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Human is not a Meat Eater
A carnivore's stomach secretes powerful digestive enzymes with about 10
times the amount of hydrochloric acid than a human or herbivore. The pH
is less than or equal to "1" with food in the stomach, for a carnivore
or omnivore. For humans or other herbivores, the pH ranges from 4 to 5
with food in the stomach. Hence, man must prepare his meats with
laborious cooking or frying methods. E. Coli bacteria, salmonella,
campylobacter, trichina worms [parasites] or other pathogens would not
survive in the stomach of a lion.
A carnivore's or omnivore's small intestine is three to six times the
length of its trunk. This is a tool designed for rapid elimination of
food that rots quickly. Man's, as well as other herbivore's small
intestines are 10 to 12 times the length of their body, and winds itself
back and forth in random directions. This is a tool designed for
keeping food in it for long enough periods of time so that all the
valuable nutrients and minerals can be extracted from it before it
enters the large intestine.
A carnivore's or omnivore's large intestine is relatively short and
simple, like a pipe. This passage is also relatively smooth and runs
fairly straight so that fatty wastes high in cholesterol can easily
slide out before they start to putrefy. Man's, as well as other
herbivore's large intestines, or colons, are puckered and pouched, an
apparatus that runs in three directions (ascending, traversing and
descending), designed to hold wastes that originally were foods high in
water content. This is so that the fluids can be extracted from these
wastes, now that all the useful nutrients and minerals have been
extracted and the long journey through the small intestine is over.
Substances high in fat and cholesterol that have been putrefying for
hours during their long stay in the small intestine tend to get stuck in
the pockets that line the large intestine.
Animal flesh, composed of the most highly complex type of protein that
exists, requires vast amounts of uric acid to process. Uric acid is
released into the system in amounts necessary to break proteins down
into amino acids. Uric acid is a toxic substance responsible for the
aging process and must be flushed out and dealt with. That is one of the
jobs of the liver. In relative terms, a carnivore's liver is a tool
designed with the capacity to eliminate ten times as much uric acid as
the liver of man or other plant eater.

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