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These diets seem like a lot of bogus, Saami, some Northern Amerindians and Inuits have very high frequency of Bloodtype A and they are traditionally nomads and hunter & gatherers, not farmers or vegetarians.
A
B
O
I'm Bloodtype A myself.
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I would also like to add that the traditional Inuit diet is mostly animal based, supplemented with some berry picking in the fall. So according to the blood type diet, these blood type A Eskimo's would have never thrived and reproduced enough to have contributed such a large percentage of individuals to the group.
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I am A+, but will bravely continue to eat meat untill my last breath.
Be creative, invent a perversion.
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Last edited by Vyacheslav; 01-03-2017 at 09:12 AM.
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In general, it is strange to relate blood and food, such as ancient hunters and! Gatherers ate including vegetarian food, it is considered that the second group of blood vegetarian, but someone then distributed the cattle, are not nomads?) And more fruits and vegetables received a large spreading recently, when they were brought from Asia and America.
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Hm, I have heard of this before. I’m O+. I was checking out one site to see what’s recommended for O+ people, and while I already eat a lot of what’s recommended, I also eat some of what’s not recommended, like salmon, catfish, green peas, lentils, peanuts, pb, oranges, and strawberries.
I think I would like to try to do without these specific foods I listed for a week and monitor how my body responds.
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Peas are carb heavy, but lentils are not as bad( which is almost self evident if you think about their size and how different they are in density, as compared to peas or other beans) and are allowed. Same with oranges, even apples. I can have some, but not a large amount. This would be the same for a diabetic diet, as the natural sugar in fruits can be hard on glucose levels.
I am O+ and a regular blood donor. My diet lacks food rich in Iron, or any nutrition in general to be honest but i've never failed the Iron test I have to take before donation
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