I just
finished reading this book, The
Big Fat Surprise: Why Butter, Meat and Cheese Belong in a Healthy Diet
by Nina Teicholz
(https://thebigfatsurprise.com/)
It's
familiar territory to me, but what an indictment of our nutrition authorities! Nina documents
the shocking refusal of so-called nutrition experts to entertain the idea that
there might be another way to look at the issue of saturated fat, instead
accusing those who have studied the research carefully of 'quackery' for
suggesting that saturated fat is not bad. They simply refuse to look at all the
research with an open mind - a very bad habit for anyone calling themselves a
scientist!
Two recent stories in The New York Times (one after the other
in my large print weekly edition) make me wonder if we’ll ever get the
nutrition right!
relates the problems nursing homes are having taking care of
massively obese patients. And I’ll bet they are feeding them the very low fat
high carb type of diet that made them fat in the first place, since that is the
standard diet in nursing homes. And that is what we’ve been told is a healthy
diet for nearly 40 years - still recommended in the government’s 2015 Dietary Guidelines for
Americans.
This is what guides food policy in many institutions,
including our public schools. Pity the
poor children that can have low fat chocolate milk with extra sugar, but not the whole milk that is truly nourishing – and never any butter on their tasteless vegetables.
Which leads me to the other shocking article, where nutrition
is completely ignored, as babies are given drugs for problems that are probably
the result of missing nutrients.
Imagine giving babies,
or even toddlers, Prozac or Risperdal for depression! The doctors who prescribe these drugs know so little about
nutrition, they have no idea that faulty nutrition of the child or even the
mother could be at the root of the problem. Yet good nutrition is
essential for the brain to work
properly. The influence on behavior of several common nutrient deficiencies is
detailed in this article:
And good natural fats, like butter, are needed to absorb
several of these important nutrients.
Parents who follow the Dietary
Guidelines based on the research of Dr. Weston A. Price, DDS, rich with
natural fats, have healthy happy children with little in the way of behavior
problems. As evidence, check out the Healthy
Baby Photo Gallery
Kris, retired and reformed dietitian
I love Adele's blog. Here she calls out the stupidity of the 6 easy guidelines from a nutritionist and journalist team
ReplyDeletehttp://eathropology.com/2016/01/21/keeping-it-simply-stupid-rogue-guidelines-not-exactly/
htt://earthapology.com/2016/01/31/keeping-it-simple-stupid-rougue-guidelines-not-exacttly/
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