Someone should be following this guy around with a camera.
Sunday, December 27, 2015
Thursday, December 10, 2015
"Proteinaholic" - Tipping Point, pt 3
This is another new book by a medical doctor, Garth Davis MD, a surgeon specializing in weight loss. The weight of the evidence (anecdotal and scientific) is finally becoming too obvious to ignore, even by those profiting from "business as usual". The weight of the evidence is finally beginning to overtake the massive amount of misinformation that has caused the developed world, and especially the USA, to become sicker and sicker.
I recommend you read the entire "look inside" section on Amazon (click on the book cover and then arrows to the right):
http://www.amazon.com/Proteinaholic-Obsession-Meat-Killing-About/dp/0062279300/ref=pd_sim_14_2?ie=UTF8&dpID=415WJw8NCyL&dpSrc=sims&preST=_AC_UL160_SR108%2C160_&refRID=1JJ400N4MZ9FT0MPG8QJ
This review is also very good:
http://www.amazon.com/review/R24RHY7LOCYTNA/ref=cm_cr_dp_title?ie=UTF8&ASIN=0062279300&channel=detail-glance&nodeID=283155&store=books
A good video interview of the author:
Yep, it looks like the tipping point may finally have arrived. Wow. Still early stages however, big backlash is inevitable - vast sections of the US/developed world economy have foundation in this sea of misinformation. To wit:
drug based medical practices
"big" pharma
"health care" insurance
supplements industry
factory farming of animals
animal products processing industries
processed (packaged) food industry
fast food industry
"mono-culture" crop farming
chemical (pesticide) industry (supporting mono-culture farming)
last, but certainly not least, the "weaponization" of food, GMO's.
http://www.amazon.com/Proteinaholic-Obsession-Meat-Killing-About/dp/0062279300/ref=pd_sim_14_2?ie=UTF8&dpID=415WJw8NCyL&dpSrc=sims&preST=_AC_UL160_SR108%2C160_&refRID=1JJ400N4MZ9FT0MPG8QJ
This review is also very good:
http://www.amazon.com/review/R24RHY7LOCYTNA/ref=cm_cr_dp_title?ie=UTF8&ASIN=0062279300&channel=detail-glance&nodeID=283155&store=books
A good video interview of the author:
Yep, it looks like the tipping point may finally have arrived. Wow. Still early stages however, big backlash is inevitable - vast sections of the US/developed world economy have foundation in this sea of misinformation. To wit:
drug based medical practices
"big" pharma
"health care" insurance
supplements industry
factory farming of animals
animal products processing industries
processed (packaged) food industry
fast food industry
"mono-culture" crop farming
chemical (pesticide) industry (supporting mono-culture farming)
last, but certainly not least, the "weaponization" of food, GMO's.
"How Not to Die" - Tipping Point, pt 2
Dr Michael Greger, an MD who has been reviewing science based studies on nutrition for years, and summing up his work in short Youtube videos on his site nutritionfacts.org, has just published a book titled "How Not to Die". It looks to be a game changer. Here's three links, 1) the Amazon book page, 2) the "most helpful" Amazon review (educational in itself), and 3) the video Dr. Greger produced to announce publication of the book.
Monday, November 23, 2015
Tipping Point?
Wouldn't that be nice.
Corollary books:
the science: "The China Study"
the method: "The Pleasure Trap"
Corollary books:
the science: "The China Study"
the method: "The Pleasure Trap"
Friday, September 4, 2015
Dr. Robert Lockhart
A 30 minute talk with Dr. Robert Lockhart at the 2015 Woodstock Fruit Festival, where he presents a general introduction to his life's work. For those of you who don't know Robert, he's a 71 year old chiropractor / naturopath / yogi with deep experience and knowledge about the cause of optimal health in humans!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vm1YLZlsio8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vm1YLZlsio8
Thursday, July 16, 2015
why can't a paleo diet reverse heart disease?
this blog post is a little bit rushed, please excuse the capitalization errors.
an interesting question remains: once cardio vascular disease has been eliminated from the body with a "whole plants only" 7-10% fat program (which is a fairly long process for complete eradication of advanced cases, probably 5--10 years, esselstyn probably has this data), is it then better for overall level of health to increase fat consumption again, and if so, to what general level? this is a question i have not seen asked or answered. the mcdougalls and esselstyns are adamant however, do they know something i don't, or are they unconsciously operating on "if a little bit is good, a lot must be better" ?
woke this morning with an insight into a hoary chestnut i've been wrestling with for some time, why is it paleo apparently reverses insulin resistance and hence diabetes, but not heart disease. easy to understand why both paleo and high carb vegan prevent insulin resistance - fat in the blood inhibits uptake of fuel (carbs), so the bod either needs to be put on an alternate fuel source (fat), or dietary fat has to be reduced to a level where uptake of (carb) fuel is efficient. (from basic sports performance science, which also shows a fat fueled body cannot reach optimal levels of physical performance, a telling point perhaps).
the answer is actually obvious in retrospect, don't know why it eluded me for so long. heart disease is essentially the buildup of fat (plaque) in the cardiovascular system. paleos will argue that fat is not the cause of fat build in the body, insulin resistance is, and that is true, imo, to a relative, relevant point. so if fat consumption in the absence of insulin resistance is not the cause of fat accumulation, why is it not also reversing heart disease in the same way high carb vegan does?
the nutrient format of a whole plant diet may have something to do with it, but i think the primary reason a plant diet with no overt fat (7-10% of calories coming from fat) reverses cardiovascular disease is because the body (obviously) needs fat on an ongoing basis to function properly, and if it's getting only the bare minimum found in whole plant foods it will start consuming body stores of fat, including, of course, the fatty plaques and particles lodged in in the arteries, veins and capillaries. this would also explain why the long term 7-10% crowd is so lean, in fact the leanest population on the planet that is also "healthy", going by blood work and physical performance measures. the 7-10% whole plant diet essentially puts the body on a "fat fast", where it begins consuming it's stores. and since it's difficult (but not impossible) to over consume calories on a whole plant diet, this approach can be relatively unsophisticated - no calorie counting necessary, eat till full, all you want.
and over time, in that process, the body's internal satiety measures, which have been blown to smithereens by modern diet, will come into balance, and back into play. i was struck by the “pleasure trap” (recommended book) factoid that only humans and their domesticated animals have any problem whatsoever (of the millions of species on the planet) with under or overweight, demonstrating that correctly functioning autonomic satiety measures essentially work perfectly, given sufficient availability of native foods.
the corresponding question is how can this 7-10% population be so healthy with so little fat consumption, and i think the answer lies in the quality and density of micronutrients on this dietary approach. we are beginning to understand that supplementation is a problem because those supplemented micronutrients are not supported by a "whole organism host" (nutrients contained within whole unadulterated fresh foods). there are complex interactions here we can so far only posit, they are not well understood as yet, but the difference between whole food nutrition and supplement supported (otherwise inadequate) diet are anecdotally clear - when we discovered vitamins a little over a hundred years ago it was thought disease would be eradicated, but progression of industrial era disease has been exponential instead... so much for early scientific conclusion....
an interesting question remains: once cardio vascular disease has been eliminated from the body with a "whole plants only" 7-10% fat program (which is a fairly long process for complete eradication of advanced cases, probably 5--10 years, esselstyn probably has this data), is it then better for overall level of health to increase fat consumption again, and if so, to what general level? this is a question i have not seen asked or answered. the mcdougalls and esselstyns are adamant however, do they know something i don't, or are they unconsciously operating on "if a little bit is good, a lot must be better" ?
Sunday, May 24, 2015
Brain Maker
I have been too busy moving to Florida and getting settled to do blog posts recently, but several things have flown by I thought would be good to share. This one is too good to pass up, so briefly, this is a podcast interview with the neurologist Dr. Perlmutter, talking about his new book "Brain Maker".
http://undergroundwellness.com/330/
I have two small quibbles, should I write them before you listen? Oh heck why not, see if you agree with me. First of all I am thrilled this perspective is making it into the main stream, to which I say "took long enough!" (leading to quibble # 1)
1. we have known anecdotally "all disease begins in the gut" since Hippocrates, with diet oriented health care professionals of recent times reversing disease and teaching the conditions of robust health using this exact approach. Dr. Perlmutter, IMHO, does not do enough to credit the pioneers in this field who came before him, taking most of the credit for recent establishment docs and researchers learning about the importance of "gut flora". They are learning about it in more detail, a good thing, but it can also be misleading. (leading to quibble # 2)
I have two small quibbles, should I write them before you listen? Oh heck why not, see if you agree with me. First of all I am thrilled this perspective is making it into the main stream, to which I say "took long enough!" (leading to quibble # 1)
1. we have known anecdotally "all disease begins in the gut" since Hippocrates, with diet oriented health care professionals of recent times reversing disease and teaching the conditions of robust health using this exact approach. Dr. Perlmutter, IMHO, does not do enough to credit the pioneers in this field who came before him, taking most of the credit for recent establishment docs and researchers learning about the importance of "gut flora". They are learning about it in more detail, a good thing, but it can also be misleading. (leading to quibble # 2)
2. Dr. Perlmutter does not make clear enough in this interview (hopefully he does in the book) the actual cause of whole body health (including the brain) is simply a very fiber rich diet, based on consumption of predominately fresh whole ripe raw organic fruits and vegetables. Too simple? it might seem so, but in fact it is not. If all of us ate this diet (of predominately fresh whole ripe raw organic fruits and vegetables) the medical industry would undergo a relative economic collapse! (perhaps this is why Dr. Permutter is somewhat obtuse on this point?)
Let me expand on this a bit. I am not saying eating a very fiber rich diet is psychologically simple - we have long established patterns going the other direction. I am only saying this is the primary "mechanical" cause of health, and from that perspective, yes, it is quite simple. Other things are, of course, also important --- enough good quality sleep - clean air and water - physical activity - love - sunshine - gratifying work.
another quibble relating to point 2, let's call it 2a:)
2a. Dr. Permutter goes on quite a bit about "fecal transplantation". I hope it can be shown to CURE AUTISM. That would be a true miracle, and one of the best medical advances of our lifetime. But it is still treating symptom, not cause! What caused gut flora degradation to begin with? Are we going to put patients on a life long (expensive) regimen of fecal transplants? No! We're going to tell them to modify diet and lifestyle choices to HEAL and MAINTAIN healthy gut flora.
It is not expensive or mechanically difficult to consume a diet that heals and maintains healthy gut flora. That is the bottom line for you and me.
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