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Whole Foods Offers Customers ‘Customized Nutrition Plan’ Pushing A Vegan Agenda

Posted by Jimmy Moore on March 23, 2011

Last February, I shared with you about a decision made by the executives of the world’s largest health food supermarket chain Whole Foods beginning to aggressively promote a low-fat, vegetarian diet with their “Health Starts Here” campaign. Interestingly, they’re not trying to hide what they are doing either as you can see on this page of their web site outlining their “Four Pillars Of Health Eating” with the call for customers to become “Plant-Strong” by making vegetables the centerpiece of their diet. Their list of 10 Easy Steps To Make A Fresh Start heavily promotes salads, whole grains, vegetables, fruits, legumes, nuts, seeds, and “smaller portions” of lean meats while eschewing refined, processed foods. They even have an in-store “Healthy Eating Specialist” whose job is to work at an in-store kiosk/desk to be there to answer questions from customers about health and healthy eating as well as giving lectures on health and nutrition in the local community–all the while pushing the vegan lifestyle. All of this may sound pretty good to the average Whole Foods customer who tends to be more health-conscious than those people who shop at a traditional grocery store. But they are laying a trap for their customers who may not be as nutritionally savvy about what a healthy diet can actually look like. And it’s really a whole lot worse than we ever thought.

Last week when I blogged about the new vegan propaganda movie called Forks Over Knives coming in May, I received well over 100 comments mostly from vegans who wanted to defend their chosen nutritional plan although I didn’t really criticize it or the film in my post. But “Jill in Chicago” wanted to defend Whole Foods and their “Healthy Eating Specialist” position against being characterized as vegan-promoting. Here’s what she wrote:

The focus of Whole Foods’ Health Starts Here program is not to eat a vegan diet, but to eat whole, unprocessed foods. I am currently in the midst of a Health Starts Here 28-Day Health Challenge, and the Healthy Eating Specialist who is assisting the group does not discourage meat and dairy consumption. The idea is to eat less of them.

That’s all well and good and I certainly wish Jill the best as she pursues her own weight and health goals with whatever diet she is choosing to follow. To me it’s all about finding the plan that will work for you, following it exactly, and then continuing to do that for the rest of your life. But what about those people who don’t know which plan is right for them? Is there a way to get a customized nutrition plan that will help them determine what their diet should look like? Whole Foods seems to think so through their partnership with Eat Right America doing direct marketing with the customers of their stores encouraging them to take a survey to see how to eat optimally for your health. What Whole Foods customer wouldn’t be interested in something like that? One of my readers forwarded an e-mail she received from a friend of hers who wanted to pass along this “amazing offer” from Whole Foods giving away “FREE customized nutrition plans to get you started or keep you motivated on your health journey.”

Gee, how nice is that? All you gotta do is go to the “Eat Right America Challenge” web site, enter or obtain an access code, fill out a survey about your eating, exercise and lifestyle habits as well as you health and they’ll spit you out the perfect diet just for you, including a personalized 28-day nutrition and eating plan that they say “really is a great resource…to Whole Foods Market customers.” They encourage people who take this survey to come back in to visit Whole Foods after you receive your diet plan to consult with the “Health Starts Here” station to speak with the “Healthy Eating Specialist” about learning more about “your path to a healthier life.” Don’t you just love how syrupy sweet and innocent they make this all sound? It’s a lot more dastardly than these unsuspecting Whole Foods customers even know!

So what’s the real deal here? I wanted to find out and share this with you so your friends, family and co-workers don’t get suckered into thinking this is a legitimate way to know which diet is right for them (if you want to have a REAL test done to determine the correct nutritional makeup of your diet for you based on how your body metabolizes food and nutrients, then you might consider getting the FitTest done from GetYourHealthTested.com). Maybe what they conclude about the kind of diet you should be eating is right for you…maybe not. But this survey is not based on anything scientific methodology regarding your specific situation. It’s deliberately meant to mislead you into thinking what you are currently doing is causing harm to your health and that there is only one solution to preventing your health from getting worse than it is. As you can imagine, the basis for the questions asked in this survey heavily leans on conventional wisdom about the relationship of consuming animal-based fats and proteins to developing heart disease, obesity, cancer, diabetes and other chronic diseases and the supposed virtues of consuming plant-based foods as a way to obtain optimal health. Let’s take a look at what it was like for me to take this survey for myself plugging in information about my diet and lifestyle.

I began by visiting the Challenge web site where they welcomed and congratulated me for taking “the first step toward a healthier more nutritious lifestyle” through my own “Personal Nutrition Report”:

The survey started off by asking me some basic demographic information about who I am in a “detailed assessment designed to accurately predict your health future.” Eat Right America is described as “a cause, a passionate desire to enable America’s families to live a life of ‘true’ health.” They do this by promising the results of their survey will give you a “personally-designed, nutrition prescription, that can dramatically extend your life expectancy and lower your risk of life-threatening diseases.” Wow, sounds like they’ve found the Fountain Of Youth miracle cure-all for all of life’s health woes. We shall see. They then asked questions about the current state of my health and what my typical diet looks like:

Two things stood out to me about the diet portion of the survey–they put eggs in with white meat and there was no designation for “grass-fed” or “pastured” foods. So any red meat consumption listed on the survey could be grain-fed or grass-fed. It obviously didn’t matter to them whether you consumed higher-quality meats or not (an it’s only gonna get even worse in a moment, though). I made it through the 15-minute survey so I could receive my own “Nutrition Prescription customized for Jimmy Moore”–they made it just for me (yeah right!):

You get a form letter from Dr. Scott Stoll who is a member of the Whole Foods Medical Board who explains that the “solution we have created for you is easy to understand, simple and fun for you and your family to adopt, and represents a proven methodology that is guaranteed to deliver the results you desire.” WOW! What in the world could this miracle of all miracles be that will end my weight and health struggles forever? They then explain about what the “Nutrition Prescription” is all about discussing the implementation of the “Nutritarian Lifestyle” from vegan physician Dr. Joel Fuhrman juxtaposed with the typical Standard American Diet and why this new way to eat is allegedly better for you. They even show you a graph of what your current diet looks like compared with SAD:

I think it’s interesting they lump meat and dairy together in the same category and apparently list foods like bacon in the “Processed Foods” section. Do you think they put things like tofu and skim milk in with the “Processed Foods” when they are both OBVIOUSLY highly-processed? I wouldn’t bet the house on it. Continuing through my personal assessment, the news only got worse. I was chastised for consuming too much red meat, animal products, and full-fat dairy while eschewing whole grains and more vegetables. They point to my diet as the reason why my health is at great risk for disease:

For several pages, I receive a lecture on why my cholesterol is too high which puts me at risk for a heart attack (I’ve previously explained in this post that cholesterol testing is a lot more sophisticated these days than ever before and that measuring particle size is much more relevant than LDL or total cholesterol). They claim my LDL (explained as “the most accurate determinant of risk” of coronary artery disease) should be below 80 mg/dl to “maximize reversal” of heart disease, but there was nary a mention of HDL “good” cholesterol in the equation. Additionally, they use the body mass index (BMI) to determine the obesity of an individual stating that it “is a fairly reliable indicator of body fat for most people.” The say my BMI at 251 pounds on my 6’3″ body frame puts me at a “significantly increased risk of heart disease, diabetes, and cancer.” Oh, now isn’t that nice? They’ve got a rude awakening coming when none of this actually happens to me as they’re trying scaremonger these poor Whole Foods customers into thinking they have to eat a vegan diet. Oh yes, that sticky little detail is coming up soon. But first they need to continue to put the fear of God in me about my current health before they swoop in to the rescue with their miracle plan to save me:

They say I’m at a “very high risk” of sudden cardiac death if I don’t “take action immediately” despite the fact that my heart scan score in 2009 showed zero calcium buildup in my arteries. My risk of stroke is also “very high” because they think blood clots will happen because of my diet. And with a fasting blood glucose score of 83, they still put me at “significant risk” for getting diabetes because I’m not eating and exercising the way they think I should be. They weren’t finished yet piling on more warnings about what my current diet is doing to my risks for developing cancer and osteoporosis (this is actually starting to get funny if they weren’t so serious about it):

So I’m at “high risk” for developing cancer because of my eating and fitness choices and they will help me “identify those choices” that will be better for me. HA! Then with my bone health, it’s the same song and dance. What I’m doing right now ain’t good enough–but there’s something better that we think (hope and pray to God) you’ll like…or something like that. What exactly are the culprits in my devastatingly, hanging-by-a-thread health right now? Let’s take a look:

My full-fat dairy loving, caffeinated tea guzzling, saturated fat-laden meat eating, and salted food consumption is what they think is killing me. Gee, if these are all of the problems with my diet right now, then why am I in the best health of my entire life? Why do I feel so good if I’m just one bunless bacon cheeseburger away from saying so long to this world? And how did eating so “unhealthy” bring my weight down by triple digits, get me off of three prescription medications for good, and have me doing things I would have never thought possible just a few years back? I, of course, know better and have all the confidence in the world about my healthy low-carb lifestyle. But what about those people who take this survey and believe it’s the gospel truth? They read this and think, “Oh my God, what can I do to stop this devastation from happening to me?” Enter the Eat Right America eating plan:

They try to convince you this is a good thing by stating at the top of the page that this is all about “Nutrition Excellence & Health” and then proceed to explain what they mean by that. To become a “Nutritarian,” all you have to do is eat lots of fruits and vegetables, beans, nuts and seeds, cut down on your animal-based food consumption opting for “healthier options in this food group” (hmmm, lemme guess–ones that are lower in saturated fat?) and eat much less of foods that are “empty of nutrients or toxic” like refined sugars, white flour, processed foods and fast food. On the final point, I think we can agree, but Dr. Fuhrman is hung up on meat being such an unhealthy part of any diet plan. He sees meat in the same vein as low-carbers look at high-fructose corn syrup. It must be avoided as much as possible except for maybe the once-in-a-while “treat.” That’s nothing more than utter nonsense and ignorance. What exactly does the Nutritarian Food Pyramid look like? Check it out for yourself:

What a bassackwards food pyramid this is! Equating eggs and meat with processed foods and sweets is being intellectually dishonest. Sure, those non-starchy vegetables are an excellent addition to any diet (including a low-carb one), but why the damnation of foods that are equal in their nutrient density to veggies such as red meat, fish, eggs, oils, and the like? There’s no explanation for this other than the insinuation that consuming these foods that contain saturated fat will lead to serious health consequences down the road. But there is no evidence supporting such a claim. Even still, here comes the kicker–”My Personalized Eating Plan” according to the great purveyors of nutritional truth and wisdom at Whole Foods:

And THERE IT IS! All of this nonsense about how horrible my health is, what the dietary “cause” of my health decline is, what a good diet should look like and all the rest was nothing more than a setup for this moment. The diet they are recommending that I begin eating immediately to overturn the issues associated with my “poor” diet is one that is 96% plants, 3% meat and dairy, and 2% processed foods/snacks. REALLY?!

While technically this isn’t a vegan diet because there are very small amounts of meat allowed on this plan, it might as well be. Meat isn’t a condiment to me–it’s the lifeblood of a healthy low-carb lifestyle change that has given me vibrant health like nothing else I’ve ever done before. I don’t need to consume 96% of my calories from plant sources which includes high-carb whole grains, beans, fruits and all the rest. I’m doing just fine livin’ la vida low-carb. Can I tell you how much this angers me that they would try to pull something so incredibly deceiving to people who will likely buy into it hook, line and sinker? This is disgusting because there is no education about the wonderful nutrients contained in meats or the health consequences for some people who consume carbohydrate-rich foods. That to me is ethically wrong to deliberately withhold information from the consumer that could help them make the most informed decision about their health.

They require a 28-day pledge to doing the following: eating at least one large salad, at least a half-cup of beans/legumes, at least three fresh fruits, at least one ounce of raw nuts/seeds, and at least one large double-sized serving of steamed green vegetables on a daily basis while avoiding the “most harmful food habits” that include eating barbequed, processed meats or commercial red meat, fried foods, full-fat dairy like cheese and butter, soft drinks of all kinds both diet and sugary, and white flour. It sure sounds a whole lot like a vegan diet to me with all of those restrictions on what can be consumed on this diet. They also say to chunk any foods that contain over 200mg sodium per serving and to use a blender to liquify your vegetables to drink. Oh, but they help you come off of your “meat habit” (as Dr. Neal Barnard described it in my podcast interview with him last year) beginning in Day 8 of this 28-Day plan:

Isn’t it interesting how they took great pains to explain that this meal plan isn’t vegan, but then pushed the need to “reduce your intake of animal foods” from your diet? If meat is part of being a “Nutritarian” as they claim, then what’s this concept of “your desire for animal foods (will) diminish over time?” Meat is most certainly NOT a condiment in a healthy diet no matter what Dr. Fuhrman and his lackeys at Whole Foods wants you to believe. Meat is where the REAL nutrition is found and you’re depriving your body of some incredible health benefits by trying to eliminate it from your diet completely. Just ask Lierre Keith or Denise Minger.

By Day 15, they encourage you to “change the focus of your meal from meat to vegetables” and they assure you will get plenty of protein by consuming greens, beans, nuts and seeds. The gradual move to eating “less meat” is in full force by week three of the plan and it reaches the climax by the time you enter the final week of the 28-Day Challenge when “you are eating much less animal foods,” oils, milk/dairy products, sugar, coffee/tea and caffeine, and a whole lot more veggies, fruit, beans, nuts and seeds. Lest you think none of this survey really has anything at all to do with Whole Foods, then you would be sorely mistaken:

Yes, you too can become a “Nutritarian” nerd by hopping in your car and driving to your nearest Whole Fools…Whole Paycheck…er, I mean Whole Foods Market to pick up these books, CDs and DVDs to provide you more vegan-based propaganda to fool you into thinking this is the best option for your health. This partnership Whole Foods has made with the vegan diet is intentional and should ostracize any customer who chooses to eat an animal-based diet. That includes virtually every Paleo and low-carb dieter on the planet. If you ask me, a company that is THIS invested in promoting a dietary agenda like this doesn’t deserve the support of people who disagree with it. They’ve drawn a line in the sand and dug in their heels on trying to make this “Nutritarian” diet the ONLY way for Whole Foods customers to get healthy. We should vote with our dollars about what we think about this and send Whole Foods executives a clear message: YOU’RE NOT PUSHING A VEGAN AGENDA DOWN OUR THROATS!

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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 Butter, cancer, Cheese, Cholesterol, cholesterol and health, diabetes, Dietary Cholesterol, grains, grass fed beef, health, heart disease, jimmy moore, livin lavida lo-carb, motivation, Nutrition, obesity, Paleo, plant-based diets, real food, red meat, saturated fat, vegetables, Weight Loss, wellness | 1 Comment »

Spring Forward With 36 Low-Carb, Paleo & Health Blogs For March 2011

Posted by Jimmy Moore on March 9, 2011

Believe it or not, it’s already time to “Spring forward” with your clocks this Sunday morning at 2AM so the sunlight will shine a little later into the day. It’s the first real shift from the cold winds of winter to the blossoming promise of Springtime and summer season that is to come over the next few months. When I told my wife Christine about the time change coming this Sunday, she exclaimed, “Already?!” Yep, it’s here and I for one am happy to see it. Living in the comfy confines of South Carolina, we don’t have the extreme cold temperatures and gobs of snow that so many others to the north of us have to deal with throughout the months of December through March, but it has been just a wee bit nippy this winter compared with past ones. I say bring on the warmer weather, baby, and none too soon! And I’ve got just the thing to help you celebrate the right way as you “Spring forward” this weekend–36 new and interesting low-carb, Paleo and health blogs that I really think you should know about!

As you know, I enjoy “paying it forward” by highlighting my fellow diet and health bloggers who are doing excellent work continuing on the conversation about what healthy living is all about. It seems over the past year there have been a lot more blogs showing up to do just that and so my updates with blogs for you to check out are becoming more frequent. I LOVE THAT! It means the community is growing and expanding like never before which will reach a whole new generation of people who have become sick and tired of being lied to about what it takes to make them leaner and healthier than they’ve ever been. Just in case you’ve missed any of my other low-carb, Paleo and health blog listings over the past few years, check ‘em out by clicking here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, and here.

And now take some time to visit these 36 low-carb, Paleo and health blogs for March 2011:

1. DR. RICHARD FEINMAN’S BLOG
2. ESCAPE THE HERD
3. NATURALLY ENGINEERED
4. CAVEMAN HOME COMPANION
5. CORI’S LOW CARB LIFE
6. PRIMAL JOURNAL
7. THE HEALTHY HOME ECONOMIST
8. I BELIEVE IN BUTTER
9. PAUL’S HEALTH BLOG
10. NUTRITION OVEREASY
11. THE REAL HEALTH TRUTH BLOG
12. DELIGHTFUL TASTE BUDS
13. RIPPLE EFFECT
14. FOUR HOUR CHALLENGE
15. ROUNDBOYS ANONYMOUS
16. CUPBOARD LOVE
17. GREATER THINGS: A 40 DAY FAST
18. POMEGRANATE PIP
19. THREE NEW LEAVES
20. CHUCK BROWN: MY BRAIN DUMP
21. MORE THAN FOOD
22. DAIASOLGAIA: DISCOVERIES FOR A FULL LIFE
23. NATURALLY WELLS
24. TODAY’S MEDICINE…
25. THE CRUNCHY PICKLE
26. BARRY HUGHES: SETTING GOALS AND LIVING LIFE
27. AIKONA
28. CRITICAL MAS
29. HEALTHIER BODY FROM HEALTHIER FOODS
30. THE CELLULITE INVESTIGATION
31. GET FIT SISTERS
32. UP PALEO!
33. KRIS HEALTH BLOG
34. SEGAMARTINEZ
35. PALEO, CROSSFIT AND THE OVERLOAD PRINCIPLE
36. BLUE SKIES AND LOW CARB PIES

By all means, please visit these blogs and leave them a comment if you see something you like. For a blogger, comments are the only real gauge of whether people are interested in what you’re writing about and provide instant feedback for the content. Your encouraging word and honest feedback will mean so much to these people who are taking a chance putting themselves out there for all the world to see–so don’t be bashful in sharing! I love hearing from my readers when they comment on my blog or e-mail me and I know the authors of the blogs I’ve listed above will appreciate it too.

And if you have a favorite low-carb, Paleo or health blog that you’d like to see featured in a future blog post, simply e-mail me the name of the blog and the URL to livinlowcarbman@charter.net. I’ll check it out for myself and then put it on my running list of new and interesting blogs to highlight in a future post. In fact, if you haven’t started your own low-carb blog, then what are you waiting for? Do it today and start making a difference in the lives of those who read about your experience livin’ la vida low-carb. One by one, we will change the world!

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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 Inspiration, jimmy moore, livin lavida lo-carb, obesity, Paleo, real food, Weight Loss, wellness | 3 Comments »

Sugar and Osteoporosis

Posted by Beck Anderson, RYT 200 on March 8, 2011

As Nora Gedaudas wrote in her book Primal Body-Primal Mind, ultimately all body fat is made from glucoseBeing fat isn’t about EATING fat, its about the inability to burn fat, which is a direct consequence of relying on carbohydrate – sugar – as a primary source of fuel.

Osteoporosis is considered a deficiency of calcium in the body, right?  Bones are mostly made of protein and collagen, giving bones their strength and flexibility, and calcium, which gives bones their hardness.  Hardness without strength or flexibility leads to weak, brittle bones.  Especially for people who’s body is used burning sugar as fuel, i.e. diabetics; the body will take the protein out of the bones and convert to sugar at night, leading to weak and brittle bones.

The solution. Eliminate sugar and starchy carbohydrates; bread, pasta, rice, grains, beans, potatoes and all sweets and sweeteners.  Limit fruits and use mostly berries when you do eat fruit.  Then, consume just enough protein to “meat” your dietary needs, using grass-fed, local beef, pork, pastured eggs and wild-caught fish.  The rest of your diet should be mostly healthy fats; olive oil, butter, avocados, nuts, sesame seeds and oil, sunflower and pumpkin seeds, safflower mayonnaise (unrefined), whipping cream, coconut oil, palm oil, ghee, lard and tallow.

References:
Primal Body-Primal Mind, Nora Gedgaudas
Nutritional Weight and Wellness

Beck Anderson, RYT200 is a Certified Nutritionist and Registered Yoga teacher in the Menominee, Michigan and Green Bay, Wisconsin area. Via phone, she has been able to help clients achieve their personal health goals. Visit Wellness Hammock for more information. Twitter. Facebook.

Posted in Ghee, Glucose, grains, Osteoporosis, red meat, wellness | Tagged: , , , | Leave a Comment »

Have You Tried An Extended One-Week Fasting Period To Boost Your Health?

Posted by Jimmy Moore on March 3, 2011

Just say the word “fasting” to most people and you’ll conjure up one of two immediate thoughts–a Christian would think about sacrificing food for a period of time in an effort to devote time in intercessory prayer to God over a matter of serious concern for your family or a friend; a health enthusiast might ponder fasting as a means for bringing about improvements in a specific disease or ailment. Of course, there is a third reaction that I think the vast majority of us would think about upon hearing the word “fasting”: torturous STARVATION that is the last thing you’d ever want to do! Can I get a witness? Wherever you fall along this spectrum of responses to the concept of fasting, there’s no denying that there are a whole lot of people who believe strongly in the power it possesses in the life of the person who decides to do it for whatever their reasons.

Although I am a committed believer in Jesus Christ and have been exposed to this concept of fasting for most of my life, I’ve never personally understood how someone could do it. Growing up I could hardly go three hours without putting something in my mouth–something I now know was intricately tied to my severe addiction to sugar and other culprit carbohydrates that kept me constantly hungry and craving more carbs! But when I attempted intermittent fasting in 2006, it merely ended in miserable futility. Anytime someone brought up the “fasting” word again, all I could think about was the pain and anguish I felt doing that intermittent fasting nearly five years ago.

But in 2011, I decided after prodding from people like Robb Wolf and other intermittent fasting advocates that I’d give it another go. Allowing myself upwards of 18-20 hours between meals has been the way I’ve tried to eat most of the time this year which has been working MUCH better for me this time around than before. In reality, it’s been quite easy eating a meal in the morning around 9:00am and then another around 2:00pm as the totality of my food intake for the day. I’ve even sometimes mixed it up and pushed my first meal to around 12:00pm and then the second meal at 5:30pm. It’s all still intermittent fasting that has helped me shed close to 30 pounds in the first couple of months of doing this. I couldn’t be more pleased! But what about this idea of an extended period of fasting in an effort to boost my health?

When I interviewed Dr. Thomas Seyfried on my podcast in November 2009, he suggested people who want to prevent cancer should eat a calorie-restricted low-carb diet and considering doing at least one week-long fast annually. Of course, most people couldn’t (or more likely WOULDN’T!) do something like this for all the reasons I’ve already stated. But what would it be like to try it? Now that intermittent fasting seems to come more naturally to me probably because of the blood sugar control my current routine is providing me, perhaps I could give a total fasting from food for one week a try for myself to see how my body would respond. One of my readers recently did not just one, not just two, but THREE one-week fasts over the past year on the suggestion of his doctor regarding some prostate issues he was dealing with. He had strict guidelines to follow during the fast and noted that “after the first 72 hours it really is not that bad at all. You don’t really feel weak or anything like that.”

He told me he wanted to share “something profound” that he learned about himself through this fasting experience.

The way you experience yourself physically when you are fasting is practically identical to the way you experience yourself physically when you are eating. There is not much difference. The reason this is so important is that when you think you experience hunger while eating normally, that same experience of hunger is present when you are fasting.

I believe this is why people have so much trouble losing weight.

In other words the hunger sensations in fasting are the same as while eating normally. You then ask yourself how you can be hungry when you have eaten 3 hours ago when it is the same hunger sensations when you have not eaten in a week? Calling them hunger sensations is also not really the right word. They are more empty stomach sensations.

So, what we think is hunger is not really hunger when you eat normally and the impulse to eat no matter how much it makes you think you want to eat cannot be taken seriously.

WOW! Now that’s quite a lesson my reader learned from his fasting experience. If we can learn to view hunger in the right way, then we can be more resistant to the temptations that tend to inevitably befall so many of us who struggle with our weight. As my reader so succinctly put it, “fasting allows you to reclaim your hunger for what it is and it no longer dictates what you put in your mouth.” Now that’s a message I think we can all learn something from. Oh, and by the way, the series of one-week fasts was “tremendously successful” in treating those prostate issues he had, too. WOO HOO!

I don’t know when I’m going to try to go an entire week without any food at all, but I definitely want to give it a go. Of course, if I do that then I don’t think I’ll be doing my normal exercise that week. And I want to make sure I won’t need to record any podcasts or other activities where I’ll need to keep my mind and body fueled. So it looks like it might be in April or May before that happens. Anybody else willing to try their own one-week fast for the sake of your health? Lemme know if you do and what it was like for you.

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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 cancer, faith, fasting, health, jimmy moore, livin lavida lo-carb, wellness | Leave a Comment »

Do Ketones Fuel Cancer? The Low-Carb Experts Respond

Posted by Jimmy Moore on March 2, 2011

It’s time to bat around another reader-inspired question about an important subject within the realm of health that virtually everyone reading this right now has had to deal with in their lifetime through a diagnosis of a family member or friend–that would be CANCER. Researchers have been looking at what the possible culprits in what is causing this terrible disease for decades, but unfortunately most of the studies have been geared towards finding a pharmaceutical answer. Oftentimes, the natural nutritional remedies aren’t even investigated because there is no money to be made promoting that to cancer victims. It’s just such a shame that finding a cure for cancer seems to be predicated on how much money can be made treating people that have it. If I’m wrong about this, then somebody tell me otherwise. I guess I’ve just become so jaded by how health is viewed from the very medical professionals who purport to be about improving health.

One of the most exciting areas of research that is taking place right now is how a ketogenic, low-carb diet could be used as a therapeutic tool for treating people afflicted with cancer when chemotherapy and other procedures have proven ineffective. Thanks to the great work of people like Dr. Eugene Fine and Dr. Thomas Seyfried who are testing this theory about how ketones can help shrink the size of cancerous tumors and quite possibly be used as a preventative measure for people concerned with getting cancer. The funding for these kind of studies has been paltry compared with the drug research, but the outlook for the ketogenic approach looks quite promising.

Enter the following monkey wrench one of my readers shared with me recently regarding this study published in the September 21, 2010 issue of the scientific journal Cell Cycle claiming that ketone bodies can INCREASE tumor growth by as much as two-and-a-half times reflecting a “Reverse Warburg Effect.” Personally, I’d never heard of anything like this, especially in light of the work of Fine and Seyfried on the BENEFITS of ketones in REDUCING cancer cell growth as part of their studies. Here’s what my reader wrote to me in an e-mail:

I am a long-term lowcarber (very high-fat — all manner of fat from grass-fed animals, eggs, nuts etc.) and am often in ketosis — more often than not. I love livin’ la vida low-carb and find it the easiest way to avoid the type 2 diabetes and obesity that has plagued so many members of my family. However, today someone posted some disturbing information on another low-carb diet forum regarding recent studies like this one claiming to show that ketones fuel cancer. Do you have any thoughts on this?

Since this was such a foreign concept to me based on all that I know about how low-carb ketogenic diets respond to cancer in just the opposite manner (see here, here, and here for just a few examples), I couldn’t help but ask some of my expert friends in the low-carb community to respond. Here’s what they had to say:

GARY TAUBES, author of Why We Get Fat

I read this paper and the whole thing is very weird. I also recently reported, as I probably told you, an article on the diabetes cancer link and virtually everyone in the field thinks it’s insulin and IGF that drive growth and explain the association between cancer and diabetes.

In fact, metabolic syndrome and obesity are also associated with greater risk of cancers and in those cases there would certainly not be increased ketone production (insulin suppresses ketone production). So all these would point to insulin and maybe IGF and not ketones, which is what they imply.

Finally, and I may be wrong, only in uncontrolled diabetes would ketone production be high, and certainly not in Type 2 diabetes. Then there’s all the evidence that isolated populations eating their traditional diets got relatively little to no cancer. I discuss this in GCBC. This includes populations that ate no carbohydrates (the Inuit, the Masai, etc.). So that would argue for glucose and insulin related drivers, not ketones.

Still, it’s conceivable, I guess, that if we get cancer and then go on a high-fat, low-carb diet that could make it worse, although that’s easily testable. In fact, there are studies ongoing now, as you know, using ketogenic diets to treat cancers. If it turns out they do nothing or accelerate the cancer growth then that would be a bad sign.

FRED & ALICE OTTOBONI, author of The Modern Nutritional Diseases

The proposition that ketone bodies and lactate (lactic acid) fuel cancer growth is a fascinating thought, but not one that should be of concern to anyone following a low-carb diet. We, too, have not come across such a claim before this. Incidentally, anyone interested cancer development and metabolism should obtain a copy of Cancer Nutrition and Survival by Drs. Steve Hickey and Hilary Roberts (wife). It is an absolute “must.”

About the paper claiming that ketone bodies and lactate (lactic acid) fuel cancer growth, here are our thoughts:

First, as a practical matter (from a nutritional viewpoint), the claim is not biochemically logical.

Second, the study on which it is based is an in-vitro experiment and not necessarily of significance for an intact organism.

We have obtained a copy of the complete paper because the abstract contained statements that are biochemically inaccurate.

First, the biochemical logic: Cancer cells require glucose as their source of energy. As far as is known, glucose is their only energy source. Cancer cells cannot survive, grow, and metastasize without energy.

People on a low-carb diet have no excess glucose (blood or dietary) with which to feed cancer cells. Instead they preserve glucose for its vital role as a blood component by catabolizing fats (and producing a variety of ketones) to provide the energy otherwise supplied by glucose.

Ketone bodies produced in humans as a result of β-oxidation of fatty acids (see Figure 5-2 and pp. 114ff of The Modern Nutritional Diseases) have been shown to be an excellent source of energy for all normal tissues and organs, except the liver. We are not aware that the metabolism of ketone bodies in cancer cells has been elucidated. Thus, there appears to be no biochemical evidence that cancer cells can use ketone bodies as sources of energy.

On the other hand, cancer cells produce lactate (lactic acid) as an end-product of anaerobic metabolism of glucose. Cancer cells use glucose aerobically (to CO2 and H2O) when they are well oxygenated and anaerobically (to pyruvate) when starved for oxygen. Cancer cells, like any normal cells that must survive when oxygen becomes limited, can function either anaerobically or aerobically.

This is possible because energy production in all mammalian cells has two parts, the first half is anaerobic and the second half aerobic. All macronutrients (carbohydrate, fats, and protein) are metabolized anaerobically to pyruvate and/or acetyl CoA (see Figure 4-1, MND). Aerobic energy production begins with the entry of acetyl CoA into the Krebs cycle, which completes the oxidation of acetyl CoA to CO2 and H2O. Some normal cells can operate anaerobically for short periods of time.

The appropriate human cell model for this dual metabolic function is the muscle cell. During normal activity, well-oxygenated muscle cells obtain energy from glucose anaerobically by glycolysis to pyruvate and acetyl CoA followed aerobically by the Krebs cycle. But during heavy exertion, delivery of oxygen to the muscles becomes inadequate with the result that sufficient energy can only be obtained anaerobically by glycolysis of glucose. Glycolysis would stop if the muscle cells did not have an electron acceptor other than oxygen available to them. They keep glycolysis (and energy production) going by using pyruvate as the electron acceptor and reducing it to lactic acid. Lactic acid accumulates in the muscles until adequate oxygen becomes available to oxidize it back to pyruvate and then through the Krebs cycle.

Cancer cells operate in the same manner as muscle cells with the exception that they excrete the lactic acid that is produced. The possibility exists that some lactic acid could be converted back to glucose but, because it is readily excreted, this would be a negligible source of energy.

DR. THOMAS SEYFRIED, Boston College cancer researcher

I know about this study. The study has serious problems. I wrote a letter to the editor of the journal regarding the flaws in the study. I discussed these flaws with Dr. Richard Veech at the NIH, who concurred with my concerns.

Unfortunately, these types of studies will occasionally appear in the literature mainly because the reviews, who know about molecular biology, are unfamiliar with the old literature on energy metabolism.

Here’s Dr. Seyfried’s letter that never got published in the journal:

October 20, 2010
Dr. M.V. Blagosklonny

Editor-in-Chief, Cell Cycle
Roswell Park Cancer Institute

Buffalo, NY

Dear Dr. Blagosklonny,

I am writing in reference to an article that appeared in the September 1 issue of Cell Cycle by Bonuccelli, et al., entitled: “Ketones and lactate “fuel” tumor growth and metastasis: Evidence that epithelial cancer cells use oxidative mitochondrial metabolism”.

The authors have made serious errors in their data interpretation and the conclusions of their article. There is no evidence in the biochemical literature that ketone bodies can be made from pyruvate in fibroblasts. It is common knowledge in biochemistry that ketone bodies are derived from fatty acid beta-oxidation in liver mitochondria. This information is also presented in the cited articles from Veech and co-workers.

The authors present evidence showing that the ketone body 3-hydroxy-butyrate does not enhance lung metastasis (Fig. 4A), yet the paper title indicates that ketones fuel tumor growth and metastasis. The paper title and abstract are therefore misleading.

Furthermore, no evidence was presented in the paper showing that the MDA-MB-231 cells can survive using only L-lactate or ketone bodies as metabolic fuels. While the authors recommend that it may be unwise to use lactate-containing i.v. solutions in cancer patients, the authors should also recognize that lactate is metabolized to glucose in the liver through the Cori cycle. It is well documented that glucose can stimulate tumor growth. No information was provided on food intake or body weights of the treated and control mice. No information was presented on blood glucose or ketone levels in the tumor bearing mice used in the study. It is difficult to assess the effects of drug injections without this information. Finally, no evidence was presented showing that OxPhos is operational in the MDA-MB-231 tumor cells. Gene expression profiles do not provide the required biochemical and physiological evidence for establishing operational OxPhos in tumor cells.

Unfortunately, the author’s provide misinformation. Such information will cause confusion in the field. I am surprised that the reviewers of this paper did not mention these issues in their critique, as some of the evidence and statements presented contradict basic principles of biochemistry as specified in any general textbook on the subject. If further evidence is needed to support my concerns, I would suggest contacting Drs. Richard Veech, Theodore B. VanItallie and Jong Rho.

Sincerely,
Thomas N. Seyfried, Ph.D.

DR. STEPHEN PHINNEY, low-carb researcher and co-author of The New Atkins For A New You

This is an interesting study, not so much because of what they claimed to find, but because of how much they had to ignore to draw the conclusions that they did. I could write a whole book chapter to explain this one study — not just why their conclusions are flawed, but also about the socio-political environment within the science establishment that promotes the publication of what I can only characterized as ‘reductionist garbage’.

But uncharacteristically, I offer you these few relatively brief points.

• some of the last Aboriginal nomads who lived by hunting/herding while in contact with modern medicine (such as the Masai and the Inuit) rarely were diagnosed with (or died of) cancer.

• Injecting a big dose of ketones into the abdomen of a mouse once per day is very different from the hormone and metabolic conditions that induce the body to make its own supply of ketones. To assert that the two are metabolically identical is at least intellectually weak, if not duplicitous.

• All that we are told about the diet of these mice is that they were given ad libitum access to ‘chow’. So what happens if ‘Mickey’ in cage #2 just ate a belly full of this yummy stuff (which is typically more than 60% carbs) and someone then picked him up and jabbed a needle into him delivering a bolus of ketones. Normally, we make ketones when dietary carbs are limited, but in this case these ‘scientists’ are jamming in ketones when the mice still have plenty of carbs. Since the normal (non-cancer) cells in the body love to burn ketones, want to guess what happens to blood glucose after the ketone injection. Of course, blood glucose goes up. Look through their paper as much as you want — they don’t tell you anything about blood glucose after the ketone (or lactate) injections. If blood glucose went up after ketone and lactate injections (just an educated guess), what caused their tumors to grow? Sugar or ketones?

• Multiple studies published in the last 5 years report that a well-formulated ketogenic diet in humans causes a significant reduction in biomarkers of inflammation. In addition to being closely associated with the risk of heart attack and Alzheimer’s disease, inflammation is now known to be positively correlated with many common cancers (including colon and breast cancer). Simply put, if a low carb diet reduces inflammation and a low level of inflammation correlates with less cancer, how did these guys get this paper published without a more rigorous peer review?

Answer. Because the peer review process is confidential, we’ll never know. But as an educated guess, it is much easier to get a paper published that bashes ketones/low carb than a paper that concludes that nutritional ketosis might be beneficial.

You do the math.

DR. ERIC WESTMAN, low-carb researcher and co-author of The New Atkins For A New You

I read two articles from this group. This is a theory with in-vitro studies so it is VERY preliminary in terms of generalizability to intact human organisms. Keep in mind that “cancer” is very complicated!

KAREN RYSAVY, long-time low-carber at “Truly Low Carb”

I have heard lots of evidence to the CONTRARY; this is the very first time I have ever heard anyone suppose that ketosis encourages cancer cells. Based on my research to date, which does not yet include the link you sent, if I were diagnosed with cancer the very first thing I would do is make sure I was in ketosis, then try to stay there for the duration. It would have to be a very compelling “single” study to sway me from this belief.

DR. MARY VERNON, low-carb practitioner in Lawrence, Kansas

This is an interesting article but I can’t extrapolate from it to humans. A PubMed search brings up pages of citations with conflicting conclusions.

However, here is my standard common sense approach to this type of thing:

1) Habeas Corpus-where are all the bodies? Enough people eat this way that if this really generated cancer then you’d think we’d be seeing the uptick in numbers.

2) Prevention and cure may not require the same intervention. The end stages of cancer have a lot more hormonal signals than just the ketones-those hormonal signals, many of which are made by the tumors-may change the way fuel is used.

3) What’s the data? There have been actual studies suggesting the opposite effect than this in prostaste cancer and case reports of beneficial effect in brain cancer for ketogenic diets. We need more info-and the NIH needs to fund studies that have as investigators practitioners who really know how to use this tool-not folks who have read an article or two.

Dr. EUGENE FINE, cancer researcher at Albert Einstein College of Medicine

I haven’t read the Lesanti article in any detail yet, but I see he is studying only one cancer type. Some cancers may indeed depend on ketone bodies. Our hypothesis, in fact states that some cancers may be adapted to the effects of carb
restriction, including ketosis (i.e. may continue to grow), and others may be vulnerable to ketosis. I do have evidence that many cancers are inhibited by ketone bodies.

Summary: Cancers aren’t simple and generalizations are usually wrong.

So, that’s what the experts say in response to this idea that ketones that are produced while on a low-carb diet actually “fuel” cancer cell growth. But what do YOU think? Is it possible for cancerous tumors to grow in the presence of ketone bodies based on all that you know about the role low-carb diets play in this? If sugar feeds cancer (and it does!), then how can the absence of sugar in the blood which occurs when carbohydrates are restricted lead to higher rates of cancer? Is it even fathomable? Let the discussion begin.

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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 cancer, health, insulin, jimmy moore, livin lavida lo-carb, wellness | Leave a Comment »

Journalist David Gumpert Says The Battle Over Raw Milk Goes Much Deeper Than Milk

Posted by Jimmy Moore on February 22, 2011

In Episode 446 of “The Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Show with Jimmy Moore,” we welcome to the show two very special guests to share about the work they are doing to promote health living. First up is a mini-interview with a former guest named Adam Kosloff who has written a new e-book entitled The Low-Carber’s Survival Guide. He’ll go into further detail about why he wrote this e-book and what he hopes people will get out of it. Then in the primary interview, we’ll hear from David Gumpert talking about his fantastic book The Raw Milk Revolution: Behind America’s Emerging Battle Over Food Rights (read my review here). What you’ll quickly realize as you listen to David speak is that this ongoing debate over raw milk goes much deeper than milk!

Listen to David Gumpert describe his vantage point in the raw milk debate:

  • Why he got interested in the intersection between health and business
  • How all the raids on small farms over unpasteurized milk caught his attention
  • How he became so jaded by the actions of the Food & Drug Administration (FDA)
  • What the possible motivation is for the FDA opposing real foods like raw milk
  • The tremendous growth in the raw milk market share in recent years
  • What the pasteurization and homogenization process does to the milk
  • The extreme processing that goes into creating grocery store milk
  • Why whole milk sold in stores isn’t the same as whole raw milk from the cow
  • Why milk in stores usually comes from a mixture of 100 cows
  • The dramatic difference in the taste and look of real food
  • His interaction with the famous real foods farmer Joel Salatin
  • Why raw milk is more of a “proxy issue” for the overall food rights debate
  • Some of the most horrific stories of the raids on farms in the middle of the night
  • The outrageous comments made by judges regarding raw milk/real food rights
  • How the raw milk movement is continuing to grow despite opposition
  • The health benefits of consuming raw vs. pasteurized dairy
  • Why there is a lack of research in the United States conducted on raw milk
  • What average people can do to make a real difference with this issue
  • Why people need to get involved politically to bring about change
  • The importance of buying more food from local farmers than the grocery store
  • How raw milk cheese is the next front in the battle over raw milk

    There are three ways you can listen to Episode 446:

    1. Listen at the iTunes page for the podcast:

    2. Listen and comment about the show at the official web site for the podcast:

    3. Download the MP3 file of Episode 446 [46:39m]:

    THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR FINANCIALLY SUPPORTING THIS PODCAST! If these twice-weekly podcast interviews from the most provocative and thought-provoking diet, fitness, and health experts have helped you in any way over the past few months and years, then help us keep it going by clicking on the DONATE button on the official podcast web site. We love making these exclusive interviews available to you at no charge so that the positive low-carb message can get out there to the people who need to hear it the most. We are so grateful for your generous donations of any amount so we can keep this going all throughout 2011 and well beyond. I have a fantastic group of fresh new expert interview guests lined up for your listening enjoyment and can’t wait for you to hear them in the coming months! Go to PayPal.com and you can give your gift to the e-mail address livinlowcarbman@charter.net. Your continued financial support and listenership is essential and we THANK YOU so very much for your support!

    What did you think about what you heard from David Gumpert regarding the fight over real food rights in America centered around raw milk? Tell us how this interview impacted you in the show notes section of Episode 446. Pick up your own copy of The Raw Milk Revolution, check out the official web site of David Gumpert, and get engaged in his “The Complete Patient” blog. Coming up on Thursday, I’m so excited to share with you a special episode highlighting a double-feature with two of the most prominent rising young stars in the real food/low-carb world who are seeking to bring healthy eating to the peers and the rest of the world. Birke Baehr, who will turn 12 years old on Thursday when this podcast airs, will be here to share about how he got so interested in real food living–including his awesome TEDx NextGeneration Asheville speech in 2010. Then we’ll hear from high school senior Sarah Czipowski who you’ll find to be one of the most articulate and outspoken 17-year olds you’ll ever hear on the subject of nutrition and health! I am so thrilled to be able to bring you Birke and Sarah later this week.

    If you have something to share about what you heard on “The Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Show,” then drop us an e-mail at our dedicated podcast e-mail address–LLVLCShow@gmail.com. We’d love to hear from you about what you think about the show, interview guest suggestions (although keep in mind I’m fully booked up through October 2011), show topics, and anything else you want to share!

    If you love this podcast, then we personally invite you to become a member of “The Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Show Fan Club!” Get special behind-the-scenes access to your favorite podcast, including the highly-coveted transcripts of past interviews, audio snippets of upcoming podcasts, see who I have scheduled for interviews and the ability to have me ask them YOUR questions, and so much more! It’s exclusive material for you uber-fans of “The Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Show” and I appreciate your support of my work. In fact, we just uploaded a whole bunch of PREVIEW audio of the upcoming interviews in the coming months, including a special full-length episode of my upcoming new podcast “Low-Carb Conversations With Jimmy Moore & Friends.” And my very heavy recording schedule for March will be posted later this week with the interviews that will air during the summer (get your questions in early for these guests). SIGN UP TODAY!

    Bookmark and Share

    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 Big Agriculture, Butter, Cheese, farm fresh, FDA, fresh and local, government, health, homogenization, jimmy moore, livin lavida lo-carb, Local Foods, low fat dairy, Media, Money, motivation, Nutrition, pasteurization, processed food, raw milk, real food, real foods, saturated fat, wellness, Weston A. Price Foundation | Leave a Comment »

    The Tide Is Turning

    Posted by John Chisholm on February 8, 2011

    My impression has been that when Reader’s Digest starts carrying articles about a topic, it’s no longer of interest to just a few people on the fringe.  When I ran across the February 2011 article on Gary Taube’s book, Why We Get Fat—and What to Do About It, I saw that the cogent and traditional way of eating is really gaining traction against the low-fat and high-carb conventions.

    Parts of the messages of Kevin Brown and the Weston A. Price Foundation are starting to penetrate mainstream awareness.  It’s encouraging, even though awareness by the mainstream press is still incomplete and still lags behind the more knowledgeable champions of healthy eating.  Jimmy Moore posted an article on Gary Taube’s book months ago.  (Jimmy  also provided a convenient link to a podcast of his interesting interview of Gary Taube— good stuff.)

    Conventional Wisdom Is Not Holding Up
    Taube’s book echoes what Kevin Brown has been saying for years, in Kevin’s own book, in his lectures, and on his website: the standard American diet has been making the population overweight, obese and prone to disease.  These observations challenge the simplistic thinking that says calories are calories no matter where they come from.  In fact, the body responds to different types of dietary calories in different ways, and the low-fat, high-carb diet upsets the body’s ability to regulate fat tissue properly.  Eating fat doesn’t lead to more fat storage in the body; eating high amounts of carbs leads to the insulin resistance that increases fat storage.  The high-carb diet also correlates to increased incidence in a multitude of diseases, from heart disease, cancers, diabetes, and even gum disease.

    The mounting evidence of researchers and mainstream publications who report on the failure of the standard American diet is like the proverbial handwriting on the wall.  Animal-produced foods are eventually going to lose their demonization.  So now what?  Do we turn to the supermarket aisles for the cheapest and most readily available animal-produced foods?  Not unless we want to trade in one set of health problems (obesity, diabetes) with another set (degenerative diseases such as arthritis and cancers).

    Bad food Affects Us.  Bad Food Also Affects Our Animals
    We humans do get all kinds of health problems from eating foods that our ancestors never ate and that we weren’t designed for, such as highly-refined grains, sugars and fake oils (care for cottonseed, anyone?).  Similarly, the livestock animals that produce our meat, eggs and milk get all kinds of health problems if forced to eat feeds that they weren’t designed for.  In agribusiness’s factory farms, the food that the animals were designed for, such as natural pasture grass, is replaced by commercial feeds that are both cheaper and cause quicker weight gain, for bigger profits.  The only thing that suffers is the health of the animals, and of the people who eat the unhealthful animals.

    A mainstay of feeds for rapid weight gain is GMO corn, which has been shown to cause organ failure in animals, mostly in the kidneys and liver, but also in the heart, adrenal glands, spleen and blood.  Another important constituent of feed is cheap protein in the form of animal renderings, which is all the animal byproducts scraped up and thrown out by the factory slaughterhouses, such as bone, feathers, eyeballs, offal, hair, hooves, diseased organs and the occasional bits of metal (from animal-ID-tags), plastic, and some restaurant grease.  Many rendering factories also accept roadkills  and carcasses from animal shelters, and add them to the mix.  To replace the mineral and chlorophyll of natural grass, the feeds for cows usually incorporate ground-up corn stalks and corn plant leaves that are left over after the crop of corn has been harvested; they can make up more than half the feed.

    The feeds’ formulas are then topped off with hormones, to force rapid weight gain, and antibiotics, to combat the pathogenic infections that are bound to assail the animals.  The animals on factory farms are kept in pens whose floors (of dirt or concrete) are covered with the animals’ feces and urine, which become an ideal breeding ground for pathogenic bacteria.

    It’s Not Smart to Subvert Nature
    Grazing animals that are designed to eat grass (e.g., with multiple stomachs) and that were never meat eaters have been forced to eat feed that their systems can’t handle, including bits of animals of their own species.  Mad cow disease is just the most severe outcome so far of these unnatural farming practices.  Other more common diseases and organ failures are inevitable for the animals subjected to modern factory farming.  But agribusiness has figured out how to adjust feeds and hormones so skillfully that they can bring the animals up to harvest weight quickly enough to be killed just weeks before organ failure would debilitate the animals.

    The result of all this tinkering with Mother Nature is to produce the most meat (or eggs or milk) for the cheapest cost.  But it’s not really a healthful practice to keep eating food produced by animals pumped up on hormones and antibiotics and on the verge of disease.

    The Right Food Raised Right
    The truly healthful alternative to an ineffectual diet that’s low-fat and high-carb is to get our food from traditional farming, that raises livestock by having them graze (literally eat living grass).  The animals are healthy because they’ve spent their whole lives feeding on their traditional diet in their natural environment: sunlit pastures where they absorb vitamin-D and the living enzymes and minerals from the grass.  As a bonus, grazing in pastures is much better for the environment than force-feeding artificial diets in confined animal feeding operations (CAFOs).  The grazing keeps alive the native species of grasses as well as the food chain of animals that dwell there, from insects to small mammals to top predators.   Grazing also does not lead to the concentrations of fecal and urine waste that typically pollute the land around the CAFOs.

    Cheap, fake foods that look the same as real are not “just as good” as traditional foods.  People are starting to question whether they’re eating the right things.  Let’s keep going to make sure we’ll all have access to the right food raised in the right way.  Let’s support our natural farmers and buy real food that’s been raised by them.

    John Chisholm is co-owner of a small company that makes Good-Gums, a toothpaste-replacement that supports the body’s ability to heal its gums. When WAPF Chapter Leaders started carrying Good-Gums, John started learning and practicing Weston A. Price dietary principles, as lucidly explained by Kevin Brown’s Liberation Wellness. Already a regular exerciser and feeling pretty healthy, John didn’t anticipate how well his body would further respond to unprocessed, full-fat, pasture-raised foods.

    Posted in Big Agriculture, diabetes, Food Safety, gmo, grains, grass fed beef, health, heart disease, insulin, jimmy moore, kevin brown, liberation diet, liberation wellness, obesity, Vitamin D, wellness, Weston A. Price Foundation | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

    Switzerland Get Away

    Posted by Kevin Brown on February 8, 2011


    Join Swiss Native Judith Mudrak on the 6th Tour to Switzerland with 12-20 healthy WAPF members!

    -Come see the Cows, Goats and Sheep!
    -Meet Farmers and Sennen! (mountain farmers)
    -Watch and taste modern and old-fashioned alpine cheese making!
    -Speak to Organic / Biodynamic farmers and cheese makers!

    -Listen and ask questions at the Research Center Agroscope Reckenholz on the importance of mycorrhizae and soil health, also clean groundwater is pure money: see Europes largest modern facility measuring groundwater drainage and nitrates. Whats farming all got to do with it? Incl. field walk!

    -Learn about Raw Meat, Blood- and Sausage preservation, tasting!
    -Enjoy an herbalist guided Alpine Plant walk with Salve making!
    -Ancient sourdough rye bread make/bake in a historical mountain village!
    -Visit the Alimentarium (historical food museum) on the beautiful lake of Geneva, take the boat ride to the famous mid-evil Castle Chillon!
    -Enjoy the 1000 Sheep festival on the Gemmi Mountain!

    -Ride the route of the Glacier Express! Spectacular Mountain Views!
    -Visit various museums/regions, walk the Ltschental where Dr. Price walked!
    -Enjoy raw milk, cheese and authentic sourdough rye!
    -Make new friends with like-minded WAPF members!!

    Length of trip: 15 days, beginning Thursday July 21 until Thursday August 4, 2011. Must obtain own flight and Swiss Pass.

    For more info please e-mail: reversemydisease@gmail.com Subject: WAPFCH11 or for slow mail: Please send self addressed, stamped envelope to: Judith Mudrak, 58 Cranberry Run, Southampton, NJ 08088 USA. Phone: 609 859- 3828 EST

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    Posted in balance, Big Agriculture, Events, Family Wellness, Food freedom, god, health, heart disease, Inspiration, liberation diet, liberation wellness, Mental Health, Nutrition, raw milk, real food, real foods, sleep, Sun Exposure, Uncategorized, water, Weight Loss, wellness, Weston A. Price Foundation, weston price | Tagged: , , | Leave a Comment »

    Raw Milk Needs Your Help!

    Posted by Kevin Brown on February 8, 2011

    NJ Raw Milk Bill A743 needs your help to get out of committee.  Please voice your support of raw milk.  We need new faces at the meeting in Trenton!

    Thursday, February 10, 2pm, 4th floor, room 15, State House Annex, Trenton NJ, directly across the street from 162 W State St, Trenton 08625.  For car pooling, contact Carol carolrice@optonline.net.

    NJ State Assembly Committee for Agriculture and Natural Resources will receive testimony on issues concerning dairy farmers in NJ.  We anticipate that some dairy farmers will testify against raw milk at this meeting, so a strong show of support is important.

    Also, please continue to email your testimonies, as raw milk drinkers, as consumers, as farmers, as health professionals, to Assemblywoman Connie Wagner, sponsor of this raw milk bill, so she can give your testimony to the committee.  aswwagner@njleg.org

    The committee loves to hear stories from people who are using raw milk, from parents who give it to their families, about children whose health has improved due to raw milk.

    And if you’d like to call the committee members and let them know why you’re in favor of raw milk, here is contact info:

    NJ Assembly Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee

    Nelson T. Albano (D), Chair

    (609) 465-0700 (Cape May Court House)

    (856) 765-0891 (Millville)

    (856) 696-7109 (Vineland)

    (609) 926-3779 (Somers Point)

    Celeste M. Riley (D), Vice-Chair

    (856) 455-1011 (Bridgeton)

    (856) 251-9801 (West Deptford)

    (856) 339-0808 (Salem)

    John F. Amodeo (R)

    (609) 677-8266 (Northfield)

    Ronald S. Dancer (R)

    (732) 901-0702 (Jackson)

    Gilbert L.Wilson (D)

    (856) 547-4800 (Audubon)

    (856) 541-1251 (Camden)

    (856) 853-2960 (Woodbury)

    FOR MORE INFORMATION:

    www.njleg.state.nj.us

    http://www.njleg.state.nj.us/2010/Bills/A1000/743_I1.PDF

    www.gardenstaterawmilk.org or search for

    Garden State Raw Milk on Facebook

    Enhanced by Zemanta

    Posted in Big Agriculture, Family Wellness, farm fresh, Fear, Food freedom, Food Politics, fresh and local, heart disease, liberation diet, liberation wellness, Nutrition, raw milk, Uncategorized, Weight Loss, wellness, Weston A. Price Foundation | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

    This Could Threaten the Future of Food – Destroying the Entire Food Chain…

    Posted by Maureen Diaz on February 2, 2011

    Reposting this from Dr. Mercola. A very important consideration as we choose our food, and even plant our gardens and create our landscapes! Posted By Dr. Mercola | February 02 2011

    Monsanto’s glyphosate-based herbicide, is causing Sudden Death Syndrome (SDS), a serious plant disease, in many fields. Study after study shows that glyphosate is contributing not only to the huge increase in SDS, but also to the outbreak of numerous other diseases.
    Glyphosate is the world’s bestselling weed killer; it was patented by Monsanto for use in their Roundup brand, which became more popular when they introduced “Roundup Ready” crops — genetically modified (GM) plants that can withstand applications of normally deadly Roundup.
    But the herbicide doesn’t destroy plants directly; instead, it creates a unique perfect storm of conditions that activates disease-causing organisms in the soil, while at the same time wiping out plant defenses against those diseases.

    The Institute for Responsible Technology reports:
    “By weakening plants and promoting disease, glyphosate opens the door for lots of problems in the field. According to Don [Huber, a plant pathologist], ‘There are more than 40 diseases of crop plants that are reported to increase with the use of glyphosate …’
    Some of the fungi promoted by glyphosate produce dangerous toxins that can end up in food and feed … They’ve ‘been linked to the plague epidemics’ of medieval Europe, ‘large-scale human toxicosis in Eastern Europe,’ esophageal cancer in

    southern Africa and parts of China, joint diseases in Asia and southern Africa, and a blood disorder in Russia.”
    Sources:  Institute for Responsible Technology January 14, 2011

    Dr. Mercola’s Comments:

    More than:
    75 percent of soybeans65 percent of cotton10 percent of corn grown in the United States… contain the genetically modified (GM) Roundup Ready gene, which allows farmers to spray Monsanto’s Roundup herbicide directly onto their fields, killing weeds without harming the crops … theoretically.
    However, this convenience comes at a steep price, as evidence shows that Roundup’s active ingredient, glyphosate, is actually devastating crops and human and animal health around the world, even when the exposure is restricted to residues leftover in the soil.
    “The Perfect Storm” for Plant Devastation
    Glyphosate is the world’s bestselling weed killer, and it’s found in more than 30 percent of all herbicides. While Roundup Ready crops can withstand the toxin because of GM genetic material from viruses and bacteria, the weed killer is thought to be contributing to Sudden Death Syndrome (SDS), a deadly plant disease that causes plants to turn yellow and die.
    As reported by GM expert Jeffrey Smith, numerous studies have linked glyphosate to increases in SDS, including in crops that have never been sprayed with the herbicide but were planted in a field that received an application the previous season.

    As Smith points out:

    “The herbicide doesn’t destroy plants directly. It rather cooks up a unique perfect storm of conditions that revs up disease-causing organisms in the soil, and at the same time wipes out plant defenses against those diseases. The mechanisms are well-documented but rarely cited.”
    In fact, Roundup herbicide weakens plants and promotes disease in a number of ways, including:
    Acting as a chelator of vital nutrients, depriving plants of the nutrients necessary for healthy plant functionDestroying beneficial soil organisms that suppress disease-causing organisms and help plants absorb nutrientsInterfering with photosynthesis, reducing water use efficiency, shortening root systems and causing plants to release sugars, which changes soil pHStunting and weakening plant growthPromoting disease-causing organisms in soil, which then overtake the weakened crops. So the glyphosate in Roundup is not only weakening plants, it’s changing the makeup of soil and boosting the number of disease-causing organisms, a deadly recipe for crops around the globe.
    As Don Huber, a plant pathologist at Purdue University, stated:
    “There are more than 40 diseases of crop plants that are reported to increase with the use of glyphosate, and that number keeps growing as people recognize the association between glyphosate and disease.”

    As the use of Roundup has increased, so too has the prevalence of potentially devastating plant diseases, which could threaten future food crops and the food chain that depends on them.
    Dangers for People and Animals Too

    It’s not only plant life that’s threatened by the use of Roundup — human and animal toxins are created too. As Smith reported, glyphosate promotes the formation of certain types of fungi that are dangerous to people and contaminate food and animal feed. One such fungi, the Fusarium fungus, has been linked to plague epidemics, cancer, infertility and animal diseases.
    Residues of Monsanto’s Roundup herbicide found in GM food and feed have also been linked to cell damage and even death, even at very low levels. Researchers have also found it causes membrane and DNA damage, and inhibits cell respiration.

    It’s also possible that glyphosate is significantly altering the nutrient content of our food, through its chelating mechanism, leading to widespread mineral deficiencies in animals and humans. Smith writes:
    “The same nutrients that glyphosate chelates and deprives plants are also vital for human and animal health. These include iron, zinc, copper, manganese, magnesium, calcium, boron, and others. Deficiencies of these elements in our diets, alone or in combination, are known to interfere with vital enzyme systems and cause a long list of disorders and diseases …
    Glyphosate-induced mineral deficiencies can easily go unidentified and untreated. Even when laboratory tests are done, they can sometimes detect adequate mineral levels, but miss the fact that glyphosate has already rendered them unusable.
    Glyphosate can tie up minerals for years and years, essentially removing them from the pool of nutrients available for plants, animals, and humans. If we combine the more than 135 million pounds of glyphosate-based herbicides applied in the US in 2010 with total applications over the past 30 years, we may have already eliminated millions of pounds of nutrients from our food supply.”

    Roundup in the Enviroment

    Monsanto long used the slogans, “It’s Safer than Mowing,” “Biodegradable,” and “Environmentally Friendly” to describe Roundup — until the real effects of this toxic herbicide were revealed and they were forced to discontinue their deceptive advertising.
    The truth is Monsanto’s own tests showed that only 2 percent of the herbicide broke down after 28 days, which means it readily persists in the environment. Glyphosate is actually the most commonly reported cause of pesticide illness among landscape maintenance workers in California. Additionally:

    The surfactant ingredient in Roundup is more acutely toxic than glyphosate itself, and the combination of the two is even more toxic.Glyphosate is suspected of causing genetic damage.Glyphosate is acutely toxic to fish and birds and can kill beneficial insects and soil organisms that maintain ecological balance.Laboratory studies have identified adverse effects of glyphosate-containing products in all standard categories of toxicological testing.In one animal study, rats given 1,000 mg/kg of glyphosate resulted in a 50 percent mortality rate, and skeletal alterations were observed in over 57 percent of fetuses!

    And just so you understand, GM crops that are resistant to Roundup are the most widely sold GM varieties. So if you eat GM foods, there is a very good chance those foods contain Round

    up residues — and possibly hefty amounts of them.

    According to Smith, by 2004 farmers used an estimated 86 percent more herbicide on GM soy fields compared to non-GM. Higher levels of herbicide residue in this GM soy might cause

    health problems, and many symptoms identified in one UK soy allergy study are also related to glyphosate exposure.
    The allergy study identified irritable bowel syndrome, digestion problems, chronic fatigue, headaches, lethargy, and skin complaints including acne and eczema, all related to soy consumption.
    Symptoms of glyphosate exposure include nausea, headaches, lethargy, skin rashes, and burning or itchy skin. It is also possible that glyphosate’s breakdown product AMPA, which accumulates in GM soybeans after each spray, might contribute to allergies.
    Again, the use of Roundup herbicide has increased dramatically since the GM Roundup Ready crops were introduced. In the first 13 years, American farmers sprayed an additional 383 million pounds of herbicide due to these herbicide-tolerant crops. And now the repeated exposures have given Mother Nature all she needs to stage her comeback in the form of devastating superweeds.
    How Can You Avoid Roundup and Roundup Ready Crops?
    Did you know that genetically modified foods are so prevalent in the United States that if you randomly pick an item off your grocery store’s shelves, you have a 75 percent chance of picking a food with GM ingredients?

    It’s true. At least seven out of every 10 processed food items have been genetically modified, and there’s more to come.
    The potential health ramifi

    cations of these world-wide experiments with our food supply are frightening to say the least. If you care about the health and future of your family, I strongly urge you to refuse to participate in this destructive trend.
    How?

    It’s actually simpler than you might think… By buying only non-GM foods.
    The True Food Shopp

    ing Guide is a great tool for helping you determine which brands and products contain GM ingredients. It lists 20 different food categories that include everything from baby food to chocolate.
    Additionally, here are four simple steps to decrease your consumption of GM foods as much as possible:
    Reduce or eliminate processed foods in your diet. The fact that 75 percent of processed foods contain GM ingredients is only one of the many reasons to stick to a whole foods diet.Read produce and food labels. Conventionally raised soybeans and corn make up the largest portion of genetically modified crops. Ingredients made from these foods include high fructose corn syrup (HFCS), corn flour and meal, dextrin, starch, soy sauce, margarine, and tofu.Buy organic produce. By definition, food that is certified organic must be free from all GM organisms, produced without artificial pesticides and fertilizers and from an animal reared without the routine use of antibiotics, growth promoters or other drugs. Additionally, grass-fed beef will not have been fed GM corn feed.You can also get involved in helping to defeat GM crops at the regulatory level. Right now the USDA is considering the approval of Monsanto’s Roundup Ready alfalfa, which would lead to the application of millions more pounds of Roundup herbicide each year.
    You can urge U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack to NOT approve Roundup Ready alfalfa, which would lead to the addition of more Roundup on U.S. fields and in our food, by using this action form from the Institute for Responsible Technology

    Posted in Big Agriculture, cancer, Family Wellness, farm fresh, Food Politics, Food Safety, FRESH, fresh and local, gmo, grains, immune system, Maureen Diaz, Nutrition, plant-based diets, processed food, seeds, soy, Uncategorized, vegetables, wellness | 1 Comment »

     
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