by activist Ryan Shapiro show the FBI advising that activists – including Shapiro – who walked onto a farm, videotaped animals there and “rescued” an animal had violated terrorism statutes.
The documents, which were first published on Will Potter’s website, Green Is the New Red, were issued by the Joint Terrorism Task Force in 2003 in response to an article in an animal rights publication in which Shapiro and two other activists (whose names were redacted from the document), openly claimed responsibility for shooting video and taking animals from a farm.
The FBI notes discuss the videotaping, illegal entry and the removal of animals, then concludes with “there is a reasonable indication that [Subject 1] and other members of the [redacted] have violated the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act, 18 USC Section 43 (a).”
Curiously, the name of the act seems to be an error; the act was called the Animal Enterprise Protection Act until 2006, when it was largely superseded by an act called the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act. The crime named in the original 1992 act, however, was always called terrorism. The penalties for such a conviction can include terrorism enhancements which can add decades to a sentence.
Later, in 2004, Shapiro and a colleague, Sarahjane Blum, working as a group called Gourmet Cruelty, were prosecuted for a different but similar act in which they walked onto a fois gras farm, videotaped the operation and took a few ducks. They were prosecuted for felony burglary and pleaded to misdemeanor trespassing.
“Sarahjane and I and everyone with Gourmet Cruelty – the undercover investigation and especially the open rescue were acts of civil disobedience,” said Shapiro by phone. He is currently a doctoral candidate in the Department of Science, Technology and Society at MIT. “We openly took credit for the things that we were doing in order to expose the horrific cruelty on factory farms and to educate the public about it. So a trespassing charge seemed like a perfectly reasonable price to pay.”
“However, it’s simply outrageous to consider civil disobedience as terrorism,” Shapiro adds. “Civil disobedience is not terrorism. It has a long and proud place in our nation’s history, from Martin Luther King to Occupy Wall Street, and the AETA takes that kind of advocacy that we celebrate from the civil rights movement and turns it into a terrorist event.”
The FBI declined to comment on the documents, though a public information officer did point out that "the FBI cannot collect or retain information on pure 1st Amendment activities unless the collection is pertinent to a legitimate law enforcement activity." Which would indicate that it is the trespassing and theft of animals that would cause the bureau to open a file. But activists and their attorneys are unsure of this interpretation.
Undercover investigations have been a mainstay of activist work, whistleblower activity and even journalism since before the days of Upton Sinclair and his landmark 1906 work about the meatpacking industry, “The Jungle.”
“Some of these investigations don’t even break state laws,” says Rachel Meerpol, an attorney with the Center for Constitutional Rights who is representing Shapiro in a constitutional challenge of the AETA. “It’s possible to gain undercover footage lawfully. The way the FBI is interpreting this law would allow for prosecution of completely lawful, valuable advocacy efforts as an act of terrorism. It’s an issue of public safety as well as animal cruelty. It’s such a waste of time and resources for the FBI to be spending money investigating folks involved in this work.”
State legislatures, however, are also getting into the act. Florida, Iowa, Minnesota and New York all tried to pass bills specifically outlawing photographing and videotaping animal enterprises in 2011, but failed. Florida state Sen. Jim Norman has already reintroduced his bill, SB1184, for 2012, which is more of an omnibus bill but still contains the prohibitions against recording farm operations.
Potter, who has looked into these state laws in more detail, points out, “There’s no shortage of laws that could be used to prosecute someone who is trespassing or someone who is vandalizing property in the process of an investigation. But these new laws are specifically aimed at mainstream animal rights and environmental groups who investigate abuse, such as the Humane Society, Mercy for Animals and PETA.”

96 Comments so far
Show AllThe Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act protects those who terrorize animals from the prying eyes of people who might expose their actions to public scrutiny.
How Orwellian.
If slaughter houses had glass walls, I'm guessing the country would soon become vegetarian.
This should show everyone who is paying attention that the truth, when it is inconvenient to the state, or its corporate owners, is the true enemy of the United States. The truth must be suppressed at all cost, it is the new Amerikan way.
Just the fact that you are considered a terrorist by taking pictures is the new America free market republican way of life. It is also illegal to take a camera into the Wisconsin state assembly, imagine that, people were actually arrested in the Wisconsin capital for taping their law makers. The new America.
And try taking pictures of the police "responding to a riot" nearly anywhere in the country.
And, yet, the police and FBI can take photos of all of us! I remember that's what they did to Iraq "War" protesters - went around to the protests taking photos of people for their files. Talk about double standards!
The Patriot Act defines a terrorist as anyone who breaks any law, including misdemeanors. Now provisions in the NDAA just pasted allows terrorists to be indefinitely detained without charge or trial.
I watched "V for Vendetta" against last night and was in awed at the artistic vision of the writers (or perhaps historical accuracy?). I thought these lines from Evey's monologue are perfect for this caption (they are a more creative version of Martin Niemoller's take on the Nazis):
EVEY:
And I remember those boots, black
leather that gleamed bright in the
morning sun. I had never seen such
boots. All moving in perfect
unison.
It must have seemed so easy to
them. They offered such a simple
deal; give up control and we will
restore order.
At first, the arrests were political.
Dissidents. Radicals. Liberals.
A gay man is dragged violently from his Piccadilly home. Outside, he sees his lover being forced to the cobblestones.
The homosexuals were next. What
God had started with AIDS had to be
finished by man. It was God's
work. That's what we were told.
In another neighborhood, we see the police arresting Pakistanis.
But once they were gone, there was
someone else. Someone different.
In a different area, young black men are packed into a caged van so tightly they are unable to move.
There were those who understood
what was happening, who knew it was
wrong but who kept silent.
And in the vacuum of that silence,
order was imposed.
Order that was like those boots,
order that required rigorous
discipline. Order that is exactly
the same, where each single step
falls with every step. The order
of the many shaped into one.
Another case of life imitating art in this lunatic asylum we call the USA or as Lewis Prothero, the movie's impersonation of Glenn Beck aptly calls it "Ulcered Sphincter of Ass-erica."
Sorry it posted so garbled up even after I painstakingly formatted it. This commenting system stinks to high heaven and has a mind of its own.
I did not even notice the formatting of the post, since the content was so gripping.
About 50% of the posts here require html code between paragraphs.
"< P > < P > "
The other 50% don't. Really odd.
Also, I'm never logged in so I can't do anything, and then I click on "login" and it says "access denied". Then I go back one screen and I'm logged in. I don't complain because times are hard all over and I can figure out workarounds.
PaulK - I'm also never logged in, but I discovered, accidently, that if I go to an article, then, instead of trying to login, just hit the back button, I'm logged in.
The news articles (headlines and the left column on the main page) require code. The opinion articles and Abby's pieces, don't require code.
FYI, Reverend_Boomerang: to create paragraph breaks, type this pair (i.e. you need to use two) of HTML tags where you want the break, like this:
< br >< br >
Don't put the spaces, included only for display purposes here, between the brackets and enclosed letters used in the above example.
< p >< p > should work also. (Again, without the spaces between the letter and enclosing brackets.)
You can test or check if you're doing it correctly by using the "preview" feature. Hope this helps.
Note: This is only necessary when posting comments to "News" articles, which includes both articles posted under the "News" header and the headlines on the top of the page above the headers.
Using the carriage return key (↵ "enter" key), aka "leaving a line blank" still works to create paragraph breaks in comments threads in the "Views" and "Further" columns.There's no rhyme or reason to this user-unfriendly inconsistency; I'm just offering a practical way of coping with it. Happy New Year.
OS, thanks again for the tips. I will definitely try that next time. This system sure has a mind of its own.
Happy New Year to you!
I just hit reply and got that I wasn't allowed access even though it had me logged in (username recognized via cookies). Then I just clicked on my username displayed above and re-clicked back to the article.
Also when I went for preview with this comment it was all run together again. So I've gone to the code and inserted paragraph tags.
This needs a few fixes in the code. I too have noticed that sometimes it picks up a line space as denoting a paragraph and the rest of the time it just runs it all together. There doesn't seem to be a predictable sign of when that is going to happen.
So. There are two ways of coding this to make sure.
1 - either put two line breaks on a clear line between your paragraphs or
2 - enclose each paragraph between paragraph start and end tags
All tags start with a less-than sign "<" and end with a greater-than sign ">"
I'll call these the tag markers. What the tag does is defined by the text inside the tag
Most come in pairs. A starting tag and and ending tag. Ending versions of tag pairs insert a slash "/" just after the less-than sign and just before the tag text.
Line breaks are each a single tag with "br" (no quotes) between the tag markers like this <br>
That takes the following text to the following line. To move the text two lines down so you see a blank line use two of them together. Better, use paragraph tags around your paragraph. That is what "p" "/p" tags do.
A paragraph is made with a starting tag "p" between the tag markers followed by your text and then ended with "/p" between the tag markers. Using paragraph tags will produce a single blank line between paragraphs.
Like this: <p>Your paragraph text.</p>
Terrorism in the U.S. is anyone who has a political belief. This is why the Patriot Act is such a misnomer. It specifically goes after the patriots.
Hiding in plain sight, it is properly labeled as "the Patriot Act," although most still are oblivious to the real meaning of its targeting patriots, not defending them.
In fact, merely having some "political belief," is not the full scope of the Act -- but any belief that potentially might impact political control of the masses.
For example, spiritual beliefs, watching the movie GasLand, or being against animal cruelty -- of themselves, have nothing MUCH to do with :
"of or relating to the government or the public affairs of a country : a period of political and economic stability.
of or relating to the ideas or strategies of a particular party or group in politics : a decision taken for purely political reasons.
interested in or active in politics : I'm not very political.
motivated or caused by a person's beliefs or actions concerning politics : a political crime.
chiefly derogatory relating to, affecting, or acting according to the interests of status or authority within an organization rather than matters of principle."
(from Wikipedia)
It appears to me that the last definition is inverted, that matters of principle for the masses, are what matters quite a lot -- to those w/o any …
==The FBI notes discuss the videotaping, illegal entry and the removal of animals, then concludes with “there is a reasonable indication that [Subject 1] and other members of the [redacted] have violated the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act, 18 USC Section 43 (a).”==
I look forward to "Pig" the new blockbuster novel by Nelson DeMille.
Trylon
And so continues the march forward with NDAA and private jail cells with our names on them. Just ass.
Yea you are in a world of trouble now, we can hold you without charge as long as we want. Now if you just give us some "actionable information" about your friends and family, we might be able to let you go in a year or two, your choice.
The FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force seems to me to be a terrorist group.
...with a license to kill and decades long sentences in their back pocket. We the People are nothing but Chinese peasants without the slave labor jobs.
Hey rubberneckduck, slave labor jobs check this out. According to the Left Business Observer, the federal prison industry produces 100% of all military helmets, ammunition belts, bullet-proof vests, ID tags, shirts, pants, tents, bags, and canteens. Along with war supplies, prison workers supply 98% of the entire market for equipment assembly services; 93% of paints and paintbrushes; 92% of stove assembly; 46% of body armor; 36% of home appliances; 30% of headphones/microphones/speakers; and 21% of office furniture. Airplane parts, medical supplies, and much more: prisoners are even raising seeing-eye dogs for blind people. When they jail you for being an animal lover, they will let you work with seeing eye dogs
The Iron Heel continues to beat us into the ground, ever grinding. Let us all aspire to the Brotherhood of Man this new year.
Kill the messenger, unless he is a sanctioned propagandist for the Oligarchs. Wow, we are now living in a Third World totalitarian police state . And Obama's science labs have just created a new more deadly and virulent strain of bird flu so if we all ever get out of hand, they'll just release epidemic influenza on us. (Don't worry Repubs, Bush's labs succeeded in recreating the 1918 Spanish flue a few years ago...) We the People are fucked to put it bluntly.
Look up in the sky what are they spraying? That's nothing those are harmless contrails. Those birds that fell dead from the sky they just ran into each other. Happens all the time. Stupid birds.
Considering video has been one of the animal rights movements' most powerful tools, it is not all that surprising that the commercial forces who profit from their depravity seek to neuter said powerful tool.
Some state history on this.
The American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) “Eco-Terrorism” Legislation was drafted in 2003 and distributed to ALEC state legislators in a publication named, “Animal and Ecological Terrorism in America’. It was the culmination of the work of the ALEC Homeland Security Working Group.
A copy of the report is here
http://www.greenisthenewred.com/blog/wp-content/Images/alec_animal_ecological_terrorism_bill.pdf
The “Model Legislation” is introduced at the end of the publication and is named “Animal and Ecological Terrorism Act (AETA)”.
In this publication ALEC lauds the efforts of ALEC members in getting the ALEC “Eco-Terrorism” “Model Legislation” introduced into their state by showing the following items.
In the closing of the report they note:
“AETA faces many of the problems posed by AEPA to combat eco-terrorism on a broad scale, including trespassing with intent to terrorize. By allowing the state government to define the terms of ecoterror, the government has the ability to attach significant penalties to those who have joined the extremist movements and enhance their ability to act out with violence.
Additionally, AETA allows for the definition of eco-terror as domestic terror, without reference to the USA PATRIOT Act. In other words, the penalties and identification of those who commit eco-terror crimes are clarified without the overbearing tools provided under the USA PATRIOT Act.”
The first states to implement the legislation were Missouri, Ohio, New York, Okalahoma, Oregon and Texas.
ALEC’s most recent copy of this legislation can be found here
http://www.alecexposed.org/w/images/f/f5/7K13-The_Animal_and_Ecological_Terrorism_Act_(AETA)_Exposed.pdf
The truth will indefinitely detain you, without trial. Just goes to show how we need more WikiLeaks.
When you eat meat you are eating suffering, pain, cruelty. This picture is mild compared to some stuff I have seen.
I once saw a dying cow being picked up by the glue factory. A big truck tied a cable to it's hind leg and flipped the switch on a winch which pulled the cow onto the truck. The cable cut into the cow's leg, The cow complained. The worker acted like it was just another day's work.
I offered to get a gun and put the cow out of it's misery. The worker just grinned at me.
I think you offered to put down the wrong individual.
The practice of putting downed (sick cows) into the food chain is common practice. There was a case here where two veterinarians that also own a slaughter facility routinely did this and worse. The same thing happened, people went in with cameras and it was aired on the news. This at the same time in Europe they tested every cow for madcow disease, something they don't do here. Putting sick downed cows into the food chain is pretty much says what they do to these animals, they can also do to you.
They do it to you each time you eat meat. And by God they will literally do it to you with a smile and a joke about what to do this weekend.
We have all been brainwashed. Why wouldn't they do it to us too?
The whole process is perverse, they feed them an unnatural diet that has caused a virulent from of e-coli and other illness that weakens the animals. Not many people in America value or understand the complex nature of things or how to treat animals. It is passive/aggressive, a symptom of the larger culture. Even the people that dress their animals in human clothing still deny the true nature of other living things.
clearbluesky...sometimes I've wondered if the collective madness rocking our world could be symptoms of a brain eating human strain of the madcow disease likely as not to be widely spread amongst cows here in America (which, if I'm not mistaken, can be transferred to humans), unleashed by our basically unregulated, wholly profit-driven factory farm industry, that would likely as not deny the disease's presence even if undeniably present.
And, while our corporate/government leaders are probably not dining on very many of the foods produced for the masses, perhaps their more exclusive sources of meat and produce aren't any more immune to the adverse effects of their blind eye approach to regulating greed than the factory farm and lab produced foods much of the rest of the population has little choice but to consume.
And the fact that these sick cows end up in the food chain would seem to indicate that it isn't, "...what they do to these animals, they can also do to you." It is that they ARE doing it to you by the very act of intentionally putting sickness and disease into the food any creature is going to eat.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Rhodes THE AUTHOR
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_ss_i_0_13?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=deadly+feasts+by+richard+rhodes&sprefix=deadly+feasts - THE BOOK
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prion THE PRION
I was fortunate enough to have the book on tapes of regarding the look at mad cow. There are six hours of hair raising commentary. I listened and learned what my country was not telling me. I changed my eating patterns.
Thank you for posting that information.
fedup2.
It isn't just factory farm animals (although it may have originated there) there is a wasting disease now that affects wild mammals like deer and elk too. It is a very destructive cycle. And yes, it does affect humans as well.
In my opinion anyone that kills an animal for meat is a heartless terrorist!!
Maybe when there is no food from the ground you might change your mind about that. Crickets grasshoppers, ants are on the 'top of the food chain's' diet. Not to mention snakes, frogs toads and maybe even humans. Famines usually bring out the true way people will eat, from herbivores to carnivores. Try leaves, grass and flowers. Seems you, like too many others, believe things are running smooth and somehow maybe think this will be a great time to try and out law eating meat.
If we lose the ability to grow enough plant food to live on -soybeans and similar- then we're finished. And so are the non-humans. We just plain won't make it, if reduced to eating insects.
The Europoid world is the only one that makes "meat" central to the diet. For Asians, Africans, and Oceanians, veggies are central, with flesh typically providing flavor only. Flesh-centered dishes are banquet fare, if found at all.
Daphne and Delphine Hirasuna, the Nisei authors of one of my cookbooks (Flavors of Japan), recount how one day their parents received a call from a desperate Caucasian neighbor who had taken in a Japanese exchange student. It seems the exchange-mother went out of her way to prepare the most-prestigious Europoid dishes: steak, prime rib, pork chops, etc. But the student politely picked at the vegetables without touching the meat.
After a week, she was so thin and weak her hosts feared for her health. Brought to the Hirasunas' house, the young woman admitted to Mrs Hirasuna that she found the idea of a big slab of flesh on her plate so abhorrent that she couldn't even look at it, never mind eat it. And she couldn't bring herself to tell her kind, generous USAian hosts what the problem was. Mrs Hirasuna prepared a Japanese meal of rice, pickled vegetables, fish, and green tea and the student "quickly revived".
When we go to a Chinese or Japanese restaurant, the menus are filled with what would be, in the old country, banquet fare. One has to have experience of the country, or at least good indigenous cookbooks, to order plain "home-style" fare -- which will rarely involve much flesh.
Probably the single most popular Sichuan dish the world around was invented ~150 years ago in Chengdu: Ma Po Doufu. A serving has maybe a quarter-cup, max, of chopped pork. And often chopped mushroom replaces even that.
I love a good chinese restaurant or buffet meal. The choices are large and the dishes great. The one problem that for nutrition I am faced with is being able to eat what is actually the most nutritious way and that is explained in Vilhjalmur Stefansson's 1 year study of himself and his explorer partner. Interesting trial study and here is the link and don't be put off because of the 'biblelife.org address and read the whole article.
And being the fool I am, I am at least aware that with the over burgeoning population of humans not very body can eat sushi and fresh food like this even the nutritious raw carbs that the hunter gathers found tasty and healthy.
http://www.biblelife.org/stefansson1.htm
You may want to get a copy of Gary Taubes' "Good Calories and Bad Calories" to read. And in the husband and wife Dr. Eades' book 'ProteinPower LifePlan' a most interesting chapter is 'The Leaky Gut' you might find interesting.
Gary Taubes is a pusher for the Atkins Diet. He discounts the multiple positive effects of exercise on the body, ignores the research on the many positive effects of fiber in the diet, fails to mention that fruits and vegetables contain multiple other compounds shown to be beneficial to human health that a carnivorous diet would not be able to provide adequately, and ignores the vast body of medical research that has been conducted on the detrimental effects of excessive cholesterol and saturated fats in diets. He's "anti-sugar" to an unhealthy extreme. I don't like that the NYT publishes his articles. But, then again, the NYT isn't always the most informed news source in the world, so perhaps my expectations are too high. I don't know the Drs. Eades' books, but they look to push the Atkins Diet, as well.
Have you read anything by Dr. Andrew Weil? He gives incredibly sound nutritional advice (and I'm giving you a recommendation from nutritionists and scientists I know who have devoted lives to researching the effects of different diets on humans and animals). Dr. Dean Ornish, a cardiologist, has great dietary recommendations. Also, Dr. Mehmet Oz actually has excellent nutritional advice at his website (and, I'm not even one who watches talk shows). Finally, the American Dietetic Association publishes a great resource on nutrition for the general public (their "Complete Food and Nutrition Guide").
Weil and Ornish (but especially Ornish) seem, in concert with the USDA, not to grasp the dangers of carbohydrates. Anyone who has diabetes or limited glucose tolerance needs to avoid carbohydrates because they transform into lots of glucose. Which is okay if you lead an intensely physical life that needs thousands of calories per day to provide enough energy, but potentially fatal if you don't. Most people don't.
Diabetics can eat carbohydrates. Just ask the nation's leading medical society that advocates health choices for diabetics and sponsors diabetes research:
http://www.diabetes.org/food-and-fitness/food/what-can-i-eat/ .
Being trained in science myself, I prefer to follow the recommendations and practice of Dr. Richard Bernstein, who has shown in the most convincing possible way that he understands the problem and how to solve it.
He was diagnosed with T1 diabetes at age 12, and by the time he reached his 30s was dying by inches. Feeling that he had absolutely nothing to lose at that point, he put his engineer's training to work, determined by careful measurement and experimentation that carbohydrates were the problem, and after he proved the validity of his research by personally maintaining a normal glucose level, re-trained as an MD so that his work would be taken seriously.
He's now in his mid-70s, in good health, and has totally outlived the expectations for people with a T1 diagnosis. His medical practice is dedicated to reducing diabetes to an annoyance rather than a killer. He has no patience at all with the very profitable "diabetes industry" exemplified by diabetes.org and the ADA.
If you are trained in science (as am I, BTW), you should know very well that type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) result from two *completely different* disease processes.
T1DM is an autoimmune disease and results in the complete loss of insulin production by the body because the body's immune system selectively targets pancreatic beta cells for destruction/death. Onset of T1DM is not due to lifestyle choices, but is genetic. It often shows when a person is young and otherwise healthy. Problems with glucose handling can largely be ameliorated with carefully timed injections of insulin (around meal times) and by watching carbohydrate intake. In fact, until the discovery of insulin, type 1 diabetics often died young and severely malnourished.
HOWEVER, T2DM - which affects many more people than T1DM - is thought to be brought about by a combination of genetic and lifestyle risk factors (aging may also be another risk factor). Full blown type 2 diabetes - severe glucose intolerance due to deficiencies of pancreatic beta cell production of insulin - is often preceded by a condition called "insulin resistance," which can be due to dysfunction of skeletal muscle, liver cells, pancreatic beta cells, and fat cells (and other cells - for instance, neurons in the hypothalamus, the part of the brain which regulates food intake, can become insulin resistant, as well). It has been shown - repeatedly and in many different models of type 2 diabetes and/or insulin resistance - that diets high in saturated fat can contribute significantly to insulin resistance, for instance that a condition known as lipotoxicity (among other things) can result in affected cells. Diets that are *extremely high* in simple sugars can contribute to glucose intolerance, as well, but not all "carbs" are simple sugars. Nor is eating a diet that is high in unprocessed vegetation (which contains simple sugars) considered to be bad - in fact, the scientific literature would support that it's beneficial to one's health.
In general, the vast majority of medical/nutritional/public health experts would agree that it's totally healthy to eliminate sugary drinks from one's diet, but that it's also good to keep saturated fats and cholesterol in one's diet to a minimum. However, most of them would see nothing wrong with the occasional sweet dessert, fruit juice/soft drink, or fried dish. Based on what's been shown to be reproducible over and over in the scientific literature, diets that are high in omega-3 fatty acids (which are not saturated fats) and which have plenty of unprocessed vegetable matter in it (cooked or uncooked, fruits, veggies, and whole-grains are still great for one's health) promote optimal health. There is nothing wrong with eating meat, as long as one watches the saturated fat and cholesterol content per serving. Dairy products are also excellent sources of calcium, and this is something women (especially young women) need to prioritize in their diets. And, of course, limiting portion size of food and maintaining a lifestyle with regular exercise have been shown repeatedly to significantly and positively impact health.
What will the FBI or some other US Government agancy in the national security realm do next? Anyone for a little 1984?
I dunno. Put nano spies in our food, so they can track our collective national digestive processes? : )
Anyway, I wanted to add to my previous comment that environmental factors may also influence risk for both T1DM and T2DM (not just genetic and/or lifestyle factors), for instance exposure to pathogens, pollutants, or toxins in a person's environment (even in utero). There's a third "type" of diabetes that can manifest characteristics of both T1DM and T2DM, called ketosis-prone diabetes. However, it's a bit too complex of a topic to go into here. And, I suppose that the MODYs deserve their own distinct category (definite genetic component with no autoimmune disease; often "discovered" in childhood).
Are you asserting that Bernstein is wrong? You seem to have responded at an angle, and I'm feeling confused.