Dear Trolls,
I can't thank you enough for trying to set me and my poor, misguided low-carb and paleo friends on the right path. It must be painful for you to read blogs and articles about eating things like bacon-wrapped shrimp, coconut chocolate tart, juicy barbecued ribs, and full-fat lemon ice cream. Nevertheless, you soldiered on to show us the way to vegan/low-fat/CICO/food reward/MMEL enlightenment. Your kindness and time and effort you've shown are appreciated.
But I do have two things to say. First, you're wrong. Not to put too fine a point on it, but there it is. Nearly all of us have already tried eating less and moving more, or reducing calories and fat, and the community is full of former vegetarians. In fact, hunger and fat accumulation are driven by hormones. This isn't the gospel according to Gary Taubes, it's in endocrinology textbooks (see this and this). High-carb diets aren't the answer to diabetes, a disease of carbohydrate intolerance. This is common sense and the common experience of thousands of diabetics who've used low-carb diets to mitigate their disease. (See this and this.) And saying that the problem is too many calories is as useful as saying that the problem with an overflowing toilet is that there's more water coming in than going out.
Ah, you say, but what about all the literature and research on low-fat and vegan diets? The research on low-fat diets is actually unimpressive (see this for a short rundown). Further, at least two main vegan authors are frauds. Neal Barnard claims in The Power of your Plate that anthropologist Richard Leakey has said that humans evolved mostly as vegetarians. Dr. Leakey said exactly the opposite in books he wrote shortly before and after The Power of your Plate came out. The one source Dr. Barnard cites actually says,"There was probably a major change in the diet of early humans, with a large increase in meat eating, at that period..." (page 249). See this and this. Likewise, T. Colin Campbell of The China Study fame wrote a book called The Low-Carb Fraud, which, unlike Dr. Campbell, I took the time to fact check. There are more errors, misleading statements and outright lies than there are pages. (See this.) How can we believe anything they report when they've told so many whoppers? And why lie if low-fat vegan diets have good results?
Photo from Heifer International. |
The wool sheep provide is a valuable resource, providing warm clothing for families and children living in harsh environments. Entire communities depend on sheep for their livelihood. Donating sheep gifts to a community:To Christopher, Carbsane, and some random trolls over at Dr. Briffa's blog, you're an inspiration.
- Provides warm clothing for families living in harsh environments
- Boosts income through sales of extra wool
- Enable families to Pass on the Gift to others quickly
Sheep can graze the hilliest, rockiest pastures unsuitable for other livestock. They can also provide milk for hungry families. Your sheep donation makes a perfect gift; sheep are adaptable and are able to survive nearly anywhere in the world.
Comments
As to trolls' nutritional state and energy level, they typically say what fine health they're in. If they're so healthy, why don't they go do some cardio instead of bothering people?
All the best Jan
I'm all for taking care of the planet, and I think animals and part of the solution. I'm not an expert on conservation, but if they eat local flora, fertilize the ground, break up the soil with their hooves, and provide nutrient-rich food, isn't this a good thing? Vegetables have their place, but plant foods have to be irrigated, fertilized, sprayed for pests, and shipped. Land has to be cleared to grow them. I'm not sure how 30 bananas a day in a temperate climate helps the environment. Likewise, overfishing is a problem now. It might be less of a problem if we hadn't been convinced that red meat would give us a heart attack.
Veganism is a religion for some people. How many people stood by T. Colin Campbell after Denise Minger used his own data to show he made up his conclusions to fit his agenda?
As I understand it (and I'm not an expert on vegan views), their problems with dairy are 1) factory farming and 2) what happens to male dairy calves. Most of them get eaten. The bee problem is a head scratcher. At many orchards, bees have to be brought in to pollinate the flowers.
If you're curious about veganism, you should read a book called The Vegetarian Myth by Lierre Keith. Keith was a moral, political and nutritional vegan for 20 years until she learned how animals fit into the environment, how monocrop culture is harmful, and how human digestion works. Sadly, by the time she discovered this and started eating meat again, she'd done permanent damage to her health. The first chapter, should you wish to read it, is on her web site.
http://www.lierrekeith.com/book-ex_the-vegetarian-myth.php