Except that we have records of the bones. We can literally look at ancient people's skulls and teeth. If what you say is true, then we should find just as many skulls of ancient peoples with bad teeth as modern people, but we don't. Did all ancient people have perfect teeth? Of course not, but they had far healthier teeth than we do today. Even mainstream sources admit this. Here are some links:
You're experiencing gell-mann amnesia. These are the same people that lie constantly about everything they can. Ancient humans didn't have as many sugar-driven cavities as we do today but they did have severe issues like their teeth literally being ground down or shattered from lower quality food.
And remember, we don't have the skull of everyone everywhere to have ever lived. There's a huge selection bias here.
I agree that the mainstream media lie almost all the time. However, that doesn't mean everything they say is wrong or a lie. Sometimes the truth slips through. For example, the New York Times actually reported on rampant pedophilia in New York Jewish communities (even orthodox ones) several years ago. Just because they lie about everything else doesn't mean they were lying, or wrong, then. To suggest otherwise would be to slip into the "well Hitler drank water" meme. In general, though, extreme caution should always be used with any source from the mainstream. They're known liars.
Furthermore, just because we don't have the skulls of everyone that ever lived doesn't mean we can't do comparative analysis of the skulls we have. Even using a small fraction of the skulls available, we can determine averages and see trends. I've heard that info before that ancient humans lost their teeth over time due to their diet. However, that doesn't disprove what I posted. They could have a much higher average (per capita) of straight and healthy teeth, but due to eating more veggies, which would be washed less and contain more dirt than veggies today, and would chew on more bones for marrow, would grind down their teeth more (even though their teeth were on average healthier).
Ancient people had fucked up teeth all the time. It's just that if you couldn't eat you died.
Except that we have records of the bones. We can literally look at ancient people's skulls and teeth. If what you say is true, then we should find just as many skulls of ancient peoples with bad teeth as modern people, but we don't. Did all ancient people have perfect teeth? Of course not, but they had far healthier teeth than we do today. Even mainstream sources admit this. Here are some links:
https://truththeory.com/scientists-reveal-ancient-romans-healthier-teeth-diets-low-one-substance/
https://www.medicinenet.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=167917
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/prehistoric-humans-had-better-teeth-than-we-do-26567282/
https://stanfordpress.typepad.com/blog/2018/05/why-cavemen-needed-no-braces.html
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2013/02/24/172688806/ancient-chompers-were-healthier-than-ours
You're experiencing gell-mann amnesia. These are the same people that lie constantly about everything they can. Ancient humans didn't have as many sugar-driven cavities as we do today but they did have severe issues like their teeth literally being ground down or shattered from lower quality food.
And remember, we don't have the skull of everyone everywhere to have ever lived. There's a huge selection bias here.
I agree that the mainstream media lie almost all the time. However, that doesn't mean everything they say is wrong or a lie. Sometimes the truth slips through. For example, the New York Times actually reported on rampant pedophilia in New York Jewish communities (even orthodox ones) several years ago. Just because they lie about everything else doesn't mean they were lying, or wrong, then. To suggest otherwise would be to slip into the "well Hitler drank water" meme. In general, though, extreme caution should always be used with any source from the mainstream. They're known liars.
Furthermore, just because we don't have the skulls of everyone that ever lived doesn't mean we can't do comparative analysis of the skulls we have. Even using a small fraction of the skulls available, we can determine averages and see trends. I've heard that info before that ancient humans lost their teeth over time due to their diet. However, that doesn't disprove what I posted. They could have a much higher average (per capita) of straight and healthy teeth, but due to eating more veggies, which would be washed less and contain more dirt than veggies today, and would chew on more bones for marrow, would grind down their teeth more (even though their teeth were on average healthier).
They only reported on that because the one thing they hate more than western civilization are jews.