Again, you are simply wrong and refuse to acknowledge it when the information is provided to you. Here is further information for you then. This information comes from the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists. You can get the pdf yourself here:
https://www.aace.com/files/dccwhitepaper.pdfThe relevant portion for you is this:
In subjects without diabetes,
blood glucose levels typically peak approximately 1
hour after the start of a meal and return to preprandial levels
within 2 to 3 hours; 2-hour postprandial blood glucose
levels rarely exceed 140 mg/dL (39,40). Therefore, the
consensus panel recommends a treatment-targeted 2-hour
postprandial blood glucose level of <140 mg/dL
Postprandial is post-meal btw, and it should be target by treatment if it exceeds 140mg/dL.
Let's take look at that table from the National Institute of Health.
visitors can't see pics , please
register or
loginAnd the larger image:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2121099/figure/F1/And we see that 1 meal a day peaks at
180 and is above 160 for at least an hour.
And more for you. More studies done by doctors that show nerve damage when your glucose levels exceed 140mg/dL
http://care.diabetesjournals.org/content/24/8/1448.fullOf patients with diabetes, 10% have peripheral neuropathy at the time of their diagnosis, suggesting that axonal injury may occur early in the course of glucose intolerance. The American Diabetes Association (ADA) revised diagnostic criteria to recognize IGT (a serum glucose between 140 and 200 mg/dl in a 2-h oral glucose tolerance test [OGTT]) as a risk factor for cardiovascular disease independent of development of diabetes.
From Merriam-Webster: Neuropathy - an abnormal and usually degenerative state of the nervous system or nerves; also : a systemic condition that stems from a neuropathy
And before you point to the fasting levels being normal in the above graph, we also have this from the same study:
A total of 13 of the 107 patients had diabetes, whereas 36 (34%) had IGT, nearly three times the prevalence in age-matched control subjects (P < 0.01). OGTT was often elevated, whereas both fasting plasma glucose and HbA1c were normal.
Now again, do whatever you like to your own body, but quit trying to convince other people to destroy their bodies following your advice simply because you love to argue endlessly even when wrong.