this post was submitted on 28 Jan 2025
110 points (94.4% liked)

DataBackRibs

51 readers
58 users here now

This is a work in progress since I've never created my own community nor moderated one. Bare with me, but the goal is to create a reference community for data and sources. All logic all the time. While I get this built and you'd like to post something that seems on brand, then go right ahead. However, here are some starter rules

  1. No NSFW
  2. No bigotry (this is a coverall. I'm a stickler for phrasing, so choose your words carefully).
  3. Debate, don't debase
  4. It's another person on the other side of the screen. Golden Rule applies
  5. No bias unless it is part of the data and you remain neutral in any description you create.
  6. Citations are required.
  7. No insults (back-handed or otherwise).
  8. Curse/cuss/swear all you want, BUT curse to people. Not at them.
  9. Trolling, brigading, targeting, harassment will not be tolerated. ZERO tolerance
  10. None of us are perfect, so if your argument in a certain case comes to nothing, admit that. You'll get more respect and appreciation for learning something rather than rage quitting a discussion
  11. It's only me on the mod team so far, so please use best judgement to report things. That way, I can respond to the issues in a timely fashion

founded 2 months ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 day ago

As far as I have read LDL by itself doesn't block arteries. Arterial plaque, or calcification attracts LDL to help repair it - in a healthy individual LDL does many things, and repair is one of them -, but for people with advanced cardio vascular disease the "emergency equipment" might end up blocking the entire roadway.