Guest guest Posted June 4, 2007 Report Share Posted June 4, 2007 Greetings, While we may resemble chimpanzees, I have never seen a chimp live in the artic. Environment and heredity play a large part of what is the correct diet for us. I would not recommend that a diet that heavy in greens for an Inuit. Asians can eat and process much more soy than occidentals, also due to environment and heredity. Knowing your own heredity and eating what is a healthy diet for your heritage is probably better. Yes, we do need to look carefully at what we eat, but there is no one correct diet for humans, we live in too many different climates and our bodies have adapted for centuries to those climates. Look at where your food comes from. How is it grown? 100% grass fed beef, with no pesticides and herbicides is much better for you than a salad of food that was sprayed twice daily with poisonous chemicals, as an extreme example. Bright Blessings, Kim breathedeepnow wrote: > > The author makes the defensible point that very possibly humans, for > best health, given such a close resemblance between chimp genes and > human genes, ought to eat the way chimps do. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2007 Report Share Posted June 4, 2007 Elliot: Hi ) What are kale and collard chips and where do you get them? Carol breathedeepnow wrote: Now I am reading the book, " Greens First, " by Butenko, and have come across a section in which the author states the fairly well-known fact that chimpanzees's genetic code is 99.4% similar to that of human beings. She then goes on to say that chimpanzees, (which have very pronounced incisor teeth, by the way), eat a tremendous amount of green leafy vegetables and only a very little bit of animal protein. They also only eat root vegetables during periods of draught, when green leafies are scarce. They also eat only a small percentage of seeds and nuts, and they eat less fruit than they do greens. The author makes the defensible point that very possibly humans, for best health, given such a close resemblance between chimp genes and human genes, ought to eat the way chimps do. My wife and I have, in fact, upped tremendously of late the amount of greens we eat, in the form of " green smoothies, " salads and " kale and collard chips, " and we both are feeling significantly better from it. Also, the tumor in my neck, which I believe responded favorably to my first GEIPE treatment, (search archive if interested in reading about GEIPE), has not grown for the last month or so. " Greens First " is well worth reading, and, I believe, it is well worth trying out the diet/lifestyle the author recommends. Elliot Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2007 Report Share Posted June 4, 2007 Hi, Kim. I do believe we need to experiment to see what works for each of us. I feel I am doing quite well right now on a vegan, high greens diet, but am open to change should I find myself lacking in some area. Butenko makes good sense to me. From another board: " Since you used the Inuit as your example in your meat post, you probably know that, until recently, the average lifespan for an Inuit man was 35 years. The infant mortality rate was four times that of the rest of Canada. Since the 1960s and the introduction of a more balanced diet, the Inuit average lifespan has increased to 55 years, the infant mortality rate is just slightly above the rest of Canada and -- this is the kicker -- the average stature has increased by six centimetres. " Asians eat mainly fermented soy, not soy grits, soy hot dogs, etc. Greens make their OWN natural pesticides, by the way, and it is getting easier and easier to buy organic produce now. Also, there are effective things to soak/wash vegetables in to get rid of at least some of the pesticides. I happen to believe T. Colin 's research to be correct--- that in high animal protein eating countries, there is a great deal more degenerative dis-ease. Eating a high animal protein diet opens up the organism to development of cancer and other degenerative dis- ease. An experiment done in India that was duplicated by showed that rats on a low animal protein diet did not develop cancer no matter how much aflatoxin they were fed. On the other hand, rats fed a 20% animal protein diet developed cancer on low doses of aflatoxin, aflatoxin being a virulent carcinogen. Elliot Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2007 Report Share Posted June 4, 2007 Hi, Carol! Kale and collard chips are made by my wife here at home in our dehydrator, and are a delicious, far more nutritious alternative to potato chips! I think you would greatly enjoy being a member of one of the raw food boards of which my wife is a member. My wife makes kale and collard chips by dipping cut-up kale or collards in a mixture of tahini, garlic, salt and other things and then drying them till crisp in our dehydrator. I can eat gobs and gobs of them, just as I used to eat potato chips. But when I'm done eating the kale/collard chips, I feel as if I've made myself HEALTHIER rather than more or less poisoned myself, as I did with potato chips! ;+)) Elliot CF wrote: > Elliot: >What are kale and collard chips and where do you get them? > Carol Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2007 Report Share Posted June 4, 2007 Greetings, Elliot, I am aware of the statistics you are quoting, but I have to disagree with them, they are scewed. If you look at the statistics on life expectancy of non-alcoholic Inuits on a natural diet for them, the numbers are quite high. Alcoholism has been a major problem in the North and continues to be. The Northwest Territories has a law that all bars must close from 5PM to 6PM so the Inuits will go home and feed their children. The high rates of alcoholism do make it difficult to determine the cause of the short life span, if you are just looking at government statistics. I spent years up north, living with the people and in the healthy families that had kept the old ways and not gone to drinking, there are many old people, in their 80's that I learned much wisdom from. I have met a few people that could stay healthy on a vegan diet, but all of them needed to take supplements to do so. I take no supplements, don't need them. I don't eat an Inuit diet, but I do eat a balanced diet for my heredity, which includes some animal protien. I raise my own food, if I didn't I couldn't afford to eat healthy. While organic may be available, it is rarely affordable. I live in an area where getting by on $500/month is common. I repeat, there is no one right diet for humans. Vegan or vegetarian is not always the right choice, it can make you sick if you have the wrong heredity. How your food is raised and how you prepare it are just as important as what type of food you eat. Bright Blessings, Kim breathedeepnow wrote: > > " Since you used the Inuit as your example in your meat post, you > probably know that, until recently, the average lifespan for an Inuit > man was 35 years. The infant mortality rate was four times that of > the rest of Canada. Since the 1960s and the introduction of a more > balanced diet, the Inuit average lifespan has increased to 55 years, > the infant mortality rate is just slightly above the rest of Canada > and -- this is the kicker -- the average stature has increased by six > centimetres. " > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2007 Report Share Posted June 4, 2007 Elliot: Sure sounds good...yum, and I have the ingredients, please send site of raw foods. Thanks! Carol breathedeepnow wrote: Hi, Carol! Kale and collard chips are made by my wife here at home in our dehydrator, and are a delicious, far more nutritious alternative to potato chips! I think you would greatly enjoy being a member of one of the raw food boards of which my wife is a member. My wife makes kale and collard chips by dipping cut-up kale or collards in a mixture of tahini, garlic, salt and other things and then drying them till crisp in our dehydrator. I can eat gobs and gobs of them, just as I used to eat potato chips. But when I'm done eating the kale/collard chips, I feel as if I've made myself HEALTHIER rather than more or less poisoned myself, as I did with potato chips! ;+)) Elliot Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2007 Report Share Posted June 4, 2007 Hi, Kim. I certainly agree that whatever dietary regimen we put ourselves on, we must monitor ourselves to see how we feel, so as to know whether or not we are doing the correct thing for our particular physiognamy. Elliot Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2007 Report Share Posted June 4, 2007 Here you go, Carol! Enjoy yourself! www.rawfoodtalk.com www.rawfreedomcommunity.info www.therawtable.com www.living-foods.com That's a start. Though the warning may be unnecessary, apropos of what Kim has said, be aware that there are, as in any group, some particularly " fringe " elements, who, if their advice and predilections are followed, might get one into trouble. But just use common sense and do your own investigating, and you should be fine. Here is a for instance: Many of the raw foodists make raw crackers, into which they put ground flax seed. The recipe calls for drying the " dough " containing the ground flax seed, at around 105 degrees fahrenheit for at least a day. Since it is my understanding that ground flax seed very quickly goes rancid even at room temperature, I would not use such a recipe, rancid oil being worse for a person than no oil at all. Or how about this--- though the great majority of members of these raw food boards are vegans, there are some animal protein raw foodists, one of whom buys and eats red meat from the regular supermarket. So caveat emptor, eh? Best, Elliot Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2007 Report Share Posted June 4, 2007 I guess it's all a matter of proportions and moderation. I would agree that organic beef is better than non-organic beef, but I think that it's not better than greens. Perhaps organic beef is better than greens sprayed with pesticides, but you do have the option of eating organic greens, as well. So, if you place them on a level playing field, organic greens vs. organic beef, I think the greens win out. I read that vegetables have more nutrients than meat, other than the protein. I think maybe people in different regions, and man as a whole, have adapted to meat, but perhaps evolution didn't completely catch up with what was largely a cultural change. Carnivores and omnivores have short intestines, fangs for tearing through meat, and jaws that move only up and down and not side-to-side as used for gnawing at roots. We weren't born knowing how to cook meat, so if we were meant to eat meat we wouldn't mind eating it raw and wouldn't mind the flavor of blood. We would also be too tempted to eat our pets for us to have any. So, maybe the fact we eat meat is a cultural thing. One thing's for sure, we never ate it like we do today. A deer or other animal split up among a large tribe wouldn't go very far. They didn't catch something every day, so the consumption of animal protein must have been very small. Only recently have we eaten meat on a daily basis. As for protein, I suspect it's not a matter of protein content as much as protein availability. Who knows. I'm open to different opinions. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2007 Report Share Posted June 4, 2007 Greetings, For starters, organic beef can be really bad for you. Organic when it comes to meat only means that the animal was not given any drugs. It can be fed grain which means the omega 3 and 6 are way out of balance and that the beef has no CLA in it at all. CLA is Mother Natures cancer fighter. 100% grass fed beef is not fed grain and is very different nutritionally. With ruminants, what they eat really affects the nutritional value. Grass fed animals can be raised on pastures that have been chemically treated, so you have to know your rancher. When I moved to Texas, we spent some real time and energy looking into food preservation techniques that don't use electricity. What we found was that the diet was a walking larder, as in walking on 4 legs. From the time Texas was settled until the advent of electricity in the rural parts, the primary food was meat. Root crops don't store well, underground storage doesn't work due to high water tables. Texas has 2 kinds of weather, too wet and too dry. This makes it hard to grow vegetables, which don't keep well in heat and high humidity. Grain was too precious to feed to the animals, it was kept for human consumption. In some climates, food storage works well. It didn't works so well in others. I do know that cancer was not common in Texas before electricity. ly, I have no desire to live on a primarily meat diet. Nor would I like a vegetarian diet. Variety is the spice of life, for me. I do look at the history of food, the disease rate, and what the animals/plants were fed historically. I find it helps me make sense from all the conflicting information out there on nutrition. Bright Blessings Kim victor martinez wrote: I guess it's all a matter of proportions and moderation. I would agree that organic beef is better than non-organic beef, but I think that it's not better than greens. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 5, 2007 Report Share Posted June 5, 2007 The history of early Texas is now irrelevant to eating much meat. There are more than enough,(hundreds of them), Wal-Marts, (which have EXCELLENT produce sections), in Texas for anyone who wishes to try a vegan diet to do so: With regard to " variety being the spice of life, " that may be true in some things, but not necessarily with regard to a healthful diet. I have friends who eat pork and ham frequently " because it tastes good, " and there are plenty of people who gorge on fried pork rinds because they also taste good. Certainly a diet that is unbalanced toward meat, cheese, milk and chicken is conducive to constipation, and constipation is the cornerstone of all manner of degenerative dis-ease. If one wants variety, anyone who applies himself to a little work and imagination can come up with unending variety within the context of a vegetable, fruit, nut and seed diet. It is not boring in the least. I am now quite convinced, as will most anyone who reads " The China Study, " that anything more than a very moderate amount of animal protein in one's diet is conducive to the development of degenerative dis-ease. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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