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Originally Posted by Villages PL
At first you may think this is unrelated or changing the subject but it's not.
Air pollution of course is bad and I have always maintained that to be at one's healthiest one needs to get as many things right as possible, including buckling up when driving and getting a good nights sleep. Everything counts for something.
To hint that some people think eating the right diet is all that counts is to misunderstand and mischaracterize. Those who are concerned about proper nutrition are usually concerned about ALL aspects of things that have an effect on one's health.
How does this relate to smokers? An observational study (The Okinawa Program) showed that elderly smokers in Okinawa were usually not as adversely affected by smoking as American smokers. They often maintained good health and longevity despite smoking. (This thread is about children not the elderly but the principle is the same, so hold on.) What was the difference? Why did smokers in Okinawa do better? The theory is that because they ate a diet high in antioxidants their system stayed clean or was kept clean.
When people are exposed to air pollution, a healthy diet becomes more important than ever for cell rebuilding and repair and to help eliminate toxins. To be exposed to air pollution together with a poor diet is to compound the problem and obesity may become more certain.
I almost forgot: Someone will always say it genetic but that's wrong. Second generation Japanese-Americans have the same rates of degenerative diseases as the rest of the American population.
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Genetics does not have to do with the general overall health of a particular race of people.It has to do with the genes that you inherited from your parents, grandparents, great grandparents and so on down the line.
Asian people do not all have the same genes.
While there are diseases that are more prevalent or less prevalent in some races than other's, that has nothing to do with genetics.
The fact that Africans are more prone to sickle cell anemia is not due to genetics. The fact that a person has blind hair and blues eyes and is predisposed to heart disease is due to genetics.