Does Taking a Multivitamin Shorten Your Lifespan?

We interrupt our coverage of B-grade crisis actors to bring you a series of nutritional supplement articles that might extend your life.

A few weeks back, media outlets ran a story about a “major” and “massive” study that supposedly found no mortality benefit for multivitamin supplements.

"Multivitamins are mostly useless, finds study of nearly 400,000 participants," declared a National Post story that was picked up by MSN.com.

“Daily multivitamin supplements don't help you live longer, study shows,” wrote ABC News. Other media outlets, like The Guardian, CBS and Fox, ran similar headlines.

The Epoch Times also ran the story, but it seems reporting on something that fails to make you live longer has limited clickbait appeal. So it upped the ante and ran with the headline Large Study Links Daily Multivitamin Use to Increased Mortality Risk.” (Bold emphasis added)

What’s going on here?

The Usual Bollocks

The “major,” “massive” study recently appeared in JAMA and it has an interesting back story - one that may help explain why an otherwise yawn-inducing paper made headlines.

The content below was originally paywalled.

The paper was authored by an Erikka Loftfield and eight of her colleagues from the National Institutes of Health (NIH). You know, the same institution whose Fauci-led subsidiary, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), partnered with Moderna to produce a deadly mRNA pseudo-vaccine.

The release of that ‘vaccine,’ along with the Pfizer version, has triggered an unprecedented wave of illness and excess mortality. Which in turn has triggered a massive wave of denial and diversion.

Witness the highly-triggered response of the pharma-industrial complex when Dutch researchers recently suggested the vaxxxines might have something to do with the well-documented excess mortality seen post-rollout.

Lo and behold, shortly after that bout of overly defensive hysteria we now have the media headlining a study dumping on multivitamins.

Was this done to help divert attention away from the deadly clot shots?

Further muddying the waters is JAMA’s choice of invited commentary. For those of you who don’t spend much time analyzing glorified medical tabloids, it’s customary for the large journals to invite ‘experts’ to write up a commentary on their lead article. That commentary is usually a page or so in length and runs at the front of the same issue that the lead article appears in.

JAMA (formerly Journal of the American Medical Association) is one of the world’s most widely-read medical journals. So you’d think the editors would have little trouble attracting highly esteemed and respected professionals to proffer commentary.

Extremely curious then, that the invited commentary was authored by none other than Neal Barnard, Hana Kahleova and Roxanne Becker. All three are members of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, which was exposed years ago as a sham medical outfit. Newsweek reported back in 2004 that only 5% of PCRM members were in fact doctors. That number is now less than 2%, going by the PCRM’s “About Us” page.

As ActivistFacts.org notes, “The Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM) is a wolf in sheep’s clothing. PCRM is a fanatical animal rights group that seeks to remove eggs, milk, meat, and seafood from the American diet, and to eliminate the use of animals in scientific research. Despite its operational and financial ties to other animal activist groups and its close relationship with violent zealots, PCRM has successfully duped the media and much of the general public into believing that its pronouncements about the superiority of vegetarian-only diets represent the opinion of the medical community.”

The PCRM is really a vegan and animal rights activist group. So where does it stand on the issues of human rights and injecting human animals with toxic gene therapies?

“In addition to requiring the use of masks, social distancing, and good hygiene, we also mandate COVID-19 vaccination for all clinic and research staffers who have contact of any sort with patients or research participants.”

The PCRM repeats all the usual vaxxxine lies, claiming “an effectiveness of over 90%” for the dangerous and useless drugs. The PCRM claims short-term side effects from the poison pricks are “minimal” and that the “evidence so far suggests that serious long-term side effects are extremely unlikely.”

We know that’s garbage. Yet the PCRM continues to spout the thoroughly disproved Safe & Effective!™ lie.

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: Irrespective of whatever benevolent intentions grassroots adherents might hold, the vegan and animal rights agendas are globalist operations.

In their guest commentary, titled The Limited Value of Multivitamin Supplements, the PCRM trio claim “Considerable evidence now shows that, apart from the aforementioned roles for vitamin supplementation, there is little health rationale for the use of multivitamin supplements.”

That’s not just an outright lie, but a most ironic one.

We have a group of individuals who recommend a diet thoroughly documented to be deficient or completely lacking in numerous important nutrients (B12, CoQ10, D3, carnitine, carnosine, creatine, taurine, long chain n-3 fatty acids) - now claiming that nutrient supplementation is unnecessary.

If ever there was a demographic that needed nutrient supplementation, it is the anti-meat crowd - but nowhere in their invited commentary do Barnard et al mention this (vegans tend to be highly dogmatic and extremely reluctant to acknowledge the nutritional shortcomings of their diets).

Looks to me like the PCRM is more about promoting ideologies than genuinely helping people achieve good health. If they really wanted to warn people away from useless supplements, they might have started with green tea extract, which is notorious for causing liver damage. GTE, however, gets scarce attention in the mainstream and medical media.

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