greg_barton
greg_barton
greg_barton

Considering just how much I loathed every second of Origins, I was pleasantly surprised how much I liked The Wolverine. I appreciated the fact that it was a small story, dealing with Wolverine's involvement with this one family. I'm tired of the world.. or the city... or all of humanity being at stake. It's probably

You bring up a lot of valid points in this review, but I just can't get behind the idea that The Wolverine was only slightly better than Origins. That's just nuttyballs. Origins came off like a bad music video from the early 2000s with a structure that follows a format that goes something like this:

— Conflict-thing

Saw the ending with the Samurai coming from miles away and while I agree the third act was messy, it wasn't A mess. All the dots were finally connected.

I had 0 hopes for it, only went to see it out of some weird obligation and... I loved it. I was really, genuinely invested in the story, I liked the side characters, I enjoyed the action. Also it had NINJAS, what more do you want? It's definitely smaller and more intimate than most superhero films and in this case, it

Its a good thing Zimmerman didn't fire shots into air harming no one to scare away a real threat. Then it would have gone badly for him.

I find this chart to be extremely disturbing... and I'm a white dude.

I'm not a paleo supporter. There are good and bad things about the diet and culture that surrounds it. But if you think consuming dairy is the best way to get strong bones, you're wrong.

I've done a lot of reading in Evolutionary Psych and I believe it has merit.

I don't really want to be that guy but...

Nuclear is absolutely the current best technology to reduce greenhouse gases. People point at poorly designed plants like Chernobyl, but ignore the fact that pebble-bed reactors are physically incapable of suffering a meltdown. People also point at Three-Mile Island, where some malfunctions occurred but the system

This book has been discredited a lot already, because it tries to say that Paleo is Paleolithic. The Paleo diet is NOT a Paleolithic diet (we eat broccoli, which didn't exist in the Paleolithic times, for example). The Paleo diet simply uses the Paleolithic times as a template, and then it uses MODERN research on food

I couldn't care less about the "paleo lifestyle" as some sort of philosophy. All I know is that if I eat less grain, especially the heavily processed stuff, I feel a lot better. Since switching to a MOSTLY paleo-style diet, my cholesterol has dropped below 200 for the first time in 10 years, I've lost about 25 pounds

Paleo doesn't propose some mythical utopia where man was in perfect harmony with nature, nor does it claim that humans are unable to digest refined grains.

It's not unnatural at all. Doing this diet is simple. You replace your starchy carbs with vegetables, usually green ones. The ketogenic diet isn't about cutting carbs altogether. If it were, there wouldn't be broccoli and peppers in that stir fry photo.

I think low-carb makes sense insofar as agriculture is still something new for mankind.

As a Type II Diabetic it's all about the blood sugar and it gets created via various mechanisms. Carbohydrates like sugar, starches (grains and potatoes) convert 100% into blood sugar. Proteins and fats also produce blood sugar but in much smaller amounts. I started a low/no carb diet 4 weeks ago and I'm healthier

your argument is illogical, just because they eat those foods and live a long life doesn't make those foods the only reason that they live long lives. One could eat those very same foods and smoke 3 packs a day, i dont believe that they would last very long

No his comment is useless. It is neither criticism nor discussion. All it says is "I don't like diet articles, so don't post them". Well get over yourself, some people on this site like the diet articles (or more accurately the science of the diet articles), and there are plenty of articles on the site for you to

This is the future. America's high-carb diets and the use of sugar (high fructose corn syrup) in everything is making us fat as fuck. Obesity has been on a dramatic rise in the past 60 years. With the industrialization of our food industry, making cheaper, high-carb foods has addicted our country to the amazing