ED Noor: Sigh............. And sweets are so much part of our culture. Think of it. Easter. Christmas. Valentine's Day. Halloween. Romance. We don't have to stop LIVING but we certainly can make many sensible choices. These choices would also be poor for the sugar industry but great for our health. For example, come Easter, I never denied my girls the thrill of the hunt but, as soon as they were smart enough to understand, the bunny stopped hiding candy and instead hid a few quality gifts in interesting places (tooth brushes, books, lip gloss, soccer socks, mascara, etc).
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Come Halloween they were as greedy for loot as the next kid but, because they already connected sugar to poor health (I never bought them commercial cereals) within a week when all the other kids were craving more sugar, they traded their goods for "stuff" that they were more interested in! By the early teens they made the connection between zits and sugar and avoided the stuff like poison and they still do. In fact, they even find oranges almost too sweet to take raw! But we do enjoy the rare sweet ~ just very judiciously. (IE the OMG balls at the local raw eatery! One tiny cookie lasts for ages.)
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ED Noor: Sugar recognizes no social classes. Walmart crap or Elite Godiva, the effects on the human body are the same.
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This is a most interesting bit of information. By now dear
Reader, you are fully aware of the dangers posed by the sweeteners in our food.
You are also aware of the horrors of the sugar substitutes they came up with to
poison and destroy our health ~ aspartame and others. Just a quick note,
ASPARTAME is no longer called that. It is marketed as AMINO SWEET. Ah the ends they go to to kill us off and make money in
the process. I am not sure what Yudkin would say about STEVIA but it is, bar
none, the best sugar substitute there is and it is truly natural, you can grow
it in your own back yard!
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Sugar, which some
people call “white death” was a food unknown to the American Natives when the
Whites addicted them to it. Not intentionally as such but the effects upon the
population were obvious within a very short time. The innocent love of honey, a
rare treat to be celebrated, became a honey addiction which, along with other
vices, contributed significantly to the genocide of these people. Not only were public warnings such as those from Dr. Yudkin warped and these brave people destroyed by the industries, these industries went on to embrace GMO sources of sugars, added sucrose from GMO corn to almost every food possible and these actions have compounded health problems significantly since the 1980's.
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Profit margin and international genocide stop for no one. Unless they are stopped.
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Profit margin and international genocide stop for no one. Unless they are stopped.
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By
Julia Llewellyn Smith
April
14, 2014
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A
couple of years ago, an out-of-print book published in 1972 by a long-dead
British professor suddenly became a collector’s item. Copies that had been
lying dusty on bookshelves were selling for hundreds of pounds, while copies
were also being pirated online.
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Alongside
such rarities as Madonna’s Sex, Stephen King’s Rage (written as Richard
Bachman) and Promise Me Tomorrow by Nora Roberts; Pure, White and Deadly
by John Yudkin, a book widely derided at the time of publication, was listed as
one of the most coveted out-of-print works in the world.
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How
exactly did a long-forgotten book suddenly become so prized? The cause was a
ground-breaking lecture called Sugar: the Bitter Truth
by Robert Lustig, professor of paediatric endocrinology at the University
of California, in which Lustig hailed Yudkin’s work as
“prophetic”.
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“Without
even knowing it, I was a Yudkin acolyte,” says Lustig, who tracked down the
book after a tip from a colleague via an interlibrary loan. “Everything this
man said in 1972 was the God’s honest truth and if you want to read a true
prophecy you find this book… I’m telling you every single thing this guy said
has come to pass. I’m in awe.”
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Posted
on YouTube in 2009, Lustig’s 90-minute talk has received 4.1 million hits and
is credited with kick-starting the anti-sugar movement, a campaign that calls
for sugar to be treated as a toxin, like alcohol and tobacco, and for
sugar-laden foods to be taxed, labelled with health warnings and banned for
anyone under 18.
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ED Noor: Trust a corporate outlet like Time for your nutritional health and this is what you get. Lies.
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ED Noor: Trust a corporate outlet like Time for your nutritional health and this is what you get. Lies.
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Lustig
is one of a growing number of scientists who don’t just believe sugar makes you
fat and rots teeth. They’re convinced it’s the cause of several chronic and
very common illnesses, including heart
disease, cancer,
Alzheimer’s
and diabetes.
It’s also addictive,
since it interferes with our appetites and creates an irresistible urge to eat.
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This
year, Lustig’s message has gone mainstream; many of the New Year diet books
focused not on fat or carbohydrates, but on cutting out sugar and the everyday
foods (soups, fruit juices, bread) that contain high levels of sucrose. The
anti-sugar camp is not celebrating yet, however. They know what happened to
Yudkin and what a ruthless and unscrupulous adversary the sugar industry proved
to be.
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The
tale begins in the Sixties. That decade, nutritionists in university
laboratories all over America and Western Europe were scrambling to work out
the reasons for an alarming rise in heart disease levels. By 1970, there were
520 deaths per 100,000 per year in England and Wales caused by coronary heart
disease and 700 per 100,000 in America. After a while, a consensus emerged: the
culprit was the high level of fat in our diets.
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One
scientist in particular grabbed the headlines: a nutritionist from the University of Minnesota
called Ancel Keys. Keys, famous for inventing the K-ration ~ 12,000 calories
packed in a little box for use by troops during the Second World War ~ declared
fat to be public enemy number one and recommended that anyone who was worried
about heart disease should switch to a low-fat “Mediterranean” diet.
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Instead
of treating the findings as a threat, the food industry spied an opportunity.
Market research showed there was a great deal of public enthusiasm for
“healthy” products and low-fat foods would prove incredibly popular. By the
start of the Seventies, supermarket shelves were awash with low-fat yogurts,
spreads, and even desserts and biscuits.
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But,
amid this new craze, one voice stood out in opposition. John Yudkin, founder of
the nutrition department at the University of London’s Queen
Elizabeth College, had been doing his own experiments and, instead of laying
the blame at the door of fat, he claimed there was a much clearer correlation
between the rise in heart disease and a rise in the consumption of sugar.
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Rodents,
chickens, rabbits, pigs and students fed sugar and carbohydrates, he said,
invariably showed raised blood levels of triglycerides (a technical term for
fat), which was then, as now, considered a risk factor for heart disease. Sugar
also raised insulin levels, linking it directly to type 2
diabetes.
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When
he outlined these results in Pure, White and Deadly, in 1972, he questioned
whether there was any causal link at all between fat and heart disease. After
all, he said, we had been eating substances like butter for centuries, while
sugar, had, up until the 1850s, been something of a rare treat for most people.
“If only a small fraction of what we know about the effects of sugar were to be revealed in -relation to any other material used as a food additive,” he wrote, “that material would promptly be banned.”
This
was not what the food industry wanted to hear. When devising their low-fat
products, manufacturers had needed a fat substitute to stop the food tasting
like cardboard, and they had plumped for sugar. The new “healthy” foods were
low-fat but had sugar by the spoonful and Yudkin’s findings threatened to
disrupt a very profitable business.
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As
a result, says Lustig, there was a concerted campaign by the food industry and
several scientists to discredit Yudkin’s work. The most vocal critic was Ancel
Keys.
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Keys
loathed Yudkin and, even before Pure, White and Deadly appeared, he published
an article, describing Yudkin’s evidence as “flimsy indeed”.
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“Yudkin
always maintained his equanimity, but Keys was a real ass, who stooped to
name-calling and character assassination,” says Lustig, speaking from New York,
where he’s just recorded yet another television interview.
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The
British Sugar Bureau put out a press release dismissing Yudkin’s claims as
“emotional assertions” and the World Sugar Research Organisation described his book as
“science fiction”. When Yudkin sued, it printed a mealy-mouthed retraction,
concluding: “Professor Yudkin recognises that we do not agree with [his] views
and accepts that we are entitled to express our disagreement.”
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Yudkin
was “uninvited” to international conferences. Others he organised were
cancelled at the last minute, after pressure from sponsors, including, on one
occasion, Coca-Cola. When he did contribute, papers he gave attacking sugar
were omitted from publications.
The British Nutrition Foundation, one of whose sponsors was Tate & Lyle, never invited anyone from Yudkin’s internationally acclaimed department to sit on its committees. Even Queen Elizabeth College reneged on a promise to allow the professor to use its research facilities when he retired in 1970 (to write Pure, White and Deadly). Only after a letter from Yudkin’s solicitor was he offered a small room in a separate building.
“Can you wonder that one sometimes becomes quite despondent about whether it is worthwhile trying to do scientific research in matters of health?” he wrote. “The results may be of great importance in helping people to avoid disease, but you then find they are being misled by propaganda designed to support commercial interests in a way you thought only existed in bad B films.”
And
this “propaganda” didn’t just affect Yudkin. By the end of the Seventies, he
had been so discredited that few scientists dared publish anything negative
about sugar for fear of being similarly attacked. As a result, the low-fat
industry, with its products laden with sugar, boomed.
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Yudkin’s
detractors had one trump card: his evidence often relied on observations,
rather than on explanations, of rising obesity, heart disease and diabetes
rates. “He could tell you these things were happening but not why, or at least
not in a scientifically acceptable way,” says David Gillespie, author of the
bestselling Sweet Poison.
“Three or four of the hormones that would explain his theories had not been
discovered.”
“Yudkin knew a lot more data was needed to support his theories, but what’s important about his book is its historical significance,” says Lustig. “It helps us understand how a concept can be bastardised by dark forces of industry.”
From
the Eighties onwards, several discoveries gave new credence to Yudkin’s theories.
Researchers found fructose, one of the two main carbohydrates in refined sugar,
is primarily metabolised by the liver; while glucose (found in starchy food
like bread and potatoes) is metabolised by all cells.
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This means consuming excessive fructose puts extra strain on the liver, which then converts fructose to fat.
This
induces a condition known as insulin resistance, or metabolic
syndrome, which doctors now generally acknowledge to be the
major risk factor for heart disease, diabetes and obesity, as well as a
possible factor for many cancers. Yudkin’s son, Michael, a former professor of
biochemistry at Oxford, says his father was never bitter about the way he was
treated, but, “he was hurt personally”.
“More than that,” says Michael, “he was such an enthusiast of public health, it saddened him to see damage being done to us all, because of vested interests in the food industry.”
One
of the problems with the anti-sugar message ~ then and now ~ is how depressing
it is. The substance is so much part of our culture, that to be told buying
children an ice cream may be tantamount to poisoning them, is most unwelcome.
But Yudkin, who grew up in dire poverty in east London and went on to win a
scholarship to Cambridge,
was no killjoy.
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“He
didn’t ban sugar from his house, and certainly didn’t deprive his grandchildren
of ice cream or cake,” recalls his granddaughter, Ruth, a psychotherapist. “He
was hugely fun-loving and would never have wanted to be deprived of a pleasure,
partly, perhaps, because he grew up in poverty and had worked so hard to escape
that level of deprivation.”
“My father certainly wasn’t fanatical,” adds Michael. “If he was invited to tea and offered cake, he’d accept it. But at home, it’s easy to say no to sugar in your tea. He believed if you educated the public to avoid sugar, they’d understand that.”
Thanks
to Lustig and the rehabilitation of Yudkin’s reputation, Penguin republished
Pure, White and Deadly 18 months ago. Obesity rates in the UK are now 10 times
what they were when it was first published and the amount of sugar we eat has
increased 31.5 per cent since 1990 (thanks to all the “invisible” sugar in
everything from processed food and orange juice to coleslaw and yogurt). The
number of diabetics in the world has nearly trebled. The numbers dying of heart
disease has decreased, thanks to improved drugs, but the number living with the
disease is growing steadily.
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As
a result, the World Health
Organisation is set to recommend a cut in the amount of sugar
in our diets from 22 teaspoons per day to almost half that. But its
director-general, Margaret Chan, has warned that, while it might be on the back
foot at last, the sugar industry remains a formidable adversary, determined to
safeguard its market position.
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ED Noor: Nutrasweet or sugar, the above is appropriate.
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Recently,
UK food campaigners have complained that they’re being shunned by ministers who
are more than willing to take meetings with representatives from the food
industry. “It is not just Big Tobacco any more,” Chan said last year.
“Public health must also contend with Big Food, Big Soda and Big Alcohol. All of these industries fear regulation and protect themselves by using the same tactics. They include front groups, lobbies, promises of self-regulation, lawsuits and industry-funded research that confuses the evidence and keeps the public in doubt.”
Dr
Julian Cooper, head of research at AB Sugar, insists the increase in the incidence
of obesity in Britain is a result of, “a range of complex factors”. “Reviews of
the body of scientific evidence by expert committees have concluded that
consuming sugar as part of a balanced diet does not induce lifestyle diseases
such as diabetes and heart disease,” he says.
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The aloe plant is a bit sickly and neglected looking, the stevia a tad scraggly. This is, to me, proof that almost anyone can grow it in an indoor window garden.
Home bottled stevia. Yes you CAN grow and harvest your own rather than pay through the nose for it as I currently do. It is not cheap by a long shot. See HOW TO GROW STEVIA AND MAKE YOUR OWN EXTRACT
Even the mega companies are catching on. Cargill has been selling adulterated stevia under the overpriced brand name of TRUVIA.
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The aloe plant is a bit sickly and neglected looking, the stevia a tad scraggly. This is, to me, proof that almost anyone can grow it in an indoor window garden.
Home bottled stevia. Yes you CAN grow and harvest your own rather than pay through the nose for it as I currently do. It is not cheap by a long shot. See HOW TO GROW STEVIA AND MAKE YOUR OWN EXTRACT
Even the mega companies are catching on. Cargill has been selling adulterated stevia under the overpriced brand name of TRUVIA.
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Commercially grown stevia
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If you look up Robert Lustig on
Wikipedia,
nearly two-thirds of the studies cited there to repudiate Lustig’s views were
funded by Coca-Cola. But Gillespie believes the message is getting through.
“More people are avoiding sugar, and when this happens companies adjust what
they’re selling,” he says. It’s just a shame, he adds, that a warning that
could have been taken on board 40 years ago went unheeded: “Science took a
disastrous detour in ignoring Yudkin. It was to the detriment of the health of
millions.”
Hey, loved the article. What about Robert Atkins? He was correct, too, for the same reasons.
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