TRANSCRIPTIONEnglish

They're Lying About 'Healthy' Foods & Sugar! Shocking New Research That's Harming You

1h 35m 36s19,043 mots2,836 segmentsEnglish

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With your diet during pregnancy, you're

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programming your baby's DNA. And this is

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going to have an impact on your baby's

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development and on their future risk of

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disease. And there's a lot of pregnant

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moms who are eating a diet that's not

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giving them the nutrients their baby

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needs. This is not the mom's fault. This

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is the fault of our food system. This is

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the fault of society. And nobody's

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telling moms about this. And I wanted to

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create this guide to help parents

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navigate that food system and see easy

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things they can do to help their baby's

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development. And I know this because as

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a biochemist when I became pregnant, I

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just went deep, deep, deep into the

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research. And there are some main things

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that I learned. For example, 90% of moms

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are not getting enough choline during

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pregnancy. And choline is super

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important. It forms your baby's brain in

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the womb. So this is the amount of eggs

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that I ate per week during the 9 months

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of pregnancy because this is the

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simplest way to give enough choline to

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our baby. And then your baby needs no

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fructose during pregnancy. So sugar from

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dessert, from chocolate, from muffins,

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from cupcakes, your baby needs none of

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this. Because if you have very high

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glucose levels [music] during pregnancy,

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scientists have found that your baby's

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DNA will have epigenetic switches that

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are programming them towards having a

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higher vulnerability to develop

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diabetes, obesity, and psychiatric

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disorders. Next, this is basically the

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amount of protein that I needed to eat

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every single day in the third trimester

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of pregnancy.

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>> Yeah. because the studies show low

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protein diets [music] lead to smaller

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babies and potentially this epigenetic

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programming of staying smaller

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throughout life. And it's findings like

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that that led me to create a plan and

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simple hacks for pregnant moms and we

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can talk about them.

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>> And then what does the research say

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about breastfeeding, exercise, caffeine

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and also do you recommend that mothers

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take certain supplements? [music]

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>> So this is what people need to know.

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>> [music]

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>> Jesse Inchospay, the glucose goddess.

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For people that don't know who you are,

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what have you spent the best part of the

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last decade committing your life to and

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why?

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>> My work started in the glucose space,

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meaning the blood sugar space. I was

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showing people how blood sugar impacts

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all of us on a daily basis. the spikes

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and dips after we eat, they lead to

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inflammation, faster aging, cravings,

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fatigue, and it's been the basis of my

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work because glucose matters for

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everybody and it is the core of a

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healthy body and mind. And so that's

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where I started because it's so

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important.

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>> We last spoke almost two years ago now.

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>> What have you learned in those last two

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years that has evolved your own thinking

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or has developed your own thinking in

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any way? If we reflect on the last

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conversations we had around glucose

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spikes and sugar and the health

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consequences and diets, is there

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anything you've learned in those two

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years that is interesting and new?

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>> Oh, absolutely. I think mostly the

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impact of glucose on mood and on

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relationships. For example, there's this

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fascinating study that took married

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couples and they gave the husband and

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the wives a little voodoo doll

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representing their spouse. And the

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researchers told uh the participants to

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put a little pin in the voodoo doll

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every time their spouse annoyed them. At

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the end of the two weeks, the

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researchers counted the number of pins

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in the voodoo dolls. And they also

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measured the participants glucose

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levels. They found that the people who

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had the most glucose lows had put the

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most pins in the voodoo doll

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representing their spouse.

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>> Wow.

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>> So, it's just an association, but it's

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interesting. And scientists then found

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that when you have very unsteady glucose

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levels, it impacts this neurotransmitter

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in your brain called tyrrosine that

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manages your mood. So it seems that with

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unsteady glucose levels, your mood is

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less stable, which could then correlate

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to you being more annoyed at your

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spouse. So I think studies like this

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have really blown my mind.

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>> What's going on when we go through a

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glucose crash, per se?

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>> So glucose is your body's energy. So

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your brain is constantly monitoring how

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much glucose do we have in our

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bloodstream. And steady glucose is

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great. When your glucose levels crash,

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this indicates biologically that you're

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out of fuel. And this is a powerful

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signal to your body and your brain to

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say, "Alert, alert. We need food. We

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need more glucose." And so it creates

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all these downstream consequences on

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your mood. You become hangry. All you

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think about is food. You're in a bad

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mood. You're like, "I need to eat

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something." You look for a banana. You

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look for a cookie. It can also activate

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the craving center in your brain that

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says, "Stephen, go find some chocolate."

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And science has shown this. Low glucose

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levels creates a cascade of consequences

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on how we feel and what we seek. Now,

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what's interesting is that back in the

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day when we had low glucose levels, I'm

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talking like huntergatherer times, they

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wouldn't arrive so quickly because we

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didn't have these big spikes that then

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led to these big drastic drops. It was

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more we ate in a more balanced way with

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less sugar obviously. So when our

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glucose became low, it was a bit more

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gradual. Today, because we have access

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to all this sugar, we can spike our

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glucose very quickly and as a result, it

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then crashes very quickly. So the

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effects are pretty much immediate and

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they're very intense. All of a sudden,

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you go from feeling okay to your brain

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being in alert mode. We need to find

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more fuel. So we've disregulated our

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glucose levels to the point where it's

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impacting us in a very unnatural way.

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>> Is that in part because we modify our

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food, even fruit? When I looked back

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through the history of fruit, apples,

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bananas, etc., looked extremely

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different before they were modified to

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be juicier and sweeter, etc.

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>> Completely. It's like dogs. So, all the

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the dog breeds today, from Chihuahua to

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golden retrievers, they all come from

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wolves. Humans have been breeding wolves

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together to create these different

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species of dogs. They all have that

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ancestor of the grey wolf. So, humans

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are very good at breeding natural things

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to serve their purposes. And when it

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comes to fruit, it's the same thing. So,

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as you say, if you compare like an

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ancestral banana or an ancestral apple

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to a modern one, they look completely

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different. And you should pull up these

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photos. They're fascinating. Ancestral

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banana, tiny, full of fiber, full of

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seeds, not very sweet. And then, modern

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banana, full of sugar, low in fiber,

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really easy to eat. So, that's the first

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thing people need to know about fruit.

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Fruit is not natural. Fruit is the

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product of human engineering. However, a

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piece of whole fruit also contains fiber

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and water. So even though it's been bred

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to have a lot of sugar, the fiber in the

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water reduce how quickly the sugar

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arrives in our bloodstream, making it

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more or less okay for us. But the

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problem comes when we denature that

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piece of fruit. Meaning if we remove the

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fiber, for example, if we take an orange

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and make an orange juice, what are we

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actually talking about here? Actually,

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oranges are not even a natural fruit.

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They were invented thousands of years

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ago by breeding by crossing other

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species of fruit. To make an orange

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juice, you throw away part of the

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orange. you throw away the solid part,

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