Sorry for the length of this post. There's a lot of apparent misconceptions to respond to here.
First I'll try to make something clear re: this forum section. It's not really a truly "ZC" section, since the title says the following:
"Carnivorous / Zero Carb Approach:
Not literally zero carb but eating only from the animal kingdom: muscle meats, organs, and fat of sea, sky, and land animals alike -- the raw meat diet for humans."
And that would include eggs, insects, grubs, etc. Some purist ZCers avoid liver, eggs and shellfish due to the carbs they contain. Since that isn't advocated in the title, then some ZCers might not consider ZC to be officially a part of this forum. Still, ZCers are welcome here if they're civil.
My impression was that you thought I meant contemporary methods as only a negative labeling in comparison to the real 'successes' of ancient wisdom.
I didn't think you meant that, no.
I don't want to get pulled into defending Matt Stone, all-pemmican-eaters, fruitarians, the WAPF, all low carbers or anyone else for that matter. If you're truly interested in the
real reasons why
I eat a very low carb diet, let me know (the assumptions made in this thread are way off target in my case; my signature is supposed to be a big hint, but it seems like a number of people have either missed it or ignored it). If you want to know why Matt Stone, Danny Roddy, or anyone else eat the way they do, why not ask them instead of speculating about it here? I still have seen no evidence that any single individual is trying to perfectly mimic the diet of any particular people, just assumptions, speculations and opinions, and thus the claim of mindless Inuit or Kitavan mimicking still seems like much ado about nothing.
But do think what you touched on about people having the more (or tons less) of whatever thing is a common mentality.
Yes, and that seems to be more typical of modern people, because I haven't come across an example of it in writings and documentaries on hunter gatherers.
In this I think Stone and others have some valid criticism in this department in terms of orthorexic behavior, but there are also misunderstandings here about RAF, mainly because he/them has no serious experience.
Before you assume that others are motivated by orthorexia or blind emulation [edit: not that you've necessarily ever accused anyone of orthorexia--I'm just questioning the validity and usefulness of this term in general and warning against its use], bear in mind that both these accusations have been broadly thrown at this forum in the recent past before you arrived here, which presumably would include you now that you've joined and presumably follow a RPD. If it wasn't ethically or factually right for people to assume these motivations would be true for you, then perhaps you shouldn't make the same mistake?
BTW, I predicted back in 9/16/09 in my self-quote below that the orthorexia insult would get thrown at Paleo dieters of all stripes and that there would be much infighting and this appears to have come to pass. I apparently decided not to post this quote at the time, probably because I was fed up with the negative vibes and thought it might just inspire negative retorts. I'm increasingly becoming fed up with the latest round of bad vibes directed at low carbers, but since not responding didn't work and since my prediction was interestingly accurate, I'll finally post it:
Since Paleo dieters of ALL stripes come in for some harsh criticism from mainstream society, and all will likely be called "extreme," or "obsessed," or "orthorexic," at some point, you might think that Paleo dieters will know better than to cast such stones at each other, but I predict there will be much infighting. Internecine wars are often the most bitter.
And it's not just RPDers who have been targeted by the orthorexia label. As I recall, the guy who coined the term first applied it to some raw vegans and was inspired to come up with the term by a raw vegan who he claims died from her diet. Most who wield the term don't seem to know much about it or the criteria that the originator developed to determine who qualifies as orthorexic. As I expected, the term is being wielded by and against dieters of many different stripes and eventually the followers of all diets with any substantial following will likely be targeted. It's much easier to label someone as orthorexic than to provide evidence or refute points. I wonder what RPDers will be called next? Maybe some combination of orthorexia and emulation like orthoremulans?
No, I don't think emulation is impossible of all WAP (not WAPF in this case ) type peoples, unless one wants heavily factor in wild foods or get really snippy about soil quality of raised foods,
Which of the WAP peoples is it possible to emulate exactly in the USA? Perhaps one of the more modern groups like the old-fashioned among the Swiss? I could see that. What do you think are the elements of traditional diets that are impossible to emulate? Do you think that wild foods and soil quality are not significant factors in nutrition?
I just think fundamentally its flawed anyway as far as what is most healing in our current setting and requirements.
What specifically about the diets of WAP-type peoples is "fundamentally flawed" from the standpoint of "our current setting and requirements" and can you include an example of one of these peoples that you mean?
at the end of the day I don't believe emulating their diet or attempting to will automatically bring health.
Do you know anyone who does believe that emulating a particular HG group's diet (like the Inuits or Kitavans or other people) will "automatically" bring them optimal health? For example, are you claiming that re: Matt Stone or Danny Roddy?
I know all of you guys want to either prove your own theories or find facts about neolithic and paleolithic tribes as well as more recent tribes ....
If I'm one of the "guys" you're talking about, then I'll fill you in that my main motivation for being here is to learn and share so as to increase my understanding of what works best for me in both diet and lifestyle, and in return maybe some will find some of what I've written to be useful to them also. If not, then I guess the benefit is all mine.
Are you surprised that my main motivation is not to prove my own theories or just to find facts about various peoples? Who do you think this is true of? If you don't want to state a name publicly, then feel free to send me a PM.
Evidence from hunter-gatherer tribes and Paleolithic digs are just one aspect of that (not the end-all and be-all) and should be expected in a forum called "RawPaleoForum", shouldn't it? Does discussion of it irritate you? Can you explain what specifically motivated your comment? What brought you to this way of eating?
but has anyone ever thought of looking at what we know about animals.
I certainly have and have written extensively about it on this forum, which is why I'm puzzled as to why you would ask that question. Maybe you missed all my posts on giant pandas, wolves, chimps, monkeys, gorillas, tarsiers, and other animals?
I think we would indeed be well served by learning more about animals in the wild because then we would learn things like that they aren't completely free of the "diseases of civilization" like dental caries, hairloss, poor sex drive and infertility.
Society constantly tries to convince us humans that we are somehow different than the animal kingdom, that we are not animals, that for some strange reason....
Precisely, and I think this also partly underlies why many people don't want to think of hunter-gatherer or Stone Age peoples as knowing some things that we don't or living better in
some ways than we do, because we tend to think of them as being closer to animals and to want to cut off all ties with the animal world so we can maintain this notion of being superior to and apart from the animal world. Don't get me wrong, I'm not trying to say that Stone Age life was perfect or that we can emulate it perfectly or any other of the canards that get thrown at this forum and Paleo dieters in general by people who haven't tried a Paleo approach.
Would it not be safe to say that maybe we need to consider all these factors instead of always doing the "he said, she said" thing when it comes to which tribe ate what and so on?
That's basically what I have been saying all along--I utilize
all relevant sources of information. Do you see a problem with someone sharing what a certain tribe ate, or with lack of evidence given to support claims made by people who say that certain tribes ate certain foods, or just with the arguing over it?
Not poor health, but premature aging and shortened lifespan. I'm not really sure that they would care about this-- it would take some pretty weird-minded people to live in the snow and relative isolation all the time. Their short stature and fatness may have been a result of their diet, but it suits them better for life in the cold anyways.
Jared, you speak as though you know much about the Inuit. Can you explain a little more about what you mean and provide a source or two to back these opinions about Inuits being "weird-minded", in "relative isolation all the time" and being fat? Are you talking about traditional Inuits of the past, or the ones of today eating modern foods?
Anyways, I'm not talking about "perfect" health, I'm just talking a lot better than dying in your 50s-60s, which you seem to acknowledge of the Inuits.
Are you talking about average lifespan? What is your source for this information and what is your view for why the figures are in that range?
If low carb, or even zero carb, really is that superior, shouldn't there be examples of these people that are at the very top of the standards that Weston Price observed? Aside from the ones you named, and I've refuted, PaleoPhil seems to have posted more societies in Arctic regions, mentioned the Kitavans (are you suggesting they were low carb?)
No, I wasn't suggesting that the Kitavans are low carb and I have never limited myself solely to examples of peoples or animals that eat much like me. I more frequently mention people of Arctic and temperate regions because their experience is more relevant to what has worked for me than people in tropical regions. Learning a lot about high-carb eating peoples wouldn't do me much good because I don't do well on high carb diets, though I do learn something about them in case it provides additional clues.
I do low carb because it works for me, and if I'm going to do it I may as well try to do it right and learn from those who have been doing it for many thousands of years, as well as other information sources, rather than try to figure it out completely on my own, don't you agree? Isn't that part of why you're here too, because such information shared in forums like this one might be useful to you too? Or is none of the information here of any use to you?
Then of course there is the theoretical diet of the hominids and Neanderthals, but at least for the human lineage, the diets can't be verified.
They are not purely theoretical--there is some hard evidence, but it is limited. I agree that we should be careful when we speculate beyond the evidence, and recognize that we are speculating.
Maybe so. As I've said though, I think it's too easy for people who read Eades, Taubes, Groves, Gedgaudas, etc, and think, "This diet could not possibly harm me-- how could it, when it is the natural diet of our species??".
Agreed, and I think over-reliance on one or two gurus is actually far more common than over-reliance on the diets of one or two tribes of the present or past. One of the things that attracted me to this forum is that it isn't run by or devoted to a single guru.
The truth is, there is possibility for harm; in fact, it now seems to me that most long-term lowcarbers come to that conclusion (Jimmy Moore).
Most of the low carbers that I'm familiar with
have talked about potential pitfalls (such as Dr. Kurt Harris, Richard Nikoley and Mark Sisson). Are there not potential pitfalls to all diets, including your own? Isn't it possible to screw up any dietary approach? Even the Instinctos like Burger talk about mistakes one can make in applying their approaches.
I'll just take your word for it that it is working for some people (or at least, stops their more severe symptoms).
And "I'll just take your word for it that" what you're doing works for you. I think we need to do that if we're going to have civil discourse here. Besides, following a RPD is not easy and there's a lot of social pressure to not do it--so it's not likely that anyone would lie about obtaining benefits from it and follow it in spite of experiencing only harm from it.
People get so riled up after the veil has been lifted from them about saturated fat and cholesterol that they enthusiastically rally on Eades and Taubes.
True, and do you also recognize that those who don't do well on LC get riled up against Eades and Taubes and those who speak positively of them and of LC diets in general (are you familiar with Tyler Durden's posts, for example
)?
But the thing is, it was a long while before I heard of any dissent to the low carb theory, at least any that wasn't completely ignorant of the SF/cholesterol truth.
Interesting, my experience has been quite the opposite. I was proselytized re: the high-carb USDA food pyramid and vegetarianism decades before I heard about Atkins, Taubes and other low carb proponents. I ate moderate-to-high carb diets with lots of "healthy whole grains, fruits and vegetables" during those decades before I tried a low carb approach. From my registration on this forum and ever since I've been reading tons of posts attacking ZC/VLC/LC and proponents of lower-carb diets, as well as attacks on proponents of carbs. Lately the anger against LC seems to be building (which is surprising with Tyler gone
). The flames from both sides of the carb debate do get tiresome at times and I prefer the more rational and evidence-based approach at another forum, but they don't have nearly as much info on the raw and Paleo aspects of diet, so I put up with the bickering here. Some low carbers got so fed up with the anti-LC bashing that they left this forum, so it's strange that you're apparently not noticing that side of the coin. Tyler frequently insults low carbers but at least he provides some evidence to back his claims. It's the posts that rely solely on opinions and are vague that I find to be the least useful on both sides of the debate.
So that's what I'm being here: The voice of dissent to the low carb theory. This site was one of the sites I used to frequent. I never went all the way with doing completely raw (I did try a whole raw steak a few times), but this was the community that I held in mind when I thought of what the ideal diet should be. I admit, I didn't investigate too thoroughly-- I now see that a lot of you are not completely low carb.
Don't you think that setting yourself up as the "voice of dissent to the low carb theory" is a tad presumptuous, especially given that you have admitted that you "didn't investigate too thoroughly"? Wouldn't it be better to focus more on seeking first to investigate and understand before you seek to teach us with your voice of dissent?
Did you not notice Tyler Durden's posts? He was a voice of dissent and tirades against low carb long before you arrived here and he is one of the two prominent leaders here, the other being GoodSamaritan who AFAIK also does not consider himself low carb (he eats plenty of tropical fruits), but he isn't as aggressive about it. Given that neither of our two leaders is low carb, where did you get this idea that this was a LC-oriented forum? This forum is nowhere near as pro-LC/ZC as true LC forums like ZIOH and Dirty Carnivore (although it is of course more LC than vegan/vegetarian forums).
But if someone needs it spelled out to them (such as me) that there is dissent to the low carb theory, and that low carb may even be harmful, that's what this thread is.
You've mentioned "low carb
theory" multiple times. I think that's part of where you're misunderstanding. I don't eat low carb solely because of some high theory. I do so mainly because it works for me. Isn't that why you eat the way you do? Why would you make a different assumption about others?
I apologize that I've come here, a place where a lot of you are serious researchers, when I'm not that motivated to look more into this myself.
Thanks for being candid about that, and it explains a lot, but do you expect people to take you seriously as the self-appointed "voice of dissent to the low carb theory" if you're "not that motivated to look more into" it?
I'll continue to check this thread to see if there's something that seriously challenges my current stance, but I'm sorry that I'm not going to go out of my way.
Nothing of what you've written seriously challenges what I have found to work for me and if you're not going to put much effort into considering the various possibilities, then I'm not going to go out of my way to investigate your dissents either. There is an overabundance of opinions on the Internet. What is lacking is motivated investigators who thoroughly examine and test possibilities and provide evidence to back their hypotheses and conclusions. Lex Rooker and Dr. Kurt Harris are a couple of the people who do the due diligence from the LC camp, and Stephan Guyenet is someone who does it from the moderate-carb camp. The Kitavans are a decent example of a people that seem to be doing well on high carb, though I haven't seen a really good explanation yet of how people do well on high carb diets--but I am open to that possibility for some people.
Particularly, PaleoPhil, I was interested to hear about the pandas, so I'll just ask this... have they tried feeding pandas meat or something, in an attempt to improve their fertility?
Not to specifically test fertility rates, that I know of, though some articles report that some zoos do feed limited animal foods to giant pandas. It would be interesting to know what the fertility rates of giant pandas fed some animal foods are compared to those fed only plant foods. If you learn any more about this, please let me know.
Unfortunately, scientists' efforts at improving captive giant panda fertility have focused more on medicinal treatments, with little success (such as the herbal medicine and Viagra testing reported on here: "Even Pandas Suffer From Impotence,"
http://www.mrsafaris.com/free-pictures-wild-animals.html). Sound familiar?
I did read that female pandas in the wild will seek out nonplant foods when it's the season for them to get pregnant, perhaps drive by hormones? I wasn't able to find the article again, however. Perhaps this drive is somewhat offset by the giant panda's genetic meat-tasting deficiency (see below), thus keeping fertility rates even in the wild low? The giant panda is a mysterious and intriguing animal that warrants more study.
Did you read any of my posts on giant pandas? I'm not going to repost them or post links to them, because some of them are easy to find and I figure that if someone isn't willing to search for them then they probably aren't really interested. I've wasted time in the past re-posting things and posting links for people who ignored them anyway, so I'm trying to avoid that.
Panda genome unveiled
DNA clues suggest little inbreeding, surprise on the bamboo diet
By Laura Sanders
http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/50736/title/Panda_genome_unveiled
"The panda genome gives clues to understanding the panda’s strict bamboo diet. It turns out that pandas have mutations in two copies of a taste gene called T1R1, which encodes a protein that senses the savory taste of meats, cheeses, broths and other high-protein foods. These mutations may have robbed pandas of the ability to taste meat, pushing them toward their bamboo diet, the researchers suggest.
Pandas possess all the requisite genes for digesting meat, but none of the genes required for digesting bamboo, Wang and colleagues found. The researchers guess that pandas rely entirely on communities of gut microbes for extracting nutrients from bamboo."