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Is Dr. Andrew Weil Now Championing The Cause Of High-Fat, Low-Carb Living?

Posted by Jimmy Moore on July 27, 2010

The science supporting a high-fat, moderate protein, low-carbohydrate nutritional approach is sound and has been for many years now. And the more we learn about the detrimental impact that carbs are having on our health, the closer we’re inching to a day and age when we will be able to love and enjoy this fabulous way of eating as a universally accepted dietary option for people dealing with obesity, diabetes, and many of the chronic diseases so many people are currently suffering from.

You might be thinking to yourself that this seems like a wild dream to even fathom low-carb acceptance as a plausible outcome with the current negative atmosphere about dietary fat (that it is “clogging your arteries” and going to give you a heart attack) and almost universal embracement of carbohydrates (that they are “essential” to the human diet) that livin’ la vida low-carb could ever be taken seriously as the natural therapeutic treatment option for healing many of life’s health woes. But there’s good news on that front–we’re getting closer now than we’ve ever been before thanks to the newfound embracement of high-fat, low-carb living by one of the world’s most recognized names in health, Dr. Andrew Weil.

As the father of the “integrative medicine” approach used by so many naturopaths and leaders in healthy living today, Dr. Weil has written several bestselling books over the past few decades on a variety of subjects related to anti-aging, alternative medicine, and using food as medicine. His prominence as a top voice in the healthy industry was affirmed when he appeared on the front cover of Time magazine twice after being named one of the 25 most influential Americans in 1997 and then again as one of the 100 most influential people in the world in 2005. Heck, he’s even had a mushroom named after him!

Dr. Weil runs the Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine where he has started a nationwide trend towards teaching integrative medicine to eager medical school students looking to help patients more holistically than pharmaceutically. In other words, this guy is the real deal when it comes to being a highly influential member of the health establishment. But despite his many years as a high-profile teacher and leader in the health industry, Dr. Weil once again returned to being a student of nutrition and the powerful effect certain kinds of food can have on metabolic health after reading a book in 2007 by a science journalist named Gary Taubes called Good Calories Bad Calories.

A transformation of sorts began happening within the mind of Dr. Weil after he carefully examined the quality science that Taubes offered up in his bestselling book detailing the indelible connection between carbohydrates and obesity/disease due to the rise in insulin levels. His change in thinking culminated right before our eyes on national television when Dr. Weil appeared on CNN’s “Larry King Live” on October 19, 2007 to share what he thought about the concepts he had read in Good Calories Bad Calories with Taubes, special guest host Joy Behar and Dr. Mehmet Oz.

After his appearance on “Larry King Live” aired, the buzz almost immediately began within the low-carb community about how Dr. Andrew Weil might be emerging as the next great champion for this cause we all believe so strongly in for helping a large segment of the population effectively get a handle on their obesity and disease.

It certainly seemed that way when he admitted in an interview published on his web site that “cutting carbs” helped him lose weight while simultaneously promoting the importance of consuming saturated fat in your diet. This wouldn’t be such a big deal if some doctor nobody had ever heard of was espousing this–but Dr. Weil is well-respected and almost universally lauded as a living legend in the world of health.

This shift in beliefs is also especially surprising given his association as a member of the Board of Directors for the pro-vegan lifestyle group Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM) alongside the likes of people like T. Colin Campbell, John MacDougall and PCRM President Neal Barnard (who just happened to be seated right next to me at the recent public testimony meeting regarding the USDA’s 2010 Dietary Guidelines).

Check out Dr. Weil’s name listed at the very bottom of PCRM’s Board of Directors:

CLICK on the image to enlarge

Given PCRM’s stated problems with a high-fat, low-carb diet and even dedicating an entire web site to discrediting the Atkins diet, it was intriguing to read Dr. Weil’s column on The Huffington Post earlier this month entitled “Fat Or Carbs: Which Is Worse? This brilliant column which should be recommended reading for anyone who cares about the nutritional relationship to health highlights all of the lessons Dr. Weil has accumulated over the past three years since reading Good Calories Bad Calories including key points like the fact that saturated fat in meat isn’t harmful (he describes it as “the safest element” in a burger meal) as evidenced by this January 2010 study published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, the infamous “Seven Countries” study conducted by Ancel Keys forty years ago was severely flawed from the start, the parallel rise in dyslipidemia associated with the astronomical increased consumption of sugar, and the nutritional superiority of choosing grass-fed forms of beef and butter to consume over grain-fed.

While he’s still hung up somewhat on the idea that meat consumption is inherently a bad thing (citing “humanitarian and ecological reasons to avoid a meat-centric diet”), Dr. Weil notes that “we would be much healthier as a nation if we stopped worrying so much about fats, and instead made a concerted effort to avoid processed, quick-digesting carbohydrates — especially added sugars.” I wonder what his colleagues at PCRM have to say about this.

This certainly begs the question: Is Dr. Andrew Weil breaking ranks from the vegetarian/vegan movement to actively promote the healthy high-fat, low-carb lifestyle? Only time will tell, but with his noted appearance several years ago on “Larry King Live,” his personal weight loss success eating low-carb, and now this 2010 column praising saturated fat and reduced carbohydrate consumption, it certainly seems that way. And before you ask it, yes, I’m trying to get Dr. Weil on my podcast show to talk about this change in his thinking regarding diet. The last time contact was made with his assistant in February this year I was told his schedule would be very busy for most of the rest of the year and to try again in September. It took me a long time to finally land my recent interview with Dr. Robert Lustig, so you know I won’t be giving up anytime soon to get Dr. Weil.

What do you think about somebody like Dr. Andrew Weil espousing the concepts of livin’ la vida low-carb as boldly in the mainstream press as he has done since 2007?

Do you think he has the kind of influence that could convince an entirely new segment of the population to give low-carb living a closer look or will he be characterized by his vegetarian/vegan friends as being out of touch with sound dietary principles? Share your thoughts about this developing story that is sure to be ruffling the feathers of those who promote a low-fat, high-carb, plant-based diet.

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Jimmy Moore is the popular blogger, podcaster and author of Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb who lost 180 pounds on the Atkins diet in 2004 and quickly established himself as a highly influential layperson in the field of health and nutrition. His wildly successful Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Blog has been educating, encouraging and inspiring readers since 2005 and his accompanying iTunes podcast The Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Show with Jimmy Moore is one of the most listened to health broadcasts online today featuring hundreds of enchanting interviews with the leading voices in the world of diet and healthy living! Jimmy’s latest book compiling all the knowledge he has learned along his journey is called 21 Life Lessons From Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb: How The Health Low-Carb Lifestyle Changed Everything I Thought I Knew. He lives in Spartanburg, SC with his beautiful wife Christine and their four crazy cats!

Posted in Nutrition, health, heart disease, saturated fat | 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 »

One Doctor Stands Up For Truth At USDA Public Hearings!

Posted by Kevin Brown on July 10, 2010

Silver Cloud Diet Weighs in on New Food Pyramid in Washington Public Hearing

ORAL TESTIMONY TO THE USDA DIETARY GUIDELINES COMMITTEE

July 8, 2010

By Dr. John Salerno and Linda West Eckhardt, Founders – The Silver Cloud Diet

The proposed 2010 Dietary Guidelines continue the misguided shibboleths against saturated fats and animal foods rich in nutrient dense fatty acids, including egg yolks, butter, cream, whole milk, cheese and fatty meats including bacon as well as animal fats for cooking. In my 20 year practice of medicine in New York City, I have treated many patients whose health had been severely compromised by excluding these necessary nutrients in their daily diet. It is my experience, backed up by scientific studies, that low fat diets have caused many of today’s lifestyle ailments including obesity, diabetes, heart disease and stroke.
Read Full Story Here…

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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 Butter, Cholesterol, Congress, FDA, Food freedom, Nutrition, Weight Loss, gmo, government, grass fed beef, health, heart disease, liberation diet, liberation wellness, liberation wellness hour, lobbying, real foods | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Chipping Away at The China Study

Posted by Lauren Snyder Grosz on July 10, 2010

Here is a recent post by one of my favorite real food bloggers who goes by the moniker Food Renegade.

I’ve answered plenty of reader questions about The China Study over the years. Most simply ask, “I appreciate the research and thought you’ve put into getting us this information about how pre-industrial diets can help curb the diseases of industrialization (heart disease, diabetes, cancer, high blood pressure, obesity, etc.), and I support your conclusions 100% based on my own experience. But I have friends who have read The China Study, and they say that it’s real, hard science disproving what you’re promoting. What’s your response to them?”

I’ve never written a post about The China Study, so rather than point them to my own content, I point them to a hodge podge of various posts online written by people whose scientific judgments I trust as more valid than my own — some are doctors, some have Ph.D.s in nutrition research, and some are just folks who are science junkies. While I’ve found those handful of articles to be helpful, I’ve never found any one of them individually to be all that comprehensive or thorough.

That changed yesterday.

Now, I’ve finally read what I consider the go-to article online for helping folks in love with The China Study see the light. The post is written by someone who took the raw data from The China Study and mapped it out to see if she could draw the same conclusions that the famous book’s author (T. Colin Campbell) drew.

After spending a solid month and a half reading, graphing, sticky-noting, and passing out at 3 AM from studious exhaustion upon her copy of the raw China Study data, blogger Denise Minger decided it was time to voice her criticisms. And there were many.

Her 9,000+ word essay is as thorough as they come, and she concludes with this thought:

In sum, “The China Study” is a compelling collection of carefully chosen data. Unfortunately for both health seekers and the scientific community, Campbell appears to exclude relevant information when it indicts plant foods as causative of disease, or when it shows potential benefits for animal products. This presents readers with a strongly misleading interpretation of the original China Study data, as well as a slanted perspective of nutritional research from other arenas (including some that Campbell himself conducted).

In rebuttals to previous criticism on “The China Study,” Campbell seems to use his curriculum vitae as reason his word should be trusted above that of his critics. His education and experience is no doubt impressive, but the “Trust me, I’m a scientist” argument is a profoundly weak one. It doesn’t require a PhD to be a critical thinker, nor does a laundry list of credentials prevent a person from falling victim to biased thinking. Ultimately, I believe Campbell was influenced by his own expectations about animal protein and disease, leading him to seek out specific correlations in the China Study data (and elsewhere) to confirm his predictions.

So, if you’ve been wanting an in-depth rebuttal to T. Colin Campbell’s The China Study, go read her 9000+ word summary conclusion. And if you want even more detailed analysis, take a look at the complete series of articles she’s posted over the past month as she’s dissected both the raw data and the famed best-selling book.

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Lauren Snyder Grosz is a Certified Nutrition and Wellness Educator. She writes for LiberationWellnessBlog.com. As a student on a lifelong quest for exceptional health and happiness, her mission is to empower people to take complete responsibility for their own health by rethinking everything we’ve assumed to be true and rediscovering what truly works based on accurate science.

Posted in Nutrition, cancer, heart disease | Tagged: , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

David Takes on The Low-Fat GOLIATH

Posted by Kevin Brown on July 1, 2010

Low-Carb Experts Comment On 2010 Dietary Guidelines,

Headed To Washington Next Week To Testify

by Jimmy Moore

It’s been a couple of weeks now since that 13-member Advisory Committee for the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) released their best recommendations for the 2010 Dietary Guidelines for Americans and the response from members of the low-carb community has been quite staggering in their underwhelmed opinion about what has been handed down as dietary truth like the Ten Commandments to Moses from the mountaintop! But, as I previously shared, what they are promoting as healthy nutrition to the American people is still very carbohydrate-heavy and fat-phobic to say the least with their recommendations for people to be eating even MORE carbs (you know, all those “healthy whole grains”) and to slash dietary fat, especially the dastardly “artery-clogging” saturated fat, even further. These asinine and archaic recommendations are still based on decades old propaganda (can you say Ancel Keys?!) that do not accurately reflect the most up-to-date research and information that we have at our disposal today. Be sure to read the scathing yet pointed commentary from across the low-carb/health blogosphere on this public sham put out by the USDA, including Sally Fallon Morell, Dana Carpender, Tom Naughton, Ed Bruske, Kristen Michaelis, Dr. Jonny Bowden, Mark Sisson, and Bonnie Minsky, just to name a few.

The level of incredulity and concern regarding the seemingly blatant miseducation of the American people about something as critical to their lives as how they should eat for optimal health led me to seek out some of my favorite low-carb and health expert friends from around the world to chime in on the issue. We are in a serious philosophical battle for reaching the hearts and minds of people who struggle with obesity, diabetes, and chronic diseases that could easily be preventable if the truth about things like saturated fat and carbohydrates was more clearly defined for people so they can make informed decisions for the health of themselves and their families. Many people are seeking out this alternative information on the Internet which is why I am constantly writing and talking about it every chance I can get. While you and I might not be looking to the USDA for dietary answers, sadly a lot of people are trusting that this 13-member panel knows exactly what they’re talking about–and nothing could be further from the truth.

Here’s what some key voices in the real food, low-carb movement have to say:

JON & CATHY PAYNE, hosts of the Our Natural Health podcast

We are appalled but not surprised by the USDA’s 2010 Dietary Guidelines for Americans. Few people can actually follow recommendations like these, but those that do are likely to suffer severe health problems. The USDA focuses on nutrients as if they are divorced from real food. Where is the focus on unprocessed foods such as raw milk, butter, pastured eggs, green vegetables, moderate fruits and soaked beans and nuts? And up to 25% of calories from added sugar and less than 7% from saturated fat? Are they crazy? This is a prescription for more obesity, more diabetes, more insulin resistance, and more cardiovascular disease. My brother who was very lean, exercised daily, and followed the low-fat guidelines to prevent CVD died suddenly at the age of 54. I am grateful that Jon and I are eating and producing real food and are helping educate people to another point of view.

COLETTE HEIMOWITZ, nutritionist with Atkins Nutritionals

What evidence does FDA have to support its statement in its conclusion: “A moderate amount of evidence demonstrates that intake of dietary patterns with less than 45% calories from carbohydrate or more than 35% calories from protein are not more effective than other diets for weight loss or weight maintenance, are difficult to maintain over the long term, and may be less safe.” What evidence does FDA have to support the implication: “Diets that are less than 45 percent carbohydrate or more than 35 percent protein are difficult to adhere to, are not more effective than other calorie-controlled diets for weight loss and weight maintenance, and may pose health risk, and are therefore not recommended for weight loss or maintenance.” After reviewing their “scientific support,” I can’t help but conclude that there was imprecision and conflation in studies cited. Despite defining high protein diets as those constituting 35 percent or more of total calories as protein and low-carb diets as constituting less than 45 percent of total calories: The studies cited to support the conclusions that low-carbohydrate diets are ineffective for weight loss and may be unsafe vary widely in macronutrient profile. Many do not adhere to the definitions above. In the commentary, the terms low-carbohydrate and high-protein are often used imprecisely and interchangeably. The studies cited have been picked to serve a low-fat agenda. Of the 63 published studies published in reputable, peer-reviewed journals that support the effectiveness and safety of the Atkins Diet, very few are cited in this report. The document defines a high-protein diet as one that comprises 35 percent or more of total calories as protein. In fact, protein remains less than 30 percent regardless of phase in all four phases of Atkins so any implication of health risk is unrelated to a true low carb diet. As defined by the 2010 DGAC definition for high protein, Atkins is not within scope of concern. Low-carbohydrate diets are defined as those in which carbs constitute less than 45 percent of total calories, which does apply to Atkins. Low Carbohydrate high protein is used somewhat interchangeably and therefore confusingly in this document. However, low-carbohydrate is not synonymous with high-protein. Atkins is a low-carbohydrate, high-fat diet, NOT a low-carbohydrate high-protein diet. Any deleterious statements about the safety and effectiveness of high-protein have nothing to do with Atkins or any current low-carbohydrate program. Atkins falls within the government guidelines of what is considered safe protein consumption. In conclusion, statements about the safety and effectiveness of so-called “low carbohydrate, high-protein” diets have no relevance to Atkins or any current low carbohydrate program.

HANNAH SUTTER, British author of Big Fat Lies and owner of GoLower

It is positively negligent to continue with these instructions when the World Health Organization has just announced the biggest study ever into fats and concludes that there is no link between saturated fats and heart disease. Combine this with the growing evidence that the real health hazard is starch and sugar and guess what you have–a bunch of incompetent government bureaucrats who are choosing to make us fatter…unbelievable but truth is always stranger than fiction!

DR. ANDREAS EENFELDT, Swedish physician and the world’s top low-carb blogger

Albert Einstein defined madness as doing the same thing over and over, and expecting a different result. The new 2010 Dietary Guidelines for Americans meets and exceeds that definition. The rate of obesity in America has tripled in the last few decades, during the fatphobia. It is a major health disaster. The new Dietary Guidelines can be summarized like this: keep doing the same thing, and expect the opposite result. Several new overviews of all available research shows no connection between saturated fats and cardiovascular disease. The responsible comittee seems to have missed that completely, being too stuck in their outdated fatphobic mindsets. At least nine randomized controlled trials from the last decade shows significantly better weight on a higher fat diet compared to a low fat diet. None show the opposite. In other words: low fat diets are proven to make you fatter. The obvious explanation is that low fat diets contain more carbohydrates, raising insulin, the main fat storing hormone. The 2010 Guidelines for Americans was outdated years before it was first printed. It is nothing more than a sad relic from the “scientific” thinking behind the obesity epidemic. The time has come for a change, not more of the same madness.

FRED HAHN, author of Slow Burn Fitness Revolution and owner of Serious Strength

The new 2010 USDA dietary guidelines will continue to make Americans fatter, more diabetic and sicker. Ignoring a wealth of scientific information specifically on saturated fats and low carbohydrate diets, the United States Department of Agriculture fails to come to our rescue. USDA should instead stand for Unbelievably Stupid Dietary Advice.

GARY TAUBES, author of Good Calories Bad Calories

I really have nothing to say that doesn’t sound like sour grapes and more complaining.

PAM SCHOENFELD, low-carb nutritionist

Your readers should keep in mind the following, as excerpted from the USDA website: The (USDA) Dietary Guidelines contain the latest, science-based nutrition information and dietary guidance for the general public. They are the foundation for the Federal nutrition education and promotion programs, as well as the basis for the nutrition assistance programs. From that statement a couple of things about the Dietary Guidelines are apparent: one, that families dependent on Federal Nutrition Assistance programs are put more at risk for health problems related to high carbohydrate and low-fat diets provided and recommended therein; and two, the Guidelines are designed for the “general public”–whomever that is? Unfortunately, obesity has descended upon the general public, hitting minorities even more heavily by the Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee’s own admission: The prevalence of overweight and obesity in the US has increased dramatically in the past three decades. This is true of children, adolescents, and adults and it is more severe in minority groups. It is simultaneously true that minority groups participate to a greater extent in the Federal Food Assistance Programs. A coincidence? I doubt it. The Advisory Committee has revealed their appeasement of the food processing industry: A coordinated strategic plan that includes all sectors of society, including….small and large business (e.g. farmers, agricultural producers, food scientists, food manufacturers, and food retailers of all kinds) shoud be engaged in the development and ultimate implementation of a plan to help all Americans eat well… At the same time the Committee states that: The macronutrient distribution of a person’s diet is not the driving force behind the current obesity epidemic. Rather, it is the over-consumption of total calories coupled with very low physical activity and too much sedentary time. Maybe, maybe not. But what is causing this overconsumption of calories? Could it be hunger driven by the blood-sugar fluctations that result when low-fat, high-carbohydrate diets are eaten? Could it be pre-diabetes or diabetes that is accompanied by excess insulin production and fat storage fueled by the consumption of carbohydrates? Jimmy, your previous criticisms of their continued recommendations for the limiting of dietary cholesterol and even further lowering of saturated fat intake to less than 7% of calories are well taken. Of course, the public will be even more confused as they attempt to exclude their stearic acid intake as they count their saturated fat intake for the day. It is also interesting (too nice of a word) to see how they promote vegetarian diets because: Plant-based diets…offer other potential benefits, such as…nutrients important in a health-promoting diet. So, animal foods don’t offer any nutrients except for high-quality protein (and of course detriments due to the fat they contain)? How about zinc, iron, calcium, vitamins A, D, K2, B12, B6, choline, and “zoo-nutrients” like conjugated linoleic acid? And what about protein? Can we get all we need from plant sources when we consume them in the right combinations as they suggest? Perhaps if you believe that all adults need only about 0.8 grams per kilogram body weight, an amount shown to be inadequate for preventing sarcopenia, the loss of muscle mass, in groups such as the elderly. They write that Diets that are less than 45 percent carbohydrate or more than 35 percent protein are difficult to adhere to, are not more effective than other calorie-controlled diets for weight loss and weight maintenance, and may pose health risk, and are therefore not recommended for weight loss or maintenance. Apparently the Advisory Committee thinks that diets that provide less than 45% of calories from carbohydrates are difficult to adhere to. Perhaps they should ask your readers whether it is more difficult to deal with obesity, diabetes, and other major health issues or adhere to a lower-carbohydrate diet! (45% of calories equates to 169 grams of carbs from a 1600 calorie diet or 203 grams of carbs from an 1800 calorie diet. So both are well above the 130 grams of carbohydrates that are supposedly needed as a “minimum.”) And what studies are they relying upon when they state that lower carbohydrate diets “may be” less safe? We certainly know that elevated blood glucose levels are dangerous–there is no debate about that. We also have good evidence that lower-carbohydrate diets lead to improved lipid profiles when the most comprehensive laboratory testing methods are utilized. Finally, although we may scoff at these recommendations and feel indifferent about them because “they don’t affect us, we know better,” let me appeal to you to weigh in on this. If for no other reason than to help someone out there who is struggling with excess weight, has diabetes, heart disease, or cancer, or is pregnant, or a growing child, and who either continues to trust the governmental “experts” or is reliant upon them for a large portion of their food choices, speak up.

DR. RICHARD FEINMAN, biochemistry professor and founder of The Nutrition & Metabolism Society

Appendix E-4 describes the evolution of the Dietary Guidelines and its progressive appointment of new committees and new experts. While paying homage to new evidence, the main effect is: “to support the credibility,” “basic tenets of earlier Dietary Guidelines were reaffirmed,” “continue to support the concepts from earlier editions” and “to support the 2010 Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee.” In other words, it has a history of maintaing the status quo. Missing from this history is the worsening situation with respect to obesity and diabetes even as the Committee’s recommendations were followed. In the end, none of the organizations involved takes any responsibility for the deteriorating nutritional health and implicitly blame the public. The question for the 2010 guidelines is whether there is any test of their effectiveness. What outcome will constitute a failure and require overhaul of the recommendations and taking account of minority opinions? Are the 2010 guidelines, like previous ones, immune from responsibility for any outcome? This is quite discouraging. Statements like “The totality of evidence documenting a beneficial impact of plant-based, lower-sodium dietary patterns on CVD risk is remarkable.” What’s remarkable is the sense of self-delusion. The real question is whether they accept any responsibility for the epidemic of obesity and diabetes. If not, are we to blame the patient? Is there even a sense that there is a crisis in recommendations. On the other hand, the total government-based encouragement light at the end of the tunnel sense is that the committee is totally out of touch and may allow more people to listen to and evaluate a minority opinion.

KEVIN BROWN, health advocate and author of The Liberation Diet

If the latest recommendations are for even lower fat and higher carbs in the diet, and you track historically was has happened to our nation’s health as we have gone into the abyss of anti-fat, it would not be hard to see that there is an agenda to keep America sick, fat and confused!

JACKIE EBERSTEIN, registered nurse who worked with Dr. Robert C. Atkins for three decades

The recent release of the updated 2010 Dietary Guidelines should not be a surprise to anyone who has some understanding of the process. Even though the Guidelines are to be “research based,” they chose to ignore the many low carb papers published in the last 12 years. Nor were any experts in a low carbohydrate lifestyle invited to present data or be a part of the process. Given the losing battle the US is fighting with obesity, the public is still encouraged to follow more of the same advice. Even when that advice has failed miserably and was wrong when first adopted and is still wrong. One would think that more solutions to the obesity challenge would be welcome. Apparently not. Or that the Guidelines would recognize that we must have different solutions for different people. One size does not fit all. There is much that can be said about the new Guidelines. I will limit myself to the following: The Guidelines continue to encourage a diet high in carbohydrates. The very foods that spike high insulin production and increase fat storage but support the food industry and the growers of corn, soy and wheat. They recommend that when considering carbohydrate foods choose based on calories and fiber content not glycemic index or glycemic load. To many people the recommendation to eat more plants will simply mean more potatoes often in the form of French Fries. A healthy start to the day is still cereal with non fat milk. Will this provide enough protein to repair body tissue and control hunger or enough fat to provide satiety? For many the answer is no. The chances are pretty good that hunger and cravings will mean a higher food intake the rest of the day thus saboutaging efforts at weight control. The statement that the brain requires at least 130 grams of dietary carbs daily is patently wrong. No matter how many times this mantra is repeated the facts don’t change. There is no minimum intake of carbs that is needed by the body. The few body tissues that require glucose can easily meet their needs by a process called gluconeogenesis. Further, when following a very low carbohydrate diet, ketones are produced in the liver for fuel. The body is well adapted to utilize these ketones for energy. Humans would not have survived if we couldn’t adapt in this way. Importantly, the brain is also very well adapted to utilize ketones. In fact, the brain appears to favor ketones over glucose. The research supporting this just doesn’t get to the public. If carbs are to be the major source of food intake, fats and proteins are to be limited. An adequate intake of these two macronutrients has major health benefits, yet the optimum amounts needed have been misrepresented or wrongly blamed for health problems for decades. The new Guidelines will do nothing to be sure that we take advantage of the benefits of obtaining optimum intakes rather than minimal intakes of these vital nutrients. The USDA did get one thing right and has finally begun to address the dangers of sugar.

DR. LARRY MCCLEARY, pediatric neurosurgeon and author of Feed Your Brain, Lose Your Belly

One of the major concerns behind the Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee Report was the explosion of the obesity epidemic and the impact it has personally, financially, on the health care system and the federal government. I would also like to add that whatever guidelines are finally accepted they will be used to determine what is included in school lunches, meals to many seniors and to those in the Armed Forces, all of which are subsidized by governmental programs. It must also be remembered that these guidelines are being formulated by the same entity that provides massive subsidies to farmers to grow corn, wheat and rice. In my opinion, they have a conflict of interest. One of the dietary recommendations is to allow 25% of daily calorie intake to come from sugars that are added to the diet. This is in addition to the 55 grams of sugar (220 calories they allow in 2 cups of 100% apple juice (considered as a fruit choice). Together, that provides 720 sugar calories a day (more than 1/3 of a 2,000 calorie daily diet!). This is in addition to the “discretionary” calories they allow (100 to 300 calories per day) that consist of solid fats, alcohol and sugar! Now the DRI committee that came up with these recommendations included in their report that evidence was insufficient for them to set a Tolerable Upper Intake Level (UL) (meaning consumption above that level would have adverse health implications) for carbohydrates but suggested that most active Americans shoot for making 2/3 of their calories carbohydrate calories. They were not aware of any data that suggest harmful effects of consuming more than 65% of dietary calories as carbohydrates although they freely admit that certain carbohydrates elevate serum triglyceride levels (a potent coronary heart disease risk factor). Elsewhere in the body of the report (page D3-11 in the cholesterol and fatty acid section) they conclude that since “cholesterol can be synthesized endogenously in sufficient amounts for metabolic and structural needs, there is no evidence for a dietary requirement for cholesterol; therefore, there is no AI, RDA, or AMDR (Acceptable Macronutrient Distribution Range) for cholesterol. Similar to SFA (Saturated Fatty Acids), there is no UL set for dietary cholesterol.” Hence there is no UL set for carbohydrate, SFA or cholesterol. In spite of this they arbitrarily recommend that 65% of the caloric intake be carbohydrate while severely restricting cholesterol and SFA. Nowhere in the report is there discussion of a nutritional deficiency syndrome associated with carbohydrate deficiency. They state that the carbohydrate RDA (130 grams for carbohydrate — 520 calories) was arrived at by the daily glucose requirement of the brain. However, it is never mentioned that glucose can also easily be endogenously produced at this level (analogous to the way they handled cholesterol above) and therefore, using similar reasoning, should not be required in the diet. Note also that the AMDR recommended by the Advisory Committee is two and one half times this number of carbohydrate calories (the RDA). Where did this number come from? From an obesity perspective, they refer to a study by Stanhope et al. (2009) that included 25 percent of daily energy intake from beverages sweetened with glucose or fructose. Weight gain was observed in this study of free-living participants. Sounds suspiciously similar to the USDA My Pyramid recommendations for slimming the nation. Another epiphany the Committee had was to further cut SFA to 7% of total calorie content. As an aside, they also demonize fat calories as a cause of the obesity epidemic because of their caloric density (9 cal/g) while also observing that during the past thirty years as waistlines have exploded the main increase in calorie consumption was carbohydrates. They also note that during the epidemic of obesity that SFA consumption has not changed in the past 15 years. Elsewhere in the Report the Committee suggests that these facts make it difficult to implicate fat or saturated fat as the driver of the obesity crisis we are experiencing. What are they thinking! Some of this information is summarized nicely in Figure D3-1: Saturated fatty acid substitution and coronary heart disease risk on page D3-17 (in the section on cholesterol and fatty acids). When carbohydrate replaced monounsaturated fat or polyunsaturated fat (at 5% of daily calories), coronary risk increased! There are many other reasons for concern throughout the Report. These are just a few of the fatal flaws both regarding weight loss and health implications.

VALERIE BERKOWITZ, low-carb nutritionist and co-author of The Stubborn Fat Fix

This Committee has provided Guidelines for a small sample of the American population. It fails to consider any other dietary method aside from the low-fat dogma that already exists. For the Americans who are healthy, they already eat right to keep themselves healthy. For most Americans who need Guidelines on how to tailor eating patterns, there is no direction given that specifically addresses the connection between excess carbohydrates and their physiological affect on the human body. Many of the major illnesses like diabetes and heart disease or risk factors for ill-health like triglycerides or blood sugar can be controlled by controlling carbohydrates and eating healthy fats (like olive oil or animal products that are free range/grass fed). The current research that has been made available by many researchers–Volek, Wortman, Westman, Dreon, Fineman–shows the need to broaden our use of various dietary interventions such as the low carb diet and these encouraging studies should be considered by the USDA committee to include current options to the archaic low fat push that has been going on for far too long. In my mind the Committee is not acting responsibly. Carbohydrates are not essential. Yes, increasing vegetables is an important message but the benefits that are provided by healthy fats are just as important. Another vital factor that is not being addressed is that they are not providing specific information only generalities, i.e. lower fat, increased carbs. People need to be armed with specific info like corn syrup, sugar and all its different forms should be avoided and trans fat should be avoided. Natural animal products like turkey and hamburger adds essential nutrients and should be consumed as part of a balanced diet. Healthy fats from nuts, avocados and olives should replace unhealthy fats found in commercially baked products. I believe that carbs can provide value if vegetables, small portions of fruits/legumes and other non-commercial carbs are prepared but the carbs that many people select such as cold cereal, fat free yogurt, pretzels, bread, etc. are absolutely NOT essential and should be consumed at a minimum if at all. Here’s where I agree with the Committee: if you push low fat, high carb diet, you better minimize the fat or you will be headed for the same health hazards the country faces today. However, in my opinion cutting out healthy fats will not provide a nutritionally complete diet. Until the USDA commissions a Committee that represents current nutritional options, the message they send is deficient and should not be considered Guidelines for everyone.

The severity of just how completely wrong these 2010 Dietary Guidelines are has spurred me to do something I hadn’t planned on doing–I’m heading to Washington, DC to testify before the 13-member Advisory Committee on Thursday, July 8, 2010 in the Jefferson Auditorium at the USDA South Building. Although we’re not currently in the best financial shape to be making such a trip, I feel it is too important for people like me to just sit idly by accepting the same old garbage without making our voices heard. Remaining silent is tantamount to putting your rubber stamp of approval on something and that speaks volumes. I want it to be known loud and clear that what they have come up with as nutritional advice for all Americans is as wrong as wrong can be.

That’s why I’ve already cleared my busy schedule next week (had to cancel five scheduled podcast interviews) to voice my concerns along with people like Sally Fallon Morell and Dr. Richard Feinman among others. We will not be permitted to take any audio, video or pictures inside the USDA building (man, I wish we could!), but I’ll be doing on-the-spot YouTube videos with people outside once the testimonies are finished. The meeting is set to last from 9:00AM-5:00PM with three-minute presentations each from a wide variety of people who want to address the Committee. That’s not a lot of time, but we’ll make the most of those precious few moments of undivided attention we’ll receive from the Committee.

I’m sure there will be vegetarians/vegans who think the 2010 Dietary Guidelines didn’t go far enough pushing a plant-based diet and they’ll present their case. But the continued vilification of fat and complete ignorance of the negative health implications of pushing lots of carbohydrate on people all in the name of health needs to be addressed. I’m working on my remarks as we speak and will possibly write another blog post with what I will be saying to the Committee. I’ll likely share my story, the tens of thousands of people I represent through my blog and podcast, why one set of dietary guidelines for everyone is as ludicrous as having one shoe size for everyone, and how much better the health of Americans would be if multiple options were made available for people to choose from. I’m still in the midst of crafting the message, but that’s the basic outline. I’d love to have your support for this trip if you want to help defray the costs. CLICK HERE to donate through PayPal and THANK YOU for anything you can contribute.

We will be hopping on a plane for Washington on Tuesday and coming back next weekend. While I’m there, I may try to go see my U.S. Senator and Congressman to express concern over the government intrusion into the diet of the American people. It never hurts to present your case to a powerful member of the government and let them be an advocate for your cause if you make your case strongly enough. I’ll simply share what I’ve learned and let them decide whether it’s worthy of their time or not.

I realize this is last-minute for most of you, but if you live in or around the greater Washington, DC area or if you want to fly into the nation’s capital to be a part of this event, then we’d love to meet you. We’ll be staying in a hotel in nearby Reston, Virginia and it would be a privilege to meet you face-to-face and maybe go have a meal together. E-mail me at livinlowcarbman@charter.net and we’ll work out the details. I always enjoy meeting the people who support “Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb” and it would be my pleasure to hang out with you in DC. Lemme know!

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The REAL Secret to Healthy Weight Loss–Tanning Beds?

Posted by Janet Stuck, ND, CNC, MH, CNHP on June 30, 2010

Because of the fact that every cell in the body is influenced by Vitamin D and its role in hormonal activity, it is interesting but not surprising to note that lack of Vitamin D interferes with the leptin response within the body.

Leptin is the hormone that suppresses appetite and regulates weight – it signals us to stop eating—could there be a link to the sun helping dieters to lose weight? Research has shown that the obese have very low levels of Vitamin D!

The sun produces 3 rays UVB (burning), UVA (aging) and UVC. Simply put, when UVB rays hit the skin, it stimulates a reaction just below the surface, creating a cholesterol, which in turn stimulates Vitamin D production.

Tanning beds have varying degrees of UVA and UVB radiation. The “Low Level” or “Level 1″ tanning beds which are mainly UVB bulbs have been shown to have the same effect on Vitamin D production within the skin as natural sunlight. However, the UVA bulbs in tanning salons are discouraged. They are advertised as the “bronzing bulbs” in the beds –UVA rays are the most damaging to the skin in terms of wrinkles, photo-aging, solar elastosis, etc. For the sake of this article, UVB tanning beds are synonymous with natural sunlight. Of course, your first choice would be to go out in the sun during the warmer months to increase Vitamin D stores.

As with diets, even the animals know they need sunlight to survive! We have all observed various animals sunning themselves – they need Vitamin D for survival as well to keep strong and healthy.

Ever notice that people are sick less often in the summer than the winter? Hmmmm, could it be Vitamin D? I recommend my clients take supplementa; Vitamin D3 during winter months to keep their immune systems strong, and towards January visit the tanning salon once or twice a week, depending on the individual.Vitamin D made in the skin lasts twice as long as Vitamin D made nutritionally. Only about 2 – 4 micrograms a day of Vitamin D is produced in the kidneys and stays constant regardless of the amount in the bloodstream. Recent discoveries have shown that vitamin D can also be activated within a variety of cells influencing the activity of abnormal cell growth and destruction.

Most Americans have very low levels of Vitamin D, and taking a Vitamin D supplement is not the fastest and only beneficial way to get vitamin D. The body has vitamin D receptors in every cell and is believed to actually be a hormone. Dr. Holick, Ph.D., M.D. has done extensive research on Vitamin D, not without ridicule. Besides, there is no money in promoting the sun – it’s free. Dermatologists and sunscreen manufactures would go out of business if the sun could advertise.

Here are some benefits of vitamin D as outlined in Dr. Holick’s book, “The Vitamin D Solution”:
  • Bone health: prevents osteopenia, osteoporosis, osteomalacia (characterized as extreme bone and muscle pain–”adult rickets”), rickets and fractures
  • Cellular health: prevents certain cancers, such as prostate, pancreatic, breast, ovarian, and colon; prevents infectious diseases and upper respiratory tract infections, asthma and sneezing disorders
  • organ health: prevents heart disease and stroke; prevents type 2 diabetes, periodontitis and tooth loss, and other inflammatory diseases
  • Muscular health: supports muscle strength
  • Autoimmune health: prevents multiple sclerosis, type 1 diabetes melitus, Crohn’s disease, and rheumatoid arthritis
  • Brain health: prevents depression, schizophrenia, Alzheimer’s disease and dementia
  • Mood Related health: prevents seasonal affective disorder, premenstrual syndrome, sleeping disorders, elevates sense of well-being

The major circulating form of Vitamin D is called 25-vitamin D and its subsequent active form is called 1,25-vitamin D. The kidneys make a supply from the 25-vitamin D in the bloodstream that is created by the liver from the vitamin D that is made in the skin from sun exposure, and to a lesser extent, foods from the diet.25-vitamin D is converted to active Vitamin D and used on the spot within the cell and thereafter extinguishes itself by self-destruction so as to not reenter the bloodstream and accumulate. Supplementation with Vitamin D nutritionally through food or pill form has benefits, but are used up and eliminated very quickly. Studies now indicate that Vitamin D obtained through the diet is not stored for future use.

When your body doesn’t obtain sufficient sunlight, it can’t make enough Vitamin D on its own. There is very little vitamin D from dietary sources — to get a sufficient amount (1,000 – 2,000 IU’s) every day you would have to:

  • eat 3 cans of sardines
  • drink 10 – 20 glasses of fortified milk
  • eat 10-20 bowls of cereal
  • consume 50 – 100 egg yolks
  • eat 7 ounces of wild salmon every day

All the hype about using sunscreen to prevent cancer actually has had an adverse effect on the body – osteoporosis, diabetes, adult rickets now referred to as osteomalacia, ect., including obesity!

Sunscreens have been known to block out the good UVB “burning” rays and allow the damaging UVA rays to penetrate longer – the burning is what tells us we have had enough! My recommendation has always been 20 minutes of “unprotected” sun exposure during the summer months between 10am and 2pm at least 3 times a week and avoid use of chemical sunscreens as they are more damaging to the body than the actual sun! If used, the best sunscreens contain natural ingredients, such as minerals, which absorb and reflect the sun’s rays.

Sun exposure just a few times a week provides the body with the longer lasting Vitamin D for almost two weeks, depending on the length of time spent and intensity of the sun. Vitamin D obtained through sunlight is imperative to keep levels of Vitamin D up and stored for winter months. It’s raining out and I’m off to the tanning salon…..

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.

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Posted in Cholesterol, Local Foods, Nutrition, Politics, Total Wellness, UVB, Weight Loss, balance, health, heart disease, liberation diet, liberation wellness, obesity, real food, seeds, sleep, wapf, wellness | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

The Harvest Show

Posted by Kevin Brown on June 28, 2010

Kevin Brown and Annette Presley discuss the Liberation Diet on the Harvest Show

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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 Butter, Journey with Liberation Diet, Sally Fallon Morell, Weight Loss, balance, cancer, heart disease, kevin brown, liberation diet, liberation fitness, liberation wellness, liberation wellness hour, raw milk, real foods, visionary trainers, wapf, wellness, weston price | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

NO Sugar CRAVINGS!

Posted by Kevin Brown on June 28, 2010

Dear Kevin,

Just got the Liberation Diet Book and have read it twice!

I have it on my husband’s side of the table in hopes he takes an interest as well.

2 1/2 years ago I went on Dr. Bernstein’s diet and lost 85 lbs, my problem has been maintaining the weight loss, I’m up 10 lbs and can’t seem to kick my sugar cravings which I indulge in once a week.

Maybe my cravings are coming from not enough fat and too much sugar free yogurt, who knows.

I went to the Nutritionsmart down the street from my home and was able to buy grass fed unhomongenized milk, whole organic butter, whole organic cheese and whole yogurt.

I no longer have a gallbladder so I am easing my way into the Liberation Diet but on day 2, no sugar cravings…..such a blessing!

Thank you for your book and your email reply for my order.

Tresha

Palm Beach Gardens, FLA

Posted in Butter, Food Addiction, Nutrition, Weight Loss, god, heart disease, liberation diet, liberation fitness, liberation wellness, liberation wellness hour, obesity, raw milk, real food, visionary trainers, wapf | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Human Rights Appeal from Sally Fallon Morell

Posted by Kevin Brown on June 25, 2010

An Appeal from Sally Fallon Morell
June 18, 2010

Dear Friend of Nutrient-Dense Food,

Here in America, we all have the right to purchase and consume the foods of our choice, foods we need for our own health and the health of our families, right? Not according to the FDA! The FDA’s response to our current legal challenge shows us exactly what we are up against — and why the Farm-to-Consumer Legal Defense Fund needs your continued financial support.

On February 19 of this year, the Farm-to-Consumer Legal Defense Fund (the Fund) filed a lawsuit against the FDA and the United States Department of Health and Human Services to challenge federal regulations banning the transport and sale of raw milk across state lines. On April 26, FDA filed its response to the lawsuit, providing a public record of what the agency’s views on food freedom of choice really are.

Here are some of FDA’s shocking claims:

  • “There is no absolute right to consume or feed children any particular food.”
  • “Plaintiffs’ assertion of a ‘fundamental right to their own bodily and physical health, which includes what foods they do and do not choose to consume for
    themselves and their families’ is similarly unavailing because plaintiffs do not have a fundamental right to obtain any food they wish.”
  • “There is no ‘deeply rooted’ historical tradition of unfettered access to foods of all kinds.”

Fortunately, we have the Fund to defend our farmers
and consumers, and with a large membership and diverse financial support, the Fund will have the resources to protect your right to healthy food.

Three years ago, on Independence Day, July 4, 2007, the Weston A. Price Foundation helped launch the Fund to defend the rights and broaden the freedoms of family farms and to protect consumer access to raw milk and other nutrient-dense foods.

Here are some of the ways the Fund has put your money to work:

1. Challenging the FDA to Increase Our Access to Raw Milk
The Fund has filed a lawsuit seeking to overturn two federal regulations banning raw dairy products for human consumption in interstate commerce. The suit is asking the court to declare FDA’s prohibition as unconstitutional and beyond its statutory authority. FDA is at the center of the opposition to raw milk, pressuring the states to outlaw its sale and distribution. Overturning the ban is key to securing access to raw milk throughout the U.S. The FDA’s response to the lawsuit has made it clear that this case is about more than just raw milk; it’s about keeping government from interfering with our food
choices.

2. Fighting NAIS to Preserve Our Family Farms
In 2008, the Fund brought a federal lawsuit challenging USDA’s implementation of the National Animal Indentification System (NAIS), the plan to require the electronic tagging and detailed tracking of all livestock. Although the judge dismissed the case, the lawsuit served to educate the public and the media about the problems with NAIS, as well as warn USDA and the states that they faced an organization prepared to challenge them in court. Thanks to these efforts, along with the activism of many other groups, USDA announced that it was dropping NAIS in February; but the agency is still talking about an animal traceability system, so we are watching developments carefully.

3. Defending Our Farmers in Court
Gone are the days when farmers stood alone in the courthouse to defend their principles. Now, the Fund’s legal team and the entire organization are there to stand beside our farmers in court. The Fund is leveling the playing field, making it more difficult for government agencies to use administrative and judicial proceedings to grind down farmers and drain their resources. Board member Tim Wightman remembers a time when farmers fought these battles alone. Just nine years ago, after a severe government action in Wisconsin, he lost his farm, restaurant and financial wellbeing running back and forth to Madison to defend himself, leaving farm partners and family at home to cover for him. What a difference the Fund is making for farmers subjected to legal actions these days!

4. Defending Our Farmers in Parking Lots
The Bechard Family Farm was sued by the Missouri Attorney General for having the audacity to distribute raw milk in a parking lot. I think we all feel for the Bechard’s teen daughters caught in this “sting operation.” Undercover agents allegedly purchased raw milk from the daughters, leading to the charges filed against the Bechards. The State is claiming that deliveries can only be made directly to the customers’ homes, even though a central delivery point is more convenient for both the Bechards and their customers — another example of the type of government intrusion we are up against.

5. Protecting Our Buyers Clubs, Food Co-Ops, and Cow-Shares
Cow-share operators, buying clubs and food co-ops have found a friend in the Fund, to help them navigate the sometimes tricky legal waters involving direct distribution of raw milk and other nutrientdense foods. Around the country, the Fund is working to protect the closer ties forged by farmers and consumers. The Fund consults with farmers on local, state and federal regulations along with labeling and contract issues, and advises members about their rights.

6. The Fund Is In It for The Long Haul
Fund General Counsel, Gary Cox, Esq., has been fighting the Meadowsweet Dairy, LLC case on behalf of Steve and Barb Smith in New York for nearly three years to uphold the right of the LLC members to obtain raw milk and raw milk products from the dairy without government interference. The Fund is appealing a court ruling that anyone who makes raw milk available to consumers must get a permit, with the court finding that “consumers” are those who “consume something” — conceivably meaning that dairy farmers would even need permits to consume raw milk from their own cows. Gary recently won a victory for the Smiths when he persuaded a judge to throw out a two-and-one-half-year-old search warrant that a state agency wanted to execute against the Smiths.

7. Sounding the Alarm About Draconian Food Safety Legislation
The Fund’s timely action alerts and thorough, thought-provoking analyses have provided activists and media outlets with highly credible, accurate and footnoted articles about the dangers for farmers hidden in Congressional legislation HR-2749 and S-510. If passed in the current form, this legislation would severely hobble or even halt small farm sales and artisan production.

8. Handling Farm Legal Emergencies 24/7
The Fund receives a number of calls daily for advice ranging from labeling issues to emergency situations. The Fund takes emergency calls 24/7. These calls often begin, “An inspector is on my farm, what do I do?” The Fund attorney then walks them through a contentious inspection — over the phone — and talks directly to the inspectors if requested.

9. Respecting the Values and Beliefs of Farmers of All Faiths
When the Fund heard that members of Anabaptist faith couldn’t join the Fund, due to religious beliefs that prohibit them from joining organizations that engage in litigation, the Fund created a new tier of services, called “Non-Member Consulting Agreements,” to provide those farmers with valuable legal counsel.

10. Putting Your Money to Work
Thanks to your support, the Fund is able to stand by the Bechards and Smiths as well as many other farmers including Chuck and Diane Phippen, of Breese Hollow Dairy in New York, Wayne and Kay Craig of Grassway Organics and Mark and Petra Zinniker in Wisconsin, John and Jackie Stowers of Manna Storehouse in Ohio, Mark and Blaine McAfee of Organic Pasture’s Dairy and Ron Garthwaite and Collette Cassidy of Claravale Farm in California. The Zinniker family says that without the Fund’s free legal representation for them, the financial burden would have been too much to bear, and the oldest biodynamic farm in the country would have folded.

I encourage you to join or renew your membership in the Farm-to- Consumer Legal Defense Fund — if all the members of the Weston A. Price Foundation also became members of the Fund, the Farm-to-Consumer Legal Defense Fund would be a force to be reckoned with! And, if you can, please make a donation. If you want your donation to be tax-deductible, you can make your check out to the Fund’s sister organization, the Farm-to-Consumer Foundation, which provides charitable relief, education and support for public interest litigation.

I look forward to writing you again next year, with another progress report. Thank you in advance for your support.

Yours in good health and farm freedom!

Sally Fallon Morell, President
The Weston A. Price Foundation

P.S. Please join me at a special event for those who donate $250 or more to the Farm-to-Consumer Legal Defense Fund. The Benefactor Appreciation Event will be held at Polyface Farm in Swoope Virginia on Saturday, September 11, 2010. It will feature a two-hour hay wagon tour of Polyface Farm by Joel Salatin and a festive farm lunch with the Polyface family and interns.

P.P.S. Joel’s newest book, The Sheer Ecstasy of Being a Lunatic Farmer, will be released September 1. We are happy to offer a free book to anyone who donates to the Fund at the $100 level by September 1, 2010.

Donate Now

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