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Thomas pfp
Thomas
@aviationdoctor.eth
Eating healthy is *hard* — it takes discipline, time, money, and considerable effort to establish your baseline, source quality nutrients, test supplements for what they claim to be, etc. Most people say they don’t have time for this. Yet *not* doing it imposes a hidden tax on the body, causing them to live on borrowed time. The biggest disruption is to make all of it easier: health data acquisition and analytics, analog twins of your own cultured cells to test various protocols, last-mile delivery of quality tested nutrients, etc. If Bitcoin is there to prevent central banks from eroding your wealth, the longevity movement is there to prevent society from eroding your health. @bryanjohnson and @balajis.eth at the /network-states conference in Singapore
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Luigi Stranieri
@luigistranieri
Probably the center of the discussion is westerners food culture and environment. As a westerner living in Japan I found that eating healthy in Japan is not hard and cheaper.
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Thomas
@aviationdoctor.eth
Indeed most of the conference materials are heavily US-centric (and slightly tone-deaf in the Asian context)
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PhiMarHal
@phimarhal
Where do you get healthy food in Japan?
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