Re: PaNu - The paleolithic nutrition argument clinic
Roger,
According to your post, the big grain-eaters (Japanese and Hunza) were in the same good-health category as the high-meat eaters (the Inuit, plains Indians, etc.) If grains are so bad for you, why is that the case?
Your post:
He's saying that it's not that grains per se that are bad, but the refined grains and other refined carbohydrates that are the problem.
Regardless of the lectins and all the other supposedly harmful chemicals that you cite in your anti-grain posts, the Japanese are quite healthy in comparison with those who don't eat many grains. What's up with that?
Roger,
According to your post, the big grain-eaters (Japanese and Hunza) were in the same good-health category as the high-meat eaters (the Inuit, plains Indians, etc.) If grains are so bad for you, why is that the case?
Your post:
The point is that when researchers look at traditional populations eating their traditional diets — whether in rural China, Japan, the Kitava study in the South Pacific, Africa, etc — and find relatively low levels of heart disease, obesity and diabetes compared to urban/westernized societies, they’re inevitably looking at populations that eat relatively little or no refined carbs and sugar compared to populations that eat a lot. Some of these traditional populations ate high-fat diets (the Inuit, plains Indians, pastoralists like the Masai, the Tokelauans); some ate relatively low-fat diets (agriculturalists like the Hunza, the Japanese, etc.), but the common denominator was the relative absence of sugar and/or refined carbs. So the simplest possible hypothesis to explain the health of these populations is that they don’t eat these particularly poor quality carbohydrates, not that they did or did not eat high fat diets." |
He's saying that it's not that grains per se that are bad, but the refined grains and other refined carbohydrates that are the problem.
Regardless of the lectins and all the other supposedly harmful chemicals that you cite in your anti-grain posts, the Japanese are quite healthy in comparison with those who don't eat many grains. What's up with that?
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