Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
February 24, 2018
At the time she passed, her body was 56% cancer cells.
Veganism is a faith-healing cult.
As evidenced by this.
A YouTube star who had claimed a vegan diet and spiritual lifestyle cured her of breast cancer died of the disease, her niece confirmed.
Liz Johnson said her aunt Mari Lopez died in December after the cancer recurred. The two women hosted a YouTube channel together titled “Liz & Mari.”
Johnson posted a video Sunday explaining her aunt stopped her vegan diet after her cancer returned. She attributed Lopez’s death to undergoing radiation, chemotherapy and eating meat again.
Just to be clear, I don’t know the details here, but early diagnosis breast cancer has a 99% survival rate. Late diagnosis – which virtually never happens in the developed world – has an 85% survival rate.
So like a Rastafarian or other faith-healing cult member, this woman died because she refused treatment and believed vegetables have magic powers.
“My aunt passed away in December because her cancer came back,” Johnson posted on the YouTube channel. “My aunt was inconsistent in her diet and spiritual life … I never pushed my aunt to do anything or stay away from doctors.”
In the video, Johnson said Lopez asked her to take down videos of her speaking about a vegan lifestyle after she realized she would die from the disease, but she refused, KSDK reported. She believed the videos could help others.
lol.
Help others die from treatable cancer.
In 2016, the two women uploaded a video titled, “Stage 4 cancer natural transformation.” In the video, Lopez shared how she cured herself of cancer through a vegan diet, juicing and a lot of praying. The video has more than 370,000 views.
In other videos, the two women shared recipes of “all natural remedies.”
But Johnson said she has never been “against doctors or medical advice.” Lopez acted in accordance with her own beliefs, she said.
“She chose to do what she did and experienced healing, leading her to share her testimony to help others,” Johnson said.
Yeah but then it caused her to die of cancer and she knew that and so she asked you to take the video down so that others don’t watch it and also die of cancer.
So…
Try It Out If You Don’t Have Cancer – Whatever
It is in my Wikipedia page that I am a transformed vegan. This is because a proud fake news author decided “liberal converts to Nazism” was a useful narrative – even though he didn’t really think through the implications of that narrative, or even bother to explain why it was meaningful.
I dropped out of high school in 10th grade, when I was 14. That information comes from then. They could have just as easily have run with “former shop-lifting Insane Clown Posse fan…” because I stole an ICP album from Walmart when I was 12. Or “former fanatical fan of the X-Men cartoon show, fixated on 1990s retro tech…” because when I was 8 I would record that every Saturday morning on VHS and watch it over and over throughout the week.
Anyway, I actually like the “vegan anti-racist hippie transforms into hardcore Nazi genocidalist” narrative, as it serves my purpose of promoting the idea that anyone can become a Nazi.
POINT BEING: because of the Wikipedia article, people will come at me like “so are you still a vegan???”
Obviously no.
But I do have an experience of spending some time between 13-14 as a vegan, so I can comment on it from experience.
Here are some things about veganism, in convenient bullet-point format:
- Most all foods eaten by vegans are healthy foods – I would exclude the legumes and processed grains in the form of whole wheat, but generally, if you go to a vegan restaurant, you’re going to get a very healthy meal (soy obviously is a poison, and that was a big part of the vegan thing when I was 14, but from the vegans I’ve talked to more recently, that community is hip to the SQ and isn’t promoting it anymore). The problem with the diet is that it is incomplete.
- By default, veganism is healthier than most modern diets, simply because it forces a person to eat whole foods. Yes, eating processed foods from a box is always going to be less healthy than eating any type of whole foods, even if it is only fruits and vegetables.
- Being on a vegan diet forces you to think about ingredients in foods, which is a good thing.
- The first 3-4 months of a vegan diet can be very positive, in terms of energy, because you are basically doing a full-body cleanse. Although meat is absolutely necessary to sustain the human form, it also requires a lot of energy to process. Also, cutting down the processed foods reduces inflammation.
- Not eating dairy products can, in itself, make an individual feel much better, because everyone on the planet has various degrees of lactose intolerance which cause inflammation (NO, MODERN DAIRY PRODUCTS ARE NOT THE SAME THING AS THE RAW MILK WE USED TO DRINK ON THE STEPPES – MOST WHITE PEOPLE ARE EVOLED TO DIGEST MILK, BUT NO ONE IS EVOLVED TO DIGEST PROCESSED MILK).
- After about 6 months doing veganism, you start to lose energy. Your muscle mass goes down while your BMI goes up. Your body begins to believe it is in some kind of starvation mode, so you can actually get chubby – “skinnyfat,” as they say – even though you are technically only eating healthy foods. Your testosterone levels will also go down, which contributes to a loss of energy and muscle mass.
These last points I want to highlight as probably the most important:
- Veganism is not the same thing as vegetarianism, and technically, you can be healthy eating eggs and no meat (if you have access to raw milk, this becomes a lot easier).
- Even vegans agree that veganism is not natural and can only exist because of modern food preparation/variety and supplements.
- A human being can only become a vegan after they have eaten meat to develop vital biology – a vegan baby would probably die.
- If you go into some really complicated shit with meal preparation and supplements, you can mitigate many of the effects of not eating meat through the magic of modern chemistry. All you are doing at that point however is purposefully mimicking a diet that includes meat by spending a bunch of time treating your meals like science projects and swallowing supplements.
- Different people’s bodies are DIFFERENT. People require different amounts of meat. Women, having lower muscle mass and needing less testosterone, generally require less meat.
Cult Shit
You could just as easily do this meme with a house plant and a piece of corn, and it would have the same amount of meaning. Veganism is a cult.
Veganism is a cult, and they will give you all of this blah blah blah bullshit that they have memorized in response to any argument you make to them. Because most vegan cult members tend to be on the higher end of the IQ spectrum, the arguments that they give are relatively sophisticated, generally.
The arguments are sophisticated enough that you would have to spend weeks researching to be able to explain why they are wrong, scientifically.
This debate between JF and “Vegan Gains” is instructive.
(Even though JF is a pussy bitch who refuses to moderate a debate between me and JF about whether or not I am a good debater, dude is pretty sharp – gotta give him that.)
Vegans who are less sophisticated will just talk about some or other sports player who is a vegan and is healthy/strong. But that person is, I guarantee, a combination of unique biology that is inclined toward veganism AND an extremely complicated food preparation and supplement regime.
So my advice is if you think this is a good idea, then try it and see what happens.
Just don’t do it in place of cancer treatment.
My Diet
I am a firm advocate of a version of the paleo diet. Although I am basically at the point personally where I am ready to promote my own unique diet with its own name, called the Nazi Diet and/or The Stormer Diet.
I think I can write a book on this and that would be funny. Then I can force Wikipedia to say “genocidal neo-Nazi and health and fitness guru…”
Basically at this point, the “paleo” brand has been drug through so much fad diet and low-carb cult shit that it is not a good brand anymore, so over the last couple of years I have not enjoyed using the term but still feel it is the most accurate way of describing my diet. The philosophy of “we are evolved to eat a certain kind of food and the modern diet, being a result of the agricultural revolution, is at odds with our biology” is also kind of cultlike I think, even though it is more or less true.
So anyway, I’ve got a diet guide I’ve been working on that I’m going to print in an incomplete form, then probably rewrite as a short (50k word) book on health and fitness with a little bit of self-helpism thrown in.