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Kevin Brown on the USDA

Posted by Kevin Brown on July 28, 2010

Here is our latest video, commenting on the USDA guidelines that are having a devastating affect on the health of our nation!

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Kevin Brown is President of Liberation Wellness and co-author of the Liberation Diet. He serves as a Fellow on the National Board of Fitness Examiners, and is president of Visionary Trainers. Kevin and his wife Tracy are Chapter leaders for the Weston A. Price foundation, a non-profit organization that is helping restore real food to its rightful place in the American diet.

Posted in Congress, FDA, Food freedom, god, government, grains, kevin brown, liberation diet, liberation fitness, liberation wellness, liberation wellness hour, lobbying | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Real milk on NPR

Posted by Liz Reitzig on July 28, 2010

On the Morning Edition July 19, 2010,  NPR covered the increasing popularity of fresh milk.

It was an honor to sit down with April Fulton and discuss with her all my reasons for choosing fresh milk.

I think she did a fantastic job piecing together all the information she collected to give a balanced explanation on why some consumers choose fresh milk.  I was thrilled to hear that a former FDA person actually admitted that pasteurization does destroy some nutrients.  At the end of the program, the narrator says “The food safety expert says not getting sick is what’s important.

He would never drink raw milk. But he thinks banning it only encourages Liz Reitzig and others to skirt the law, and that could put them at greater risk.

If you’re one of the one to 3 percent of the population that drinks raw milk, Acheson says make sure that the cows are clean, your hands are clean, and the bottle are sterilized and stored properly.”

This is the most flexibility I have ever heard from a government person on raw milk.  Kudos to NPR for covering this important topic and doing such a great job on it!

About Liz Reitzig
Liz Reitzig is a
certified Liberation Wellness Nutritionist and a regular contributor to Liberation Wellness (www.LiberationWellnessBlog.com) She serves as President of the Maryland Independent Consumers and Farmers Association and Secretary of the National Independent Consumers and Farmers Association.  As a champion for real foods and farm freedom, Liz is the co-founder and partner in a farm fresh buying club and raises her own family on real foods from local farms. She is also a Chapter Leader for the Weston A Price Foundation.

Posted in FDA, Family Wellness, Fear, Food Safety, Food freedom, Local Foods, Nutrition, Politics, Weight Loss, farm fresh, fresh and local, government, health, liberation diet, liberation wellness, liz reitzig, processed food, raw milk, real food, real foods, wapf, wellness | Tagged: , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Farm Food Voices DC 2011

Posted by Liz Reitzig on July 28, 2010

Joel Salatin and Joel Thevoz teamed up to bring us a perfectly roasted Polyface Farm pig for Farm Food Voices 2010

The planning is underway for the national food freedom lobby day!  Check out the new site dedicated to documenting as farmers, producers and chefs

prepare for the big day on Capitol Hill.  If you know any farmers or chefs who want to participate, please pass along the invitation to them!  And…food activists from around the country are invited to attend so if you or anyone you know is interested, please follow the blog to get regular updates on how we can work together to have the greatest effect lobbying.  For those who participated this past March, please plan on being there again!

Farmers and chefs supportive of local foods are invited to participate in Farm Food Voices DC 2011 – the annual local foods feast on Capitol Hill for legislators, staff and grassroots lobbyists organized by the National Independent Consumers and Farmers Association (NICFA)

Led by Chef Bryan Voltaggio of VOLT restaurant in Frederick, MD,

and Emceed by Joel Salatin, Polyface Farm, Swoope, VA

Read more here…


About Liz Reitzig
Liz Reitzig is a
certified Liberation Wellness Nutritionist and a regular contributor to Liberation Wellness (www.LiberationWellnessBlog.com) She serves as President of the Maryland Independent Consumers and Farmers Association and Secretary of the National Independent Consumers and Farmers Association.  As a champion for real foods and farm freedom, Liz is the co-founder and partner in a farm fresh buying club and raises her own family on real foods from local farms. She is also a Chapter Leader for the Weston A Price Foundation.

Posted in Butter, Chef, Congress, Events, FDA, Food Safety, Food freedom, Inspiration, Local Foods, Maureen Diaz, NICFA, Politics, farm fresh, fresh and local, government, health, liz reitzig, lobbying, raw milk, real food, real foods, wellness | Tagged: , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Jimmy Moore “Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb” Book Review: The Liberation Diet By Kevin Brown And Annette Presley

Posted by Kevin Brown on July 26, 2010

Summertime 2010 Book Review Series:

The Liberation Diet By Kevin Brown and Annette Presley

People these days feel trapped by the obvious failure of conventional wisdom when it comes to their diet and health.  They have faithfully followed everything they’ve been told is good for them down to the last bit of whole grain bread and tofu burgers that are most commonly associated with the standard low-fat, high-carb, plant-based dietary recommendations but they still inexplicably deal with obesity and chronic disease like never before!  What the heck is going on here?  Its one thing to fool around with your personal fitness and nutrition where you are expected to gain weight and have unhealthy blood sugars, lipids and the like.  But what can explain these things happening when you’re supposedly doing everything 100% right?

That’s the answer that personal trainer Kevin Brown and registered dietitian Annette Presley answer for readers in their counterintuitive book called

The Liberation Diet: Setting America Free from the Bondage of Health Misinformation!.

Brown and Presley do an outstanding job of explaining the breakdown that is happening with nutrition in the 21st Century. They correctly identify whats wrong with a one-size-fits-all approach to promoting the same diet to

everyone without taking into account the specific individualized factors that make one way of eating better than another for certain people. Challenging this conventional wisdom on nutrition is what you get early and often from The Liberation Diet and the authors d

on’t hold back in blasting away at the nonsense that pervades from the so-called health experts and government policymakers responsible for perpetrating these lies on the unsuspecting public.  The stories behind how foods like Crisco came into being are truly fascinating and should make you shudder about what the food industry is feeding Americans that we DON’T yet know about.  We learn that clever marketing and a little sleight of hand is all it takes to convince people to start eating something their great-grandparents would have never even entertained a thought about eating.  From margarine to Cool Whip to Wonder Bread, we’re surrounded by so many fake foods that the message this book implores on the reader is to simply get back to eating real, whole foods again.  Duh!

As you turn page after page of The Liberation Diet, you’ll no doubt find yourself becoming angrier and angrier by all the preponderance of the evidence presented that proves beyond a shadow of a doubt that we have been

lied to about what constitutes a healthy diet.  And even more egregious is the story you’ll read about entrepreneurs Andrew Carnegie and John D. Rockefeller who were the ones who set up the accreditation process for medical schools.  Because they saw the potential for billions of dollars in profits from pharmaceutical sales, the only schools that would be accredited were ones that taught students about how to prescribe expensive drugs to their patients rather than having them learn about the equally effective nutritional therapies.  Unfortunately, this model for teaching medical school students still exists today while millions of people in the United States are needlessly suffering from mostly preventable diseases related their diet.  You may need to start breathing deeply or take a walk in between chapters to get your blood pressure down again because this information will have you up in arms!

Brown and Presley also point readers back to the infamous Seven Countries study by Ancel Keys that has become the standard-bearer for the low-fat diet quagmire that is surprisingly still in existence today despite the fact there have never been any scientific studies published proving it is effective for weight loss or improving health.  In fact, there is ample evidence that the diet has been a dismal failure for people with obesity, diabetes, heart disease, cancer, and other diseases of modern man.  But rather than admitting they’ve been wrong all these years, the purveyors of the high-carb, low-fat diet keep touting it as the gospel truth while tens of millions more are getting sick and dying from the biggest health scam in the history of the world.  And the politicians on Capitol Hill are partially to blame for this as well.

Senator George McGovern and his committee on nutrition in the mid-1970′s were the ones who created all the mass hysteria and fear-mongering about saturated fat when they promoted the now-infamous Dietary Goals for Americans that was later picked up by the United States Department of Agriculture to help them promote the sale of more key crops like grains, corn and bean (which just so happen to be very high in carbohydrate).  The authors write in their book, They liked the idea of a low-fat diet because if people cut the fat from their diets, they would have to add carbohydrates.  Again, this is still the overriding theme of the USDA Dietary Guidelines released every five years in the United States with seemingly no dramatic changes each time new recommendations are released. This is why The Liberation Diet book was written and so sorely needed in modern-day society.  Its time for public revolt against the status quo!

So if everything is so grim and bleak, do we have any hope at all? You bet we do!  Its called THE TRUTH and you get a lot of it within the pages of this book.  Learn why saturated fat and cholesterol are not the reasons why we have heart disease, how eating butter, lard, and coconut oil are actually good for you, why high cholesterol foods like eggs are healthy, why consuming real whole (raw) milk is optimal for your health, and why the highly processed hydrogenated fats (trans fats) and vegetable oils are the real villains in our diet along with sugar and excessive consumption of carbohydrate.  And there are some real doozy stories you’ll read about how common carbohydrate foods consumed by most Americans like cereal actually came into existence.  You’ll never believe it until you read about it.  This book is peppered with ample evidence that should convince you that eating carbs will make you fat, diseased, and eventually dead from some preventable chronic health problems that nobody is talking about.  You’ll learn that there is absolutely zero science supporting a high-carb diet and that livin la vida low-carb is NOT the fad diet it has been made out to be by the anti-low-carb members of the health media.

Other topics of interest covered in this book include calories in, calories out, salt, water, exercise, supplements, and more! Real-life examples of how people have changed their lives by implementing the strategies of The Liberation Diet are also included to encourage you as you take this newfound journey for yourself.  Of course, you also get lots of recipes, references and other resources to help you along as you improve your lifestyle for good.  Having interviewed both Kevin Brown and Annette Presley for my health-based podcast, I can personally attest that they are the real deal when it comes to articulating information that will help you in your personal weight and health goals.  If you’ve been frustrated and felt trapped by the low-fat lie that’s been heavily promoted for far too long, then why not give the concepts outlined in this book a try for yourself?  It could be the answer you’ve been looking for all along.

Jimmy Moore author of LivinLaVida Lo-Carb

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Kevin Brown is President of Liberation Wellness and co-author of the Liberation Diet. He serves as a Fellow on the National Board of Fitness Examiners, and is president of Visionary Trainers. Kevin and his wife Tracy are Chapter leaders for the Weston A. Price foundation, a non-profit organization that is helping restore real food to its rightful place in the American diet.

Posted in Big Agriculture, Financial Wellness, Food freedom, Journey with Liberation Diet, Nutrition, Vitamin D, big pharma, kevin brown, liberation diet, liberation fitness, liberation wellness, liberation wellness hour, obesity, raw milk, real food | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Cops Raid Raw Food Club, Guns Drawn

Posted by Maureen Diaz on July 24, 2010

The Cooler at Rawsome Foods, filled with-gasp!-unpasteurized dairy products!!!

Bizarre is all I can say. After the Wisconsin DATCP raided the Vernon Hershberger Farm, authorities gathered the “evidence” they needed and moved on to California where they raided the private (as in, “not public”) Rawesome Food Club.

Were they looking for illegal drugs? Illegal immigrants? Illegal money laundering? No folks, I kid you not; the “authorities” came in, guns drawn, looking for (drum roll please…) Raw Milk!

How silly they look, searching carefully under tables and boxes of vegetables, guns in hand just in case some radical foodie might jump them. What would one of these scary individuals do to them anyway? Give them a (raw) milk bath?!

Ah, please Big Brother; you have grown too big for your britches. Why don’t you go after the really bad guys and let us have our food? Can you not see how ridiculous this is, and how positively hilarious you look? Sheesh.

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Maureen Diaz is a certified Liberation Wellness Nutritionist, Educator, and Cooking Instructor. She works from home where she oversees the education and daily life of her large family. Maureen has also produced 3 cooking DVD’s including her latest available now, the Liberation Wellness Cooking DVD. For purchasing information email Maureen at: mamasfollies@gmail.com or visit her website, FilmBaby.com

Posted in Big Agriculture, FDA, Family Wellness, Fear, Food Safety, Food freedom, Local Foods, Maureen Diaz, NICFA, Politics, farm fresh, fresh and local, government, raw milk, real food, real foods | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

BUDGET SHORTFALLS HIT ILLINOIS PRISON DIET

Posted by Kevin Brown on July 21, 2010

Weston A. Price Foundation
Washington, DC
westonaprice.org
Contact: Kimberly Hartke
press@westonaprice.org
703-860-2711, cell 703-675-5557

BUDGET SHORTFALLS HIT ILLINOIS PRISON DIET

State Ignores Win-Win Solution

WASHINGTON, DC, July 20, 2010:  Budget shortfalls and unpaid bills have forced a virtually meatless diet on Illinois prisoners, exacerbating health problems and raising tensions among the state’s prison population.

The quality of prison food has been reduced “to the point that it’s nearly inedible,” said Ken Kleinlein, president of the union local at Western Illinois Correctional Center in Mount Sterling, Illinois, noting that much of the food is soy-based or pure soy. “When the meals are like this, it puts a huge strain on the inmate population.”

Until recently, inmates received several meals containing chicken, turkey or pork each week; but recent unpaid bills by the Illinois Department of Corrections has forced elimination of these items, resulting in soy-based meals for breakfast, lunch and dinner.  Meanwhile, the U.S. government has a huge surplus of chicken legs, which it sends to China and other countries overseas.

Soy was introduced into the prisons as a substitute for meat in January 2003, when Blagojevich became governor.  Archer Daniel Midlands, a major contributor to Blagojevich’s campaign, was the main beneficiary of the new prison food policy.

In the wake of the dietary change, prisoners began to suffer from a variety of health problems.  “We have heard from over two hundred prisoners in the state of Illinois,” said Sally Fallon Morell, president of the Weston A. Price Foundation. “The most common complaint is digestive disorders, including severe constipation, debilitating diarrhea, vomiting and extreme pain after eating,” said Fallon Morell.  “Skin problems, thyroid disorders and endocrine disruption leading to breast development are also common.”

The Weston A. Price Foundation, a nonprofit nutrition education organization, is supporting the case of  Harris et al. v. Brown, et al., Case No. 3:07-cv-03225, which is currently pending before the Honorable Harold Baker in the United States District Court for the Central District of Illinois. The suit seeks an injunction putting a halt to the use of a soy-laden diet in the prison system.

“When prisoners unable to tolerate soy request a soy-free diet, they are told to purchase commissary food or starve,” said Fallon Morell.  “Since most of the prisoners cannot afford commissary food, many of them are either starving or suffering severe health consequences.  Department of Corrections officials justify the soy-based meals as a cost-cutting measure, but increased health care costs and pending liability for not supplying life-sustaining meals have the potential to make the soy-based meals very expensive for the state of Illinois.” Several Supreme Court decisions have confirmed the right of prisoners to a diet that sustains their health. Before the recent budget crisis, prisoners at least got meat several times per week.

Government officials in Illinois and other states face a dilemma of budget shortfalls and the need to feed over 40,000 prisoners daily. But, until recently, prisoners raised their own food at no cost to the state.

The Vandalia prison complex still has the equipment and buildings for a dairy farm, as well as facilities to butcher, package and ship meat to every prison in Illinois. Menard prison in Chester, Illinois has enough acreage to raise cattle, hogs and chickens, along with barns and buildings for a butcher shop. Mt. Sterling Correctional Center has processing facilities as well.  All these were mothballed not more than twenty years ago when the state began contracting with private parties for prison food.

Prisoners in the state of Virginia raise grass-fed meat in a state park; the excess is sold to the Pennsylvania prison system, so the state actually makes money on the venture. Similarly, in Illinois, excess beef, pork, eggs, poultry and dairy products could be sold on the open market to offset the cost of security personnel, or used in food give-away programs.

Of additional benefit, most prisoners would welcome the chance to work outside in a farm environment, or in a butcher shop learning new skills. Every prison has enough land for a vegetable garden, another outlet for men forced to spend the entire day inside.

“A self-supporting farm program for Illinois prisons is a win-win proposition,” says Fallon Morell. “The prisoners would be well fed and healthy, they would have meaningful work, and the state would save millions of taxpayer dollars every year.”

The Weston A. Price Foundation is a non-profit nutrition education foundation dedicated to restoring nutrient-dense foods to the human diet through education, research and activism. The Foundation is spearheading a national campaign to warn consumers about the dangers of modern soy foods. Please visit their website www.westonaprice.org to learn more about the Foundation’s Soy Alert! campaign.

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Kevin Brown is President of Liberation Wellness and co-author of the Liberation Diet. He serves as a Fellow on the National Board of Fitness Examiners, and is president of Visionary Trainers. Kevin and his wife Tracy are Chapter leaders for the Weston A. Price foundation, a non-profit organization that is helping restore real food to its rightful place in the American diet.

Posted in Food freedom, Kimberly Hartke, government, real food, real foods, weston price | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Wait, it’s “Genetics”?!

Posted by Maureen Diaz on July 20, 2010

Morgan Spurlock of "SuperSize Me" fame

I’ve heard it all; because several family members have had their gall bladders removed, the only reasonable conclusion is that it is”genetics”. I am not wanting to poke fun at anyone, but do we really need to place the blame for every ill on our genes? Really?!

Folks, genetics have been blamed for every ill under the sun: cancer, diabetes, heart disease, birth defects, excema, schizophrenia, obesity, breast cancer, etc.; along with a few “disorders’ such as laziness, obsessive compulsiveness, depression, shyness… You get the picture.

Well I’m not buyin’ it folks; I’m just not. After all, most of these diseases and disorders are particular to modern man, and certainly the rest occurred  infrequently at best in people who suffered from malnutrition, war, and lack of decent living conditions, or indulged to excess.

But, “No!”, you say. “My mother was diabetic, my grandmother diabetic, and I am also diabetic; therefore it must be genetic”. More importantly, “My doctor says it is genetic!”  Well, let’s bow down to the doctor/god who proclaims such truth!

Folks, we live in a processed world. Likely you are eating a similar diet as an adult to what you were fed as a child. This means your mother ate the same types of foods as you ate (and, scary though it seems, your children now do as well). Mom learned to cook from her mother, although Grandma likely ate far better as a girl than she did later in life, which is why she only developed diabetes as an old woman, not at 30, or 20, or… as people do now.

Our great grandparents ate mostly simple, local, whole foods. They had gardens, farms, or neighbors who were farmers. Their diets consisted of fresh, whole (unprocessed) milk, eggs, meat, fresh fruits & vegetables, and whole grains. They used lard and butter for cooking and baking, not crisco and vegetable oil. Fermented foods such as sauerkraut or pickles were part of the daily diet. Processed foods only began to make strong appearances on the local grocer’s shelves around the turn of the 20th century. Even still it was eggs, meat, and butter that were in demand. Now consider this: they and their parents died of old age, not degenerative disease!

I recall well my grandmother’s cooking; she was famous in our little Mid-Western town for her culinary skill. But she was feeding us on all kinds of new-fangled foods like sugar (and artificial color/flavor) laden Jello, casseroles made from canned vegetable and Campbells soup, and Tater Tots. Her pie crusts were dutifully made with Crisco, the fillings filled with canned fruit. Not good; Grandma died at 63.

My own mother fed us hamburger helper, Kraft Macaroni and Cheese, turkey burgers (ultimate bluck!) and powdered skimmed milk. She has asthma, allergies, and developed other problems in spite of switching to “healthy” (low-fat) foods when I was a teen. I now tell people that it is important we get our nutrients from real food, not nutritional supplements: Mom popped multitude pills everyday, but even still refuses to eat butter or drink much whole, unprocessed milk (thankfully, she does consume some raw milk). She is proud of her 2 eggs a day, but suffers from severe short term memory loss and has had most of her major joints replaced. (Sorry Mom, but your story is just such a good example :-P )

You must understand: we were not created to require knee replacements and back surgery. Nor were our bodies designed for behavior and learning disorders, degenerative diseases, depression, cancer. Our vision is supposed to hold out pretty well until we’re elderly, as is every other part of our body. And we were supposed to be able to eat all good things, not suffer from Celiac Disease and Irritable Bowel Syndrome. Then, when our time has come, we were designed to die of old age-what a concept!

There is now a new field of study called Epigenetics. This particular field explores how genes can be turned on and  off to display differing characteristics dependent upon environmental, nutrient and other factors. It is a fascinating study!

The research of Dr. Weston A Price and others, seems to corroborate  these findings. Dr. Price found that food played an absolutely integral role in the development of the human body and mind. Replacing nutrient-dense, traditional foods with the “foods of modern commerce”  caused birth defects and many physical weaknesses, along with degenerative diseases and mental/emotional disorders in the people he studied. Today’s foods are far worse than those of Price’s day, and we are also much further down the road of malnourishment, due to the displacement of nutrients in our modern, processed “foods”. The work of Dr. Francis Pottenger, as well as the information coming from the study of epigenetics clearly show that the effects of a poor diet can, in fact, be passed down for several generations. But it also shows that as individuals we can affect  change upon we, and our children’s, genes for generations to come.

So is it genetics, really? Well, in one sense I would say, “yes”. But to a much larger degree I must conclude that we hold within our hands, more specifically the tips of our forks, the power to change our very lives and the lives of future generations. It all begins with what we choose to put in our mouths, and the mouths of our families. Choose well.

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Maureen Diaz is a certified Liberation Wellness Nutritionist, Educator, and Cooking Instructor. She works from home where she oversees the education and daily life of her large family. Maureen has also produced 3 cooking DVD’s including her latest available now, the Liberation Wellness Cooking DVD. For purchasing information email Maureen at: mamasfollies@gmail.com or visit her website, NourishingTraditionalCook.com, which is (sigh) still currently under construction.

Posted in Butter, Dietary Cholesterol, Family Wellness, Fermented Foods, Food Addiction, Food Safety, HOMOCYSTEINE, Local Foods, Maureen Diaz, Nutrition, cancer, diabetes, farm fresh, fresh and local, grains, grass fed beef, health, heart disease, lard, liberation diet, obesity, oral health, processed food, raw milk, real food, real foods, saturated fat, wapf, wellness, weston price | Leave a Comment »

Cholesterol Builds Muscle? Cholesterol and the Big FAT Lie

Posted by Janet Stuck, ND, CNC, MH, CNHP on July 16, 2010

We have been programmed to believe that any form of cholesterol is bad for us.  In fact, the opposite is true.

There is a new study finding that low levels of cholesterol can actually reduce the beneficial muscle gain from exercising. Research has also shown that people who die of heart disease have low or average blood cholesterol.

Despite the plethora of previous and on-going scientific studies, there is NO evidence linking a diet high in saturated fats and blood cholesterol levels and coronary heart disease.  In fact, almost ¾ of the fat that accumulates in the arteries is unsaturated fat.

Researchers looked at 55 healthy men and women in their 60s. Overall, the study concluded that there was a significant link between dietary cholesterol and the increase in strength: Those with the higher cholesterol intake had the most muscle strength gain. What’s more, the test subjects who were taking cholesterol-lowering drugs showed lower muscle gain than those who were not.

The researchers conducting the study were stunned. “Needless to say, these findings caught us totally off guard,” said lead researcher Steven Reichman, a professor of health at Texas A&M University.

Cholesterol facts:

Cholesterol is so vital to the body it takes a lot of cholesterol to build and maintain a healthy body, especially the brain—There are 100 grams of cholesterol in the body, 25% of which is in the brain, the highest concentration in the connection between nerve cells and myelin that protects brain and  nervous tissue.

  • Cholesterol is in all cell membranes and stored in adipose tissue.
  • Human breast milk is high in cholesterol because of the developing brain and eyes of an infant, which require large amounts of cholesterol.
  • Cholesterol is the main ingredient in bile which is an emulsifier necessary for digesting and metabolizing dietary fat.  Bile is the only way cholesterol leaves the body and is made and excreted at the direction of the liver.
  • Cholesterol is a powerful antioxidant that prevents cancer and slows aging by protection from free radical damage.
  • Cholesterol provides structural support for the cells of the body.
  • Cholesterol is the raw material needed by the body to produce Vitamin D and hormones (See my Vitamin D Blog).
  • Cholesterol is structural glue used by the body to repair lesions and fissures (caused by inflammation, nutritional deficiency and toxins) in coronary arteries.
  • Even at a very high dietary cholesterol intake, the fraction absorbed decreases, tending to limit absorption as the body keeps levels in balance with circulating blood cholesterol around and back to the liver.

Cholesterol Components:

Here are some of the components that make up cholesterol and its function in the body:

  • Cholesterol is composed of a sterol or high molecular weight alcohol, fat and fat soluble vitamins, which are bundled together into lipoproteins.
  • Lipoproteins are “transport vehicles” for fat and cholesterol in the body that travel in the blood and vary in size.  Listed are from largest to smallest order of lipoproteins with “transport vehicle”equivalents:
    • Chylomicrons – Bus – made in gut, transports dietary fat reassembled and sent out from intestinal wall
    • VLDL – Van – Made in liver, transporting liver-made-fat and cholesterol throughout the body
    • LDL – Car – Main transporter of cholesterol throughout the body-LDL is the metabolic residue VLDL
    • HDL – motorcycle – Secreted by the liver separately, transporting “loose cholesterol” back to the liver for recycling.

Not surprisingly, VLDL , the liver-made-fat, is generated in response to ingested carbohydrates resulting in its metabolic residue, LDL.  The more carbohydrates eaten the more VLDL is required to transport fat out to the body unloading its triglycerides.

High triglyceride (TG)  and low HDL numbers indicate the strongest risk factor for heart disease.  Divide TG by HDL for ratio.  Anything above a 1:1 ratio is greatest risk indicator.  (Example:  TG 90, HDL 90 = 1:1 ratio – good; TG 150 HDL 30 = 5:1 ratio – bad)  A TG number greater than 100 and a low HDL number is a strong indication that the LDL is probably the small, dense sticky blood Pattern B.  An HDL number that is high with a low TG number indicates a probable Pattern A LDL, which is “large and fluffy.”  An example would be TG 65, HDL 98, and is considered more desirable.

Cholesterol and Diet:

Let’s look at what happens when you eat a “High cholesterol” meal rich in saturated fats versus a “Government Recommended Food Pyramid” high carbohydrate meal.

Steak and Eggs:  The  fat and protein begin to separate in the stomach and ultimately become gut assembled dietary fat, releasing Chylomicrons into the bloodstream via the lymph, traveling until they release fat to the cells, shrink and disappear, being cleared from circulation within 2 to 3 hours.

Cereal and skim milk: Glucose from the carbohydrates is sent directly into the blood and may be used in the short term for energy.  After a short delay the liver starts converting excess carbohydrate into the body-made-fat called triglyceride. The liver then bundles triglycerides (liver-made-fat) with cholesterol and protein sending it out into the bloodstream as VLDL, the second largest lipoprotein and main transporter of liver-made-fat which can go on for several hours after a meal unloading its triglycerides.

As you can clearly see, metabolism is very different between a “high cholesterol, saturated fat” meal and a low-fat high-carbohydrate meal based on the food pyramid.

The body prefers fat as its main source of fuel. Saturated fats from animal and vegetable sources provide a concentrated source of energy that is very efficiently utilized by the body.  In addition, saturated fats are:

  • Modulators of genetic regulation, prevent cancer, act as carriers of fat soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K and mineral absorption as well as numerous other biological processes
  • The main source of fuel for your heart, and also used as a source of fuel during energy expenditure  - (The heart is the only organ that doesn’t get cancer)
  • Useful antiviral agents (caprylic acid)
  • Effective as an anticaries, antiplaque and anti fungal agents (lauric acid)
  • Useful to actually lower cholesterol levels (palmitic and stearic acids)

Eight of the most common saturated fats and their sources are as follows:

  • Butyric – Milk fat of ruminants – butter
  • Caproic – milk fat
  • Caprylic – animal fat, plant fat, milk and some seeds
  • Capric – milk and some seed fats
  • Lauric – palm kernel, coconut, human breast milk
  • Myristic – milk and dairy products
  • Palmitic – animal, plants and microorganisms – palm oil and meat
  • Stearic – animals, plants, cocoa butter – meat and cocoa butter

An on-line search in Wikipedia’s definition of saturated fat states,

“Deepfry oils and baking fats that are high in saturated fats, like palm oil, tallow or lard, can withstand extreme heat (of 180-200 degrees Celsius) and are resistant to oxidation. A 2001 parallel review of 20-year dietary fat studies in the United Kingdom, the United States of America and Spain concluded that polyunsaturated oils like soya, canola, sunflower and corn degrade easily to toxic compounds and trans fat when heated up. Prolonged consumption of trans fat-laden oxidized oils can lead to atherosclerosis, inflammatory joint disease and development of birth defects. The scientists also questioned global health authorities’ wilful recommendation of large amounts of polyunsaturated fats into the human diet without accompanying measures to ensure the protection of these fatty acids against heat- and oxidative-degradation.[6

With all this information on how good saturated fats are and how bad polyunsaturated fats are, why are we so ingrained to believe that low-fat (polyunsaturated fat) and high carbohydrate diets are so healthy?

Cholesterol and Heart Disease:

In 1953 Ancel Keys, American Heart Association board member and professor at the University of Minnesota, published his Six Countries Analysis, showing a correlation between dietary fat and heart disease.

What you don’t hear is that the study was actually a 22 country study, but Keys didn’t like the results of the total 22 countries, which indicated that there was no correlation between consumption of saturated fats and heart disease, but actually the opposite. Keys omitted the other 16 countries and chose the 6 he knew would support his hypothesis.

A fellow AHA board member and staunch Keys supporter, Jeremiah Stamler, wrote a self-help book, Your Heart Has Nine Lives, which advocated the substitution of vegetable oils for butter and saturated fat.  The book and Stamler’s research was sponsored by the makers of Mazola Corn Oil and Fleishmann’s Margarine.

In addition, an interesting point to mention is the fact that cholesterol lowering statin drugs account for more profit than any other drug. Statin drugs reduce the liver’s production of coenzyme Q10, which is vital for the proper function of the heart and other muscles.  Moreover, recent studies have shown statin drugs to cause cancer in humans and laboratory animals.

In the 1980’s the total cholesterol number considered safe was 240 and below – Currently, the safe number is 200.  Why does the safe cholesterol number keep going down?  The most profitable drug needs marketed and  sold! Doctors now seem to be more driven by a number more than internal health.  Blood Cholesterol numbers naturally go up as we age and are protective in adults over 50.

French researchers found that “the incidence of cancer began to climb steadily as cholesterol values fell below 200 mg/dl.  “Data suggests that for people without heart disease only 1 in 100 is likely to benefit from taking statin drugs” according to Businessweek.

I’m scratching my head and wondering why people just can’t grasp the concept that it’s the polyunsaturated fats, processed foods, sugar, and excess carbohydrates that are bad – carbohydrates regardless of the source, simple, complex, processed, are sugar to the body and creates an insulin response, which is the real culprit when it comes to heart disease and chronic disease.

I would like to point out also that people with heart disease have been shown to have elevated uric acid levels and elevated homocysteine levels.  Both high uric acid and homocysteine levels are a direct result of excess carbohydrate consumption.

Cholesterol is Essential for Us

It has been known for over 50 years that milk is a natural antidote to elevated uric acid levels.  It is also known that Vitamin B6, B12 and Folic acid reduce homocysteine levels in the body.  Large amounts of B vitamins are necessary for digestion of sugar, processed or refined foods.  Again, we see the sugar/carbohydrate heart connection.

Just think – if cows, raw milk, butter, eggs, B vitamins, the sun, etc., had a marketing budget, ad campaign and funding, don’t you think our opinion about what is healthy would be different from what people believe today?

The government and its food pyramid says that cholesterol is bad for us–nonsense!  I say we leave the pyramids to the Ancient Egyptians and fire up the griddle for some bacon and eggs!

Resources:

Life Without Bread, Christian B. Allan Ph.D and Wolfgang Lutz, MD

Cereal Killer, Alan L. Watson

Mercola.com

Perfecthealthinstitute.com

Douglassreport.com

Articlegarden.com

Wikipedia.com

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Janet Stuck is a Doctor of Naturopathy, Certified Nutritional Counselor, Certified Wellness Nutritional Counselor, Master Herbologist and Certified Natural Health Professional. Janet writes for www.LiberationWellnessBlog.com and her website www.onestopherbshop.net.

Posted in Ancel Keys, Artherosclerosis, Big Agriculture, Blood Serum Cholesterol, Butter, Cholesterol, Chylomicron, Dietary Cholesterol, Food freedom, HDL, HOMOCYSTEINE, Janet Stuck, Jeremiah Stamler, Journey with Liberation Diet, LDL, ND, Nutrition, Total Wellness, VLDL, balance, big pharma, blood cholesterol, cancer, exercise, government, grains, health, heart disease, lard, liberation diet, liberation wellness, liproprotein, obesity, polyunsaturated fats, processed food, raw milk, real food, saturated fat, sugar, tallow, triglycerides, unsaturated fat, uric acid, wellness | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments »

USDA Dietary Guidelines are Cause of Health and Obesity Crisis!

Posted by Kevin Brown on July 13, 2010

CRITICS ASSAIL USDA DIETARY GUIDELINES

High-Carb, Low-Fat Diets Cause Obesity, Heart Disease, Diabetes, Scientists Claim

Monday, July 12, 2010–WASHINGTON, D.C.–The USDA Dietary Guidelines are a leading cause of the American health and obesity crisis, according to scientists, nutritionists and consumers who testified last Thursday at a USDA public hearing on the report of the Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee (DGAC). Dissenters argued that the proposed 2010 revisions to the Dietary Guidelines are worse, and will not prevent obesity and will only increase degenerative disease in the U.S.

Those testifying against the Guidelines focused on the Committee’s misuse of scientific data to justify a high-carbohydrate, low-fat diet. Dr. Jeff Volek, scientist and academic researcher at the University of Connecticut, noted that the DGAC report ignored scientific studies showing the effectiveness of low carbohydrate diets for weight loss.  “Americans deserve to have official support for the low-carb dietary option,” he said.

“I have followed the work of the DGAC all the way through this process as an academic project. I have dug into their nutrition evidence library,” said Adele Hite, a graduate student in nutrition and public health at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. “Time after time, the scientific evidence the DGAC cited to oppose low-carb diets actually says the exact opposite of the Committee’s conclusions.” Hite testified to losing sixty pounds on a low-carbohydrate diet.

Morton Satin of the Salt Institute sharply criticized the Committee’s recommendation to reduce sodium consumption to 1500 mg per day. “The Committee is suggesting that Americans consume less than 4 grams of salt per day.  No modern society consumes so little salt, making this proposal nothing less than a call for an uncontrolled experiment on more than 300 million Americans.” Satin provided references showing the critical role of salt in digestion, blood pressure regulation and brain development.

Four of the dissenters presented the views of the Nutrition and Metabolism Society, a group of nutrition researchers and medical professionals who have studied the benefits of a low-carbohydrate diet for weight loss, insulin regulation and protection against chronic disease. “We expected the new guidelines to recognize current research that vindicates saturated fats as a cause of heart disease and weight gain, and to acknowledge the demonstrated benefits of lower carbohydrate diets,” said Dr. Richard Feinman of Downstate University, New York.

In response to the DGAC report, the Nutrition and Metabolism Society recently launched the Committee for a Healthy Nation (CHN). “The CHN is a working coalition of professionals who oppose the low-fat, plant-based thrust of the DGAC report. We feel strongly that the scientific evidence omitted from or misrepresented by their report must be considered in the final outcome,” said Feinman.

“Five years ago, I was the lone voice testifying against the guidelines,” said Sally Fallon Morell, president of the Weston A. Price Foundation and member of the CHN. “This year I was happy to be joined by members of the medical and research community in opposition to USDA’s unscientific prescription.” Fallon Morell’s testimony focused on nutrient deficiencies common in those following low-fat diets.

Dr. Feinman challenged the DGAC panel to an open public debate on the scientific evidence underpinning the Guidelines. “Our nation’s citizens need a range of dietary options to choose from, not a one-size-fits-all approach. We must allow for lifestyle, activity levels and metabolism as factors in choosing an optimal diet for each individual.”

The Committee for a Healthy Nation membership is open to professionals and organizations interested in developing guidelines that will offer a range of choices to the American public.

The Committee for a Healthy Nation is a project of The Nutrition & Metabolism Society, a 501(c)3 nonprofit health organization providing research, information and education in the application of fundamental science to nutrition, particularly dedicated to the problems of obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular disease.  Their office is located at 24 Spruce Street, Bedminster, N.J. 07921. For further information or to join the CHN, contact by E-mail: info@nmsociety.org or call 908-326-6464.

MEDIA CONTACTS:  Kimberly Hartke, 703-675-5557  press@westonaprice.org

Pam Schoenfeld,  609-439-8237  Pam@MetabolismSociety.org

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Kevin Brown is President of Liberation Wellness and co-author of the Liberation Diet. He serves as a Fellow on the National Board of Fitness Examiners, and is president of Visionary Trainers. Kevin and his wife Tracy are Chapter leaders for the Weston A. Price foundation, a non-profit organization that is helping restore real food to its rightful place in the American diet.

Posted in Big Agriculture, Cholesterol, Congress, FDA, Food Safety, Food freedom, big pharma, farm fresh, government, grains, health, lobbying | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

Howling Wolf Farm Tour

Posted by Kevin Brown on July 12, 2010

Weston Price Friendly Farm Announces Tour

Howling Wolf Farm

Come out to Howling Wolf Farm on Saturday, July 17 (raindate July 18), from 2 to 7pm for a nourishing potluck and introduction to a diversified organic farm. Learn about the farm, meet the grassfed beef cattle and dairy herd, visit the chickens and pigs on pasture, and tour the vegetable fields.

Bring healthy potluck food, your own plate, cup, bowl and utensils, and a picnic blanket or camp chair. Grilling capabilities will be available. Please eat lunch before you come, as you will be touring the farm first before the potluck at 5pm.

Wear sturdy boots for walking through the fields, and please carpool if possible. The farm is located near Hope NJ, 5 minutes from Rt 80 in Warren County NJ. Please RSVP by Wed, July 14 to howlingwolffarm@embarqmail.com with the dish you will bring, and to get driving directions.

Howling Wolf Farm is a full food farm — grass-based, diversified, and visionary. Partners in this full food farm share year-round weekly pick-ups of free-choice animal products and seasonal vegetables, with future plans for dry beans, grains, prepared foods including fermentation and culturing. Email the farm at howlingwolffarm@embarqmail.com for more information.

Regards, Carol Rice

WAPF local chapter leader northeastnjwapf@optonline.net

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Kevin Brown is President of Liberation Wellness and co-author of the Liberation Diet. He serves as a Fellow on the National Board of Fitness Examiners, and is president of Visionary Trainers. Kevin and his wife Tracy are Chapter leaders for the Weston A. Price foundation, a non-profit organization that is helping restore real food to its rightful place in the American diet.

Posted in Food freedom, Local Foods, farm fresh, fresh and local, weston price | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »