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    <title>AnthaBeth’s blog</title>
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    <updated>2009-01-04T20:45:32Z</updated> 
    <author>
        <name>AnthaBeth</name>
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    <id>tag:vox.com,2006:6p00cd96fd9c164cd5/</id> 
    <subtitle>A life in books, games and music.</subtitle>  
    
    <entry>
        <title>Book Discussion:  Good Calories, Bad Calories by Gary Taubes</title>   
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        <published>2009-01-04T20:45:32Z</published>
        <updated>2009-01-04T20:45:32Z</updated>
    
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        <p>This book has 24 chapters, plus a prologue and pages of references.&#160; So far I have read the book twice and am now re-reading and underlining.</p><p><br />Here is my summary of the prologue.</p><p><br />&quot;A Brief History of Banting&quot;&#160; </p><p>William Banting was in 1862, sixty-six years old, five foot five and weighed over 200 pounds.&#160; He had trouble tying his shoes, and had trouble with many aspects of his life.&#160; He tried many different methods to help him lose weight.&#160; When he took up rowing, his appetite and muscles increased as well as his weight.&#160; When he tried to cut back on his total food intake he was exhausted. He got bigger.&#160; He tried all manner of sports and hard work and purgatives and laxatives and nothing would prevent him from gaining even more weight.</p><p>Eventually, he was experiencing deafness from fat on his eardrum.&#160; He consulted an aural surgeon named William Harvey, who had heard in Paris the physiologist Claude Bernard lecture on diabetes.&#160; Harvey created an eating plan based on Bernard&#39;s lecture. &quot;It was well known, Harvey later explained, that a diet of only meat and dairy would check the secretion of sugar in the urine of a diabetic.&#160; This in turn suggested that complete abstinence from sugars and starches might do the same.&#160; &#39;Knowing too that a saccharine and farinaceous diet is used to fatten certain animals...if a purely animal diet were useful in the latter disease, a combination of animal food with such vegetable diet as contained neither sugar nor starch, might serve to arrest the undue formation of fat.&#39;&quot;</p><p>Banting ate of this diet and lost fifty pounds.&#160; He felt well and healthy. He printed, at his own expense, a sixteen page pamphlet&#160; called Letter on Corpulence, Addressed to the Public.&#160; This started the popular dieting term, banting or to bant.&#160; It seemed to be extremely successful. <a href="http://www.lowcarb.ca/corpulence/corpulence_preface_1.html">Letter on Corpulence Part 1</a>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; <a href="http://www.lowcarb.ca/corpulence/corpulence_1.html">Letter on Corpulence part 2</a></p><p>Some of the medical community of the time were skeptical and others attacked him outright.&#160; They also said that the diet was already well known. &quot;The medical literature , wrote The Lancet, &quot;is tolerably complete, and supplies abundant evidence that all which Mr. Banting advises has been writeen over and over again.&quot;&#160; Banting responded that this might well have been so, but it was news to him and other corpulent individuals.&quot; They also accused the diet of being dangerous but could not prove it without a &quot;fair trial&quot;.</p><p>Other people who did research on reduced carbohydrate diets were Claude Bernard, Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin, and Jean-Francois Dancel, Alfred William Moore and John Harvey. (Moore and Harvey were published in 1860 and 1861)</p><p><br />In 1825 Brillant-Savarin published <em>The Physiology of Taste </em>where he identified the cause of obesity because fat people &quot;proclaimed the joys of bread, rice, and potatoes. He added that the effects of this intake were exacerbated when sugar was consumed as well.&#160; His recommendation reducing diet, not surprisingly, was &#39;more or less rigid abstinence from everything that is starchy or floury.&#39;&quot;</p><p>Another author, Dancel wrote in 1844, based on the work of German chemist Justus von Liebig &quot;who at the time was defending his belief that fat is formed in animals primarily from the ingestion of fats, starches, sugars, and that protein is used exclusively for the restoration or creation of muscular tissue. &#39;All food which is not flesh--all food rich is carbon and hydrogen--must have a tendency to produce fat.&#39;&quot;</p><p><br />There were several other publications supporting reduced carbohydrate dieting, most of the high fat kind, but Max Joseph Oertel was more restrictive of fats and included more vegetables and bread.&#160; He treated Prince Otto von Bismarck who lost 60 pounds in a year. </p><p>Part 2 of prologue to follow.</p><p><br /> <div><br /></div></p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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        </content> 
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    <entry>
        <title>30 Day Sugar Free Challenge</title>   
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        <published>2008-12-04T01:00:53Z</published>
        <updated>2008-12-04T01:00:53Z</updated>
    
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        <p>It&#39;s almost time for that New Year&#39;s resolution.&#160; Why not try this one on for size?</p><p>I&#39;m doing my own 24 day (or longer if I can) day challenge from December 1-24 of going back to low carbing after a long overdue break.&#160; I may or may not have an EPIC CHRISTMAS CARB FAIL!!!&#160; and regardless, I will do the January 30 day sugar free (and low carb) challange.</p><p>I first learned about this from <a href="http://lovinglowcarblife.blogspot.com/">Amy Dugan&#39;s Blog</a>.&#160; The actual challenge is at the website of <a href="http://olsonnd.com/30-sugar-free-days/">Dr. Scott Olsen</a>.&#160; He has written a book called Sugarettes, but you don&#39;t have to actually buy his book, he has a free e-book that you can download.&#160; I haven&#39;t looked at it, I know my carbs and sugars.</p><p>I signed up for his newsletter and got my first one today.&#160; Dr. Olsen suggests that before you begin your 30 day challenge in January, you give it a test drive to try it out and see how hard it might be and help you to be prepared.</p><p>One thing that has always helped me is the addition of the supplement chromium piccolinate.&#160; It makes cravings almost non-existant. Other people are helped by supplementing with L-Glutamine.&#160; L-Glutamine is an amino acid and it comes in pill form as well as powder form.&#160; I took the powder form after lifting weights to ease the pain of DOMS (delayed on-set muscle soreness) and it works great for that too.</p><p>Also, Jimmy Moore of <a href="http://livinlavidalowcarb.com/blog/">Livin&#39; La Vida Low Carb</a> recently tried a 30 day sweet taste free challenge and couldn&#39;t complete it.&#160; On day 17 he had a diet soda and from there on out he started supplementing with what some people refer to as Frankenfood or low carbage.&#160; He says that he will try again in January.</p><p>I eat very little Frankenfood most of the time when I&#39;m low carbing.&#160; Once in a while I will enjoy a Tea2Go mix in my water and I&#39;m a condiment junky.&#160; I like low carb bbq sauce and ketchup.&#160; I very rarely make myself give up my beloved Miracle Whip, even though it&#39;s a little on the carby side.&#160; Mayo just isn&#39;t my thing.</p><p>Time to go watch Pushing Daisies while it&#39;s still on the air.</p><p></p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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        </content> 
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    </entry> 
    
    <entry>
        <title>Hedwig and the Angry Inch</title>   
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        <published>2008-10-28T13:52:26Z</published>
        <updated>2008-10-28T14:37:28Z</updated>
    
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        <p>Hedwig is better than Rocky Horror Picture show because the theme is more universal.&#160; John Cameron Mitchell and composer Stephen Trask created Hedwig out of many stories from their lives.&#160; Hedwig says &quot;How did some slip of a girly boy from communist East Berlin become the
internationally ignored song stylist barely standing before you?&quot; and we want to know too and share in the journey.</p><p>The opening song, Tear Me Down</p>
    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        





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<p></p><p><br />The story depicted in Origin of Love is based on a story by Plato.</p>
    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        





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<p></p><p>A country twist to this hard rocking Hedwig, Sugar Daddy</p>
    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        





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<p></p><p><br />What happened to Hedwig 
    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        





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</p><p>Hedwig gets a fan.</p>
    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        





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<p></p><p>The sing-a-long song</p>
    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        





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<p></p><p><br />
    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        





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</p><p><br />
    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        





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<br /><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div></p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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</p>

                </div>
            ]]>
        </content> 
    <category term="musicals" scheme="http://anthabeth.vox.com/tags/musicals/" label="musicals" /> 
    <category term="hedwig and the angry inch" scheme="http://anthabeth.vox.com/tags/hedwig+and+the+angry+inch/" label="hedwig and the angry inch" /> 
    </entry> 
    
    <entry>
        <title>That Halloween Musical!</title>   
        <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" title="That Halloween Musical!" href="http://anthabeth.vox.com/library/post/that-halloween-musical.html?_c=feed-atom-full" />  
        <link rel="service.post" type="application/atom+xml" title="That Halloween Musical!" href="http://anthabeth.vox.com/library/post/that-halloween-musical.html?_c=feed-atom-full#comments" /> 
        <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" title="That Halloween Musical!" href="http://www.vox.com/atom/svc=post/asset_id=6a00cd96fd9c164cd501098146091c000d" />                  <id>tag:vox.com,2008-10-28:asset-6a00cd96fd9c164cd501098146091c000d</id>
        <published>2008-10-28T13:05:23Z</published>
        <updated>2008-10-28T13:07:13Z</updated>
    
        <author>
            <name>AnthaBeth</name>
            <uri>http://anthabeth.vox.com/?_c=feed-atom-full</uri>
        </author>
    
        
        <content type="html" xml:base="http://anthabeth.vox.com/?_c=feed-atom-full">
            <![CDATA[
                <div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xmlns:at="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/at">
        <p>It&#39;s that time of year again, when we long to do the time warp again!</p>
    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        





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                <div class="enclosure-asset-name"><a href="http://anthabeth.vox.com/library/video/6a00cd96fd9c164cd5010981064a5e000c.html" title="The Time Warp!">The Time Warp!</a></div>
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<p></p><p>Then we go right into...</p>
    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        





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                <div class="enclosure-asset-name"><a href="http://anthabeth.vox.com/library/video/6a00cd96fd9c164cd5010981064a78000c.html" title="Sweet Transvestite [scene 8]">Sweet Transvestite [scene 8]</a></div>
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<p><br /> <div><br />A geezer from the freezer, a bat out of hell!<br /><br />
    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        





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<br /><br />Don&#39;t dream it, be it!<br /><br />
    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        





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<br /><br /></div><div><br /></div></p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
    <a href="http://anthabeth.vox.com/library/post/that-halloween-musical.html?_c=feed-atom-full#comments">Read and post comments</a>   |   
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</p>

                </div>
            ]]>
        </content> 
    <category term="musicals" scheme="http://anthabeth.vox.com/tags/musicals/" label="musicals" /> 
    <category term="rocky horror picture show" scheme="http://anthabeth.vox.com/tags/rocky+horror+picture+show/" label="rocky horror picture show" /> 
    </entry> 
    
    <entry>
        <title>You too can be a superhero!</title>   
        <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" title="You too can be a superhero!" href="http://anthabeth.vox.com/library/post/you-too-can-be-a-superhero.html?_c=feed-atom-full" />  
        <link rel="service.post" type="application/atom+xml" title="You too can be a superhero!" href="http://anthabeth.vox.com/library/post/you-too-can-be-a-superhero.html?_c=feed-atom-full#comments" /> 
        <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" title="You too can be a superhero!" href="http://www.vox.com/atom/svc=post/asset_id=6a00cd96fd9c164cd500fa96968b2a0002" />            <id>tag:vox.com,2008-09-02:asset-6a00cd96fd9c164cd500fa96968b2a0002</id>
        <published>2008-09-02T15:55:25Z</published>
        <updated>2008-09-02T15:55:25Z</updated>
    
        <author>
            <name>AnthaBeth</name>
            <uri>http://anthabeth.vox.com/?_c=feed-atom-full</uri>
        </author>
    
        
        <content type="html" xml:base="http://anthabeth.vox.com/?_c=feed-atom-full">
            <![CDATA[
                <div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xmlns:at="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/at">
        <p>At&#160;&#160; <a href="http://www.ugo.com/channels/comics/heromachine2/heroMachine2.asp">HeroMachine 2.5</a>&#160; you can create your own superhero! Here is mine. You can customize your look, clothes, background, colors, companions etc.&#160; It can be used just for fun, for role-playing games or to create your on-line personna.</p><p>Try it, have fun!</p><p><br />
    
    
    

    
    
    
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                <div class="enclosure-asset-name"><a href="http://anthabeth.vox.com/library/photo/6a00cd96fd9c164cd500fa96972e0d0003.html" title="Anthabeth">Anthabeth</a></div>
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<br /><div><br /></div></p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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</p>

                </div>
            ]]>
        </content> 
    <category term="superhero" scheme="http://anthabeth.vox.com/tags/superhero/" label="superhero" /> 
    </entry> 
    
    <entry>
        <title>Princess Bride</title>   
        <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" title="Princess Bride" href="http://anthabeth.vox.com/library/post/princess-bride.html?_c=feed-atom-full" />  
        <link rel="service.post" type="application/atom+xml" title="Princess Bride" href="http://anthabeth.vox.com/library/post/princess-bride.html?_c=feed-atom-full#comments" /> 
        <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" title="Princess Bride" href="http://www.vox.com/atom/svc=post/asset_id=6a00cd96fd9c164cd50100a7f22511000e" />          <id>tag:vox.com,2008-08-14:asset-6a00cd96fd9c164cd50100a7f22511000e</id>
        <published>2008-08-14T21:21:50Z</published>
        <updated>2008-08-14T21:21:50Z</updated>
    
        <author>
            <name>AnthaBeth</name>
            <uri>http://anthabeth.vox.com/?_c=feed-atom-full</uri>
        </author>
    
        
        <content type="html" xml:base="http://anthabeth.vox.com/?_c=feed-atom-full">
            <![CDATA[
                <div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xmlns:at="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/at">
        <p>Kathleen24 at the forum posted this parody and I thought it was great!&#160; <a href="http://forum.lowcarber.org/showthread.php?p=7544956#post7544956">Forum link to post</a></p><p>[QUOTE]<br /><div class="smallfont">
				<img alt="Default" class="inlineimg" src="http://forum.lowcarber.org/images/icons/icon1.gif" title="Default" />
				<strong>HelLO!  My NAME is InIgo MonTOYa!  YOU KILLED MY FATHER!  PREPARE TO DIE!</strong>
			</div>
			<hr style="font-size: x-small; color: rgb(255, 204, 153);" />
			
		
		
		
		Count Carb: [Inigo stands up after getting stabbed by a knife thrown by Count Carb] Good heavens. Are you still trying to win?
</p><p>
[Inigo falls back against the wall, weak, defeated, dying]
</p><p>
Count Carb: You&#39;ve got an overdeveloped sense of survival. It&#39;s going to get you into trouble someday.
</p><p>
Count Carb: [draws his sword and lunges at Inigo who then forces the
blade to his left shoulder. Again Carb lunges at Inigo and the blade is
deflected to Inigo&#39;s right arm] You&#39;re back? In TDC? You&#39;ve got some
nerve. 
</p><p>
Inigo Montoya: [Carb swings his sword but Inigo blocks it and then
begins advancing] Hello. My name is Inigo Montoya. You have stolen my
youth prepare to die.
</p><p>
Count Carb: I remember you. You were here three years ago. And two. And
one. Each time you were going to lose weight, remember? 
</p><p>
[Montoya falls on a table. Carb attacks and Inigo blocks four times before he continues to advance on Carb]
</p><p>
Inigo Montoya: Hello. My name is Inigo Montoya. You have damaged my body prepare to die.
</p><p>
Count Carb: [Now Carb attacks five times and Inigo blocks every single
one] Even when you lost weight, you gained it back, remember? People
here will laugh at you. You have no credibility. 
</p><p>
Inigo Montoya: [Louder] Hello. My name is Inigo Montoya. You have
caused me decades of shame, pain, and humiliation prepare to die.
</p><p>
Count Carb: Stop saying that!
</p><p>
Inigo Montoya: [Carb attacks and Inigo blocks it and then stabs Carb in
the shoulder. Then Carb swings his sword. Inigo ducks and stabs Carb in
the other shoulder. Then he advances quickly and they fight] <span style="font-size: small">Hello! My name is Inigo Montoya! You held me back when my children needed me prepare to die!</span>
</p><p>
Count Carb: [Carb gets his sword knocked away and Inigo slices his cheek] No!
</p><p>
Inigo Montoya: Offer me a doughnut!
</p><p>
Count Carb: Yes
</p><p>
Inigo Montoya: Snickers, too promise that!<br />
[he slices Carb&#39;s other cheek]
</p><p>
Count Carb: All that I have and more. Please.
</p><p>
Inigo Montoya: Offer me everything I ask for.
</p><p>
Count Carb: Anything you want.  Mashed potatoes and gravy!  Pizza!  Chips!  <br />
[Carb attacks but Inigo grabs his arm and stabs Carb in the stomach]
</p><p>
Inigo Montoya: I want my life back you son of a bitch.
</p><p>[Inigo plunches the sword into Carb&#39;s gut and he falls down dead] [/QUOTE]<br />
 </p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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                </div>
            ]]>
        </content> 
    <category term="low carb" scheme="http://anthabeth.vox.com/tags/low+carb/" label="low carb" /> 
    <category term="princess bride" scheme="http://anthabeth.vox.com/tags/princess+bride/" label="princess bride" /> 
    <category term="active low carber&#39;s forum" scheme="http://anthabeth.vox.com/tags/active+low+carber's+forum/" label="active low carber&#39;s forum" /> 
    </entry> 
    
    <entry>
        <title>Genocide in Canada</title>   
        <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" title="Genocide in Canada" href="http://anthabeth.vox.com/library/post/genocide-in-canada.html?_c=feed-atom-full" />  
        <link rel="service.post" type="application/atom+xml" title="Genocide in Canada" href="http://anthabeth.vox.com/library/post/genocide-in-canada.html?_c=feed-atom-full#comments" /> 
        <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" title="Genocide in Canada" href="http://www.vox.com/atom/svc=post/asset_id=6a00cd96fd9c164cd500fa968e547f0002" />            <id>tag:vox.com,2008-08-06:asset-6a00cd96fd9c164cd500fa968e547f0002</id>
        <published>2008-08-06T10:35:48Z</published>
        <updated>2008-08-06T10:38:30Z</updated>
    
        <author>
            <name>AnthaBeth</name>
            <uri>http://anthabeth.vox.com/?_c=feed-atom-full</uri>
        </author>
    
        
        <content type="html" xml:base="http://anthabeth.vox.com/?_c=feed-atom-full">
            <![CDATA[
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        <p>Usually when I&#39;m stumbling around with <a href="http://www.stumbleupon.com/">Stumble Upon</a> I&#39;m looking for entertainment.&#160; Yesterday I found two really important sites that are worth noting.&#160; One is a self publishing site that helps you with aspects of publishing your own manuscripts.&#160; <a href="http://www.wordclay.com/">Wordclay</a>.&#160; You can pay for cover design and such but you it seems like a very easy and free (or cheap) way of getting your book published.&#160; This may be important in the future.&#160; Ever since I hyphenated my name I thought, that would look really cool on a book I&#39;ll write.</p><p>On a more serious note, I discovered <a href="http://hiddenfromhistory.org/">Hidden From History</a>&#160; between the Canadian government and the church run schools on-going, systematic crimes were being committed against the native people and it&#39;s been kept quiet on purpose.&#160; Kevin Annett was a minister in a small town with a large population of indians (or indigenous people) and he innocently wondered why none of them attended church services.&#160; He reached out to them and encouraged them to attend his church.&#160; In his church, after the serman, anyone was allowed to speak.&#160; People began to share stories about their abuse at the Residential Schools.&#160; At first it was hard to believe, and then later it was hard not to believe.&#160; After Kevin Annett discovered that the native&#39;s land, cared for by the church was sold to outside logging corporations he confronted the United Church of Canada.&#160; He was fired without cause in an effort to silence him.&#160; The more he spoke out the more he was threatened and blocked at every avenue.&#160; His Phd. program fell through.&#160; His wife divorced him with a $250,000 bribe from the church.&#160; More stories came out of the natives that were too shocking to believe.&#160; </p><p>Through the Indian Act, Residential Schools were one way to kill many indian children.&#160; Children as young as 3 were taken from their parents and put on gun boats and taken away to school.&#160; Abuse was common. Some were outright murdered, pushed down the stairs or out windows.&#160; Some were killed through disease and it&#39;s non-treatment, putting tuburcular students in with non-tuburcular students to encourage the disease to spread.&#160; The death rate at these schools was 50%.&#160; At one school it was 67%.&#160; Mass graves were discovered full of dead children. <a href="http://www.hiddenfromhistory.org/RecentUpdatesampArticles/Apr102008LocationofMassGravesRevealed/tabid/71/Default.aspx">Article</a></p><p>I had heard stories about how whites had given blankets from small pox victims to indians, in the documentary I watched there were pictures to go along with it.&#160; I remember reading Lewis and Clark had smallpox vaccine on their travels (though it was a fiction book, Sacajawea but that it probably true).&#160; Vaccine did exist.&#160; Germ warfare was going on.&#160; I&#39;m sure it was going on in the U.S. also.</p><p>In the 1970&#39;s medical experiments were done on children at those schools.&#160; The doctors sterilized boys and girls both in and out of the schools.&#160; Children were sexually abused.&#160; </p><p>Some things must still be going on today.&#160; Why the hush up?&#160; Why the blocking from the government and the church?&#160; Apparently they appologized, apparently, that&#39;s not enough for the natives.&#160; One woman said, she just wanted to look at someone (official) who said that it happened.&#160; She had testifiyed about the girl getting pushed down the stairs. Virginia died two days later. <a href="http://archive.hiddenfromhistory.org/html/baptiste.htm">Murdered by the Roman Catholic Church</a> &#160; </p><p>It made it more real to me when I read the list of mass graves found and one was in Alert Bay where the low carb study had been done.</p><p>At the end, nothing can be done for the people except to tell the truth.&#160; Perhaps if everything wasn&#39;t so hidden, people could learn from this and make sure that nothing like it happens again.&#160; Sometimes I lose faith in humanity, crimes like this have happened throughout human history, over and over again.&#160; </p><p>Who&#39;ll be a witness?&#160; 
    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        





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    <entry>
        <title>Does Exercise Really Make Us Thinner? </title>   
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        <div id="main"><div class="header-spacing"><h2 class="primary first-page">The Scientist and the Stairmaster</h2><h3 class="deck">Why most of us believe that exercise makes us thinner—and why we&#39;re wrong.</h3><div class="start-discussion" id="narrow-bubble"><p class="no_comments" style="display: none;"><strong><em><u><a class="extra" href="http://www.nymag.com/news/sports/38001/comments.html#comment-form" target="_blank">Add a Comment</a><em class="bottom">&gt;</em></u></em></strong></p><p class="one_comment" style="display: none;"><strong><em><u><a class="extra" href="http://www.nymag.com/news/sports/38001/comments.html" target="_blank"><strong>1</strong> Comment</a> | <a class="extra" href="http://www.nymag.com/news/sports/38001/comments.html#comment-form" target="_blank">Add Yours</a><em class="bottom">&gt; </em></u></em></strong></p><p class="multiple_comments" style="display: none;"><strong><em><u><a class="extra" href="http://www.nymag.com/news/sports/38001/comments.html" target="_blank"><strong class="article_comment_count"></strong>Comments</a> | <a class="extra" href="http://www.nymag.com/news/sports/38001/comments.html#comment-form" target="_blank">Add Yours</a><em class="bottom">&gt; </em></u></em></strong></p></div><ul class="byline"><li class="by">By Gary Taubes</li><li class="date">Published Sep 24, 2007</li></ul></div><div id="story"><table style="text-align: center"><tbody><tr><td style="width: 560px" valign="top"><img height="375" src="http://nymag.com/news/sports/exercise071001_1_560.jpg" width="560" /><br />
</td></tr><tr><td style="text-align: left; width: 560px"><br /></td></tr></tbody></table><p><span class="drop">L</span>et
us begin with a short quiz: a few questions to ponder during the 30 (or
60 or 90) minutes a day you spend burning off excess calories at the
gym, or perhaps while feeling guilty because you’re not so engaged. If
lean people are more physically active than fat people—one fact in the
often-murky science of weight control that’s been established beyond
reasonable doubt— does that mean that working out will make a fat
person lean? Does it mean that sitting around will make a lean person
fat? How about a mathematical variation on these questions: Let’s say
we go to the gym and burn off 3,500 calories every week—that’s 700
calories a session, five times a week. Since a pound of fat is
equivalent to 3,500 calories, does that mean we’ll be a pound slimmer
for every week we exercise? And will we continue to slim down at this
pace for as long as we continue to exercise?</p><p>For most of
us, fear of flab is the reason we exercise, the motivation that drives
us to the gym. It’s also why public-health authorities have taken to
encouraging ever more exercise as part of a healthy lifestyle. If we’re
fat or fatter than ideal, we work out. Burn calories. Expend energy.
Still fat? Burn more. The dietary guidelines of the U.S. Department of
Agriculture, for instance, now recommend that we engage in up to 60
minutes daily of “moderate to vigorous intensity” physical activity
just to maintain weight—that is, keep us from fattening further.
Considering the ubiquity of the message, the hold it has on our lives,
and the elegant simplicity of the notion—burn calories, lose
weight—wouldn’t it be nice to believe it were true? The catch is that
science suggests it’s not, and so the answer to all of the above quiz
questions is “no.”</p><p>Just last month, the American Heart
Association and the American College of Sports Medicine published joint
guidelines for physical activity and health. They suggested that 30
minutes of moderate physical activity five days a week is necessary to
“promote and maintain health.” What they didn’t say, though, was that
more physical activity will lead us to lose weight. Indeed, the best
they could say about the relationship between fat and exercise was
this: “It is reasonable to assume that persons with relatively high
daily energy expenditures would be less likely to gain weight over
time, compared with those who have low energy expenditures. So far,
data to support this hypothesis are not particularly compelling.” In
other words, despite half a century of efforts to prove otherwise,
scientists still can’t say that exercise will help keep off the pounds.</p><p>The
30 minutes recommended by the AHA-ACSM report is a departure from the
recent guidelines of other authoritative organizations—the Institute of
Medicine of the National Academies and the International Association
for the Study of Obesity—both of which, like the USDA, have recommended
that we exercise for up to 60 minutes a day to avoid what the USDA
calls “unhealthy weight gain.” But the reason for this 60-minute
recommendation is precisely that so little evidence exists to support
the notion that exercising less has any effect.</p><p>The report
that these experts cite most often as grounds for their assessments was
published in 2000 by two Finnish researchers who surveyed all the
relevant research on exercise and weight of the previous twenty years.
Yet the Finnish report, the most scientifically rigorous review of the
evidence to date, can hardly be said to have cleared up the matter.
When the Finnish investigators looked at the results of the dozen
best-constructed experimental trials that addressed weight
maintenance—that is, successful dieters who were trying to keep off the
pounds they had shed—they found that everyone regains weight. And
depending on the type of trial, exercise would either decrease the rate
of that gain (by 3.2 ounces per month) or increase its rate (by 1.8
ounces). As the Finns themselves concluded, with characteristic
understatement, the relationship between exercise and weight is “more
complex” than they might otherwise have imagined.</p><p>This is
not to say that there aren’t excellent reasons to be physically active,
as these reports invariably point out. We might just enjoy exercise. We
may increase our overall fitness; we may live longer, perhaps by
reducing our risk of heart disease or diabetes; we’ll probably feel
better about ourselves. (Of course, this may be purely a cultural
phenomenon. It’s hard to imagine that the French, for instance, would
improve their self-esteem by spending more time at the gym.) But
there’s no reason to think that we will lose any significant amount of
weight, and little reason to think we will prevent ourselves from
gaining it.</p></div><div class="page-navigation"><p><a href="http://nymag.com/news/sports/38001/index1.html" target="_blank">Next: The post-workout hormone that is actually feeding your fat cells.</a></p></div>



<div id="story"><table style="text-align: center"><tbody><tr><td style="width: 560px" valign="top"><img height="375" src="http://nymag.com/news/sports/exercise071001_2_560.jpg" width="560" /><br />
</td></tr><tr><td style="text-align: left; width: 560px"><br /></td></tr></tbody></table><p>The
one thing that might be said about exercise with certainty is that it
tends to makes us hungry. Maybe not immediately, but eventually. Burn
more calories and the odds are very good that we’ll consume more as
well. And this simple fact alone might explain both the scientific
evidence and a nation’s worth of sorely disappointing anecdotal
experience.</p><p>It’s difficult to get health authorities to
talk about the disconnect between their official recommendations and
the scientific evidence that underlies it because they want to
encourage us to exercise, even if their primary reason for doing so is
highly debatable. Steve Blair, for instance, a University of South
Carolina exercise scientist and a co-author of the AHA-ACSM guidelines,
says he was “short, fat, and bald” when he started running in his
thirties and he is short, fatter, and balder now, at age 68. In the
intervening years, he estimates, he has run close to 80,000 miles and
gained about 30 pounds.</p><p>When I asked Blair whether he
thought he might be leaner had he run even more, he had to think about
it. “I don’t see how I could have been more active,” he said. “Thirty
years ago, I was running 50 miles a week. I had no time to do more. But
if I could have gone out over the last couple of decades for two to
three hours a day, maybe I would not have gained this weight.” And
maybe he would have anyway. If we trust the AHA-ACSM report he
co-authored, there is little reason to believe that the amount he runs
makes any difference. Nonetheless, Blair personally believes he would
be fatter still if he hadn’t been running. Why?</p><p><span class="drop">T</span>here
was a time when virtually no one believed exercise would help a person
lose weight. Until the sixties, clinicians who treated obese and
overweight patients dismissed the notion as naïve. When Russell Wilder,
an obesity and diabetes specialist at the Mayo Clinic, lectured on
obesity in 1932, he said his fat patients tended to lose more weight
with bed rest, “while unusually strenuous physical exercise slows the
rate of loss.”</p><p>The problem, as he and his contemporaries
saw it, is that light exercise burns an insignificant number of
calories, amounts that are undone by comparatively effortless changes
in diet. In 1942, Louis Newburgh of the University of Michigan
calculated that a 250-pound man expends only three calories climbing a
flight of stairs—the equivalent of depriving himself of a
quarter-teaspoon of sugar or a hundredth of an ounce of butter. “He
will have to climb twenty flights of stairs to rid himself of the
energy contained in one slice of bread!” Newburgh observed. So why not
skip the stairs, skip the bread, and call it a day?</p><p>More-strenuous
exercise, these physicians further argued, doesn’t help matters—because
it works up an appetite. “Vigorous muscle exercise usually results in
immediate demand for a large meal,” noted Hugo Rony of Northwestern
University in his 1940 textbook, <em>Obesity and Leanness.</em>
“Consistently high or low energy expenditures result in consistently
high or low levels of appetite. Thus men doing heavy physical work
spontaneously eat more than men engaged in sedentary occupations.
Statistics show that the average daily caloric intake of lumberjacks is
more than 5,000 calories, while that of tailors is only about 2,500
calories. Persons who change their occupation from light to heavy work
or vice versa soon develop corresponding changes in their appetite.” If
a tailor becomes a lumberjack and, by doing so, takes to eating like
one, why assume that the same won’t happen, albeit on a lesser scale,
to an overweight tailor who decides to work out like a lumberjack for
an hour a day?</p><p>Credit for why we came to believe otherwise
goes to one man, Jean Mayer, who began his career at Harvard in the
early fifties, went on to become the most influential nutritionist in
the country, and then, for sixteen years, served as president of Tufts
University (where there is now a Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition
Research Center on Aging). As an authority on human weight regulation,
Mayer was among the very first of a new breed, a type that has since
come to dominate the field. His predecessors—Wilder, Rony, Newburgh,
and others—had all been physicians who worked closely with obese and
overweight patients. Mayer was not. His training was in physiological
chemistry; he had obtained a doctorate at Yale with a dissertation on
the interrelationship of vitamins A and C in rats. In the ensuing
decades, he would publish hundreds of papers on different aspects of
nutrition, including why we get fat, but he never had to reduce obese
patients as part of his clinical obligation, and so his hypotheses were
less fettered by anecdotal or real-life experience.</p><p>As
early as 1953, after just a few years of research on laboratory mice,
Mayer began extolling the virtues of exercise for weight control. By
1959, the New York <em>Times</em> was crediting him with having
“debunked [the] popular theories” that exercise played little role in
weight control. Mayer knew that the obese often eat no more than the
lean and occasionally even less. This seemed to exclude gluttony as a
cause of their weight gain, which meant that these fat people had to be
less physically active. Otherwise, how could they take in more calories
than they expend and so become fat?</p></div><div class="page-navigation"><p><a href="http://nymag.com/news/sports/38001/index2.html" target="_blank">Next: Does exercise stimulate your appetite?</a></p></div>



<div id="story"><p>Through the sixties, Mayer documented the
relationship between inactivity and the overweight. He noted that fat
high-school girls ate “several hundred calories less” than lean
classmates. “The laws of thermodynamics were, however, not flouted by
this finding,” he wrote, because the obese girls expended less energy
than the lean: They were much less active; they spent four times as
many hours watching television. Mayer also studied infants. “The
striking phenomenon is that the fatter babies were quiet, placid babies
that had moderate intake,” Mayer reported, “whereas the babies who had
the highest intake tended to be very thin babies, cried a lot, moved a
lot, and became very tense.” Thus, Mayer concluded, “some individuals
are born very quiet, inactive, and placid and with moderate intake get
fat, and some individuals from the very beginning are very active and
do not get particularly fat even with high intakes.”</p><p>It
was Mayer who pioneered the now-ubiquitous practice of implicating
sedentary living as the “most important factor” leading to obesity and
the chronic diseases that accompany it. Modern Americans, said Mayer,
were inert compared with their “pioneer forebears” who were “constantly
engaged in hard physical labor.” Every modern convenience, by this
logic, from power windows to the electric toothbrush, only serves to
minimize the calories we expend. “The development of obesity,” Mayer
wrote in 1968, “is to a large extent the result of the lack of
foresight of a civilization which spends tens of billions annually on
cars, but is unwilling to include a swimming pool and tennis courts in
the plans of every high school.”</p><p>Mayer’s hypothesis always
had shortcomings, but they were ignored for the same reasons they still
are—who wants to openly question the idea that physical activity is a
panacea? The first issue is a logical one: That conclusion that the
fatter we are, the more sedentary we’re likely to be is actually a
correlation; it tells us nothing about what is cause and what is
effect. “It is a common observation,” noted Rony in 1941, “that many
obese persons are lazy, i.e., show decreased impulse to muscle
activity. This may be, in part, an effect that excess weight would have
on the activity impulse of any normal person.” Equally possible is that
obesity and physical inactivity are both symptoms of the same
underlying cause.</p><p>This logical problem was then obscured
by Mayer’s all-out attack on the role of hunger. Mayer acknowledged
that exercise could make us hungrier, but he said it wasn’t necessarily
the case. This was the heart of Mayer’s message—a purported loophole in
the relationship between appetite and physical activity. “If exercise
is decreased below a certain point, food intake no longer decreases,”
said Mayer. “In other words, walking one half-hour a day may be
equivalent to only four slices of bread, but if you don’t walk the
half-hour, you still want to eat the four slices.”</p><p>Mayer
based this conclusion on two (and only two) of his own studies from the
mid-fifties. The first purported to demonstrate that laboratory rats
exercised for a few hours every day will eat less than rats that don’t
exercise at all. But this would never be replicated. In more recent
experiments, the more rats run the more rats eat; weights remain
unchanged. And when rats are retired from these exercise programs, they
eat more than ever and gain weight with age more rapidly than rats that
were allowed to remain sedentary. With hamsters and gerbils, exercise
increases body weight and body-fat percentage. So exercising makes
these particular rodents fatter, not leaner.</p><p>Mayer’s
second study was an assessment of the diet, physical activity, and
weights of workers and merchants at a mill in West Bengal, India. This
article is still cited—by the Institute of Medicine, for instance—as
perhaps the only existing evidence that physical activity and appetite
do not necessarily go hand in hand. But it, too, has never been
replicated, despite (or perhaps because of) a half-century of
improvements in methods of assessing diet and energy expenditure in
humans.</p><p>It helped that Mayer promoted his pro-exercise
message with a fervor akin to a moral crusade. In 1966, Mayer was the
primary author of a U.S. Public Health Service report advocating
increased physical activity along with diet as the best way to lose
weight. In 1969, Mayer chaired Richard Nixon’s White House Conference
on Food, Nutrition, and Health. “The successful treatment of obesity
must involve far-reaching changes in lifestyle,” the conference report
concludes. “These changes include alterations of dietary patterns and
patterns of physical activity.” In 1972, Mayer began writing a
syndicated newspaper column on nutrition: Exercise, Mayer now wrote,
sounding suspiciously like a diet doctor selling a patent claim, will
make “weight melt away faster,” and “contrary to popular belief,
exercise won’t stimulate your appetite.”</p></div><div class="page-navigation"><p><a href="http://nymag.com/news/sports/38001/index3.html" target="_blank">Next: The &quot;exercise explosion&quot; grips America.</a></p></div>



<div id="story"><p><span class="drop">O</span>ur culture of
physical exercise began only in the late sixties, coincident with
Mayer’s crusade, which explains why our parents might not have been
quite so devoted to the idea of spending their leisure time perspiring
profusely. In 1977, the New York <em>Times</em> was covering the
“exercise explosion” that had come about because the conventional
wisdom of the sixties that exercise was “bad for you” had been
transformed into the “new conventional wisdom—that strenuous exercise
is good for you.” When the Washington <em>Post</em> estimated in 1980
that 100 million Americans were partaking in the “new fitness
revolution”—coincident with the start of the current obesity
epidemic—it also noted that most of them “would have been derided as
‘health nuts’&quot; only a decade earlier.</p><p>Meanwhile, the
evidence simply never came around to support Mayer’s hypothesis, even
though our beliefs did. My favorite study of the effect of physical
activity on weight loss was published in 1989 by a team of Danish
researchers. Over the course of eighteen months the Danes trained
nonathletes to run a marathon. At the end of this training period, the
eighteen men in the study had lost an average of five pounds of body
fat. As for the nine women subjects, the Danes reported, “no change in
body composition was observed.” That same year, F. Xavier Pi-Sunyer,
then director of the St. Luke’s–Roosevelt Hospital Obesity Research
Center in New York, reviewed the studies on exercise and weight, and
his conclusion was identical to that of the Finnish review’s eleven
years later: “Decreases, increases, and no changes in body weight and
body composition have been observed,” Pi-Sunyer reported.</p><p>Granted,
all this still doesn’t explain why we bought into Mayer’s idea that we
could exercise more and not compensate by eating more. One simple
reason is that the health reporters bought it, and we were reading
their articles, not the research literature itself. In 1977, for
instance, the National Institutes of Health hosted its second
conference on obesity and weight control. “The importance of exercise
in weight control is less than might be believed,” the assembled
experts concluded, “because increases in energy expenditure due to
exercise also tend to increase food consumption, and it is not possible
to predict whether the increased caloric output will be outweighed by
the greater food intake.” That same year, <em>The New York Times Magazine</em>
reported that there was “now strong evidence that regular exercise can
and does result in substantial and—so long as the exercise is
continued—permanent weight loss.” By 1990, a year after Pi-Sunyer’s
pessimistic assessment of the evidence, <em>Newsweek</em> was declaring exercise an “essential” element of any weight-loss program, and the <em>Times</em>
had stated that on those infrequent occasions “when exercise isn’t
enough” to lose weight, “you must also make sure you don’t overeat.”</p><p>As
for the authorities themselves, the primary factor fueling their belief
in the weight-maintaining benefits of exercise was their natural
reluctance to acknowledge otherwise. Although one couldn’t help but be
“underwhelmed by” the evidence, as Mayer’s student Judith Stern, a UC
Davis nutritionist, wrote in 1986, it would be “shortsighted” to say
that exercise was ineffective because it meant ignoring the possible
contributions of exercise to the prevention of obesity and to the
maintenance of weight loss that might be induced by diet. These, of
course, had never been demonstrated either, but they hadn’t been ruled
out. This faith-based philosophy came to dominate scientific
discussions on exercise and weight, but it couldn’t be reconciled with
the simple notion that appetite and calories consumed will increase
with an increase in physical activity. Hence, the idea of working up an
appetite was jettisoned. Clinicians, researchers, exercise
physiologists, even personal trainers at the local gym took to thinking
and talking about hunger as though it were a phenomenon exclusive to
the brain, a question of willpower (whatever that is), not the natural
consequence of a body trying to replenish itself with energy.</p><p><span class="drop">U</span>ltimately,
the relationship between physical activity and fatness comes down to
the question of cause and effect. Is Lance Armstrong excessively lean
because he burns off a few thousand calories a day cycling, or is he
driven to expend that energy because his body is constitutionally set
against storing calories as fat? If his fat tissue is resistant to
accumulating calories, his body has little choice but to burn them as
quickly as possible: what Rony and his contemporaries called the
“activity impulse”—a physiological drive, not a conscious one. His body
is telling him to get on his bike and ride, not his mind. Those of us
who run to fat would have the opposite problem. Our fat tissue wants to
store calories, leaving our muscles with a relative dearth of energy to
burn. It’s not willpower we lack, but fuel.</p><p>For the last
60 years, researchers studying obesity and weight regulation have
insisted on treating the human body as a thermodynamic black box:
Calories go in one side, they come out the other, and the difference
(calories in minus calories out) ends up as either more or less fat.
The fat tissue, in this thermodynamic model, has nothing to say in the
matter. Thus the official recommendations to eat less and exercise more
and assuredly you’ll get thinner. (Or at least not fatter.) And in the
strict sense this is true—you can starve a human, or a rat, and he will
indeed lose weight—but that misses the point. Humans, rats, and all
living organisms are ruled by biology, not thermodynamics. When we
deprive ourselves of food, we get hungry. When we push ourselves
physically, we get tired.</p><p>Our bodies, like all living
organisms, have evolved a fantastically complex web of feedback loops.
These physiological mechanisms serve fundamentally to work against the
inevitable pull of thermodynamics (which is entropy, a.k.a. death) and
so make life possible. The necessary condition of life, as the great
French physiologist Claude Bernard noted 140 years ago, is to keep the
internal environment of an organism stable and conducive to life,
regardless of what’s happening on the outside. This is what the Harvard
physiologist Walter Cannon, in the thirties, called homeostasis—or the
“wisdom of the body,” as he put it. “Somehow the unstable stuff of
which we are composed,” Cannon wrote, “had learned the trick of
maintaining stability.”</p></div><div class="page-navigation"><p><a href="http://nymag.com/news/sports/38001/index4.html" target="_blank">Next: How fat affects our ability to lose weight. </a></p></div>



<div id="story"><p>The key is that among the many things
regulated in this homeostatic system—along with blood pressure and
blood sugar, body temperature, respiration, etc.—is the amount of fat
we carry. From this biological or homeostatic perspective, lean people
are not those who have the willpower to exercise more and eat less.
They are people whose bodies are programmed to send the calories they
consume to the muscles to be burned rather than to the fat tissue to be
stored—the Lance Armstrongs of the world. The rest of us tend to go the
other way, shunting off calories to fat tissue, where they accumulate
to excess. This shunting of calories toward fat cells to be stored or
toward the muscles to be burned is a phenomenon known as fuel
partitioning.</p><p>The job of determining how fuels (glucose
and fatty acids) will be used, whether we will store them as fat or
burn them for energy, is carried out primarily by the hormone insulin
in concert with an enzyme known technically as lipoprotein lipase—LPL,
for short. (Sex hormones also interact with LPL, which is why men and
women fatten differently.)</p><p>In the eighties, biochemists
and physiologists worked out how LPL responds to exercise. They found
that during a workout, LPL activity increases in muscle tissue, and so
our muscle cells suck up fatty acids to use for fuel. Then, when we’re
done exercising, LPL activity in the muscle tissue tapers off and LPL
activity in our fat tissue spikes, pulling calories into fat cells.
This works to return to the fat cells any fat they might have had to
surrender—homeostasis, in other words. The more rigorous the exercise,
and the more fat lost from our fat tissue, the greater the subsequent
increase in LPL activity in the fat cells. Thus, post-workout, we get
hungry: Our fat tissue is devoting itself to restoring calories as fat,
depriving other tissues and organs of the fuel they need and triggering
a compensatory impulse to eat. The feeling of hunger is the brain’s way
of trying to satisfy the demands of the body. Just as sweating makes us
thirsty, burning off calories makes us hungry.</p><p>This
research has never been controversial. It’s simply been considered
irrelevant by authorities, all too often lean, who have been dead set
on blaming fatness on some combination of gluttony, sloth, and perhaps
a little genetic predisposition thrown in on the side. But
contemplating the means by which we might lose weight without
considering the hormonal regulation of fat tissue is like wondering why
children grow taller without considering the role of growth hormones.
Or, for that matter, like trying to explain the record-breaking
triumphs of modern athletes—Barry Bonds, say—and never considering the
possibility that steroid hormones (or human growth hormone or insulin)
might be involved.</p><p><span class="drop">I</span>f it’s
biology, and not a lack of willpower, that explains why exercise fails
so many of us as a weight-loss tool, then we can still find reason for
optimism. Since insulin is the primary hormone affecting the activity
of LPL on our cells, it’s not surprising that insulin is the primary
regulator of how fat we get. “Fat is mobilized [from fat tissue] when
insulin secretion diminishes,” the American Medical Association Council
on Foods and Nutrition explained back in 1974, before this fact, too,
was deemed irrelevant to the question of why we gain weight or the
means to lose it. Because insulin determines fat accumulation, it’s
quite possible that we get fat not because we eat too much or exercise
too little but because we secrete too much insulin or because our
insulin levels remain elevated far longer than might be ideal.</p><p>To
be sure, this is the same logic that leads to other unconventional
ideas. As it turns out, it’s carbohydrates—particularly easily
digestible carbohydrates and sugars—that primarily stimulate insulin
secretion. “Carbohydrates is driving insulin is driving fat,” as George
Cahill Jr., a retired Harvard professor of medicine and expert on
insulin, recently phrased it for me. So maybe if we eat fewer
carbohydrates—in particular the easily digestible simple carbohydrates
and sugars—we might lose considerable fat or at least not gain any
more, whether we exercise or not. This would explain the slew of recent
clinical trials demonstrating that dieters who restrict carbohydrates
but not calories invariably lose more weight than dieters who restrict
calories but not necessarily carbohydrates. Put simply, it’s quite
possible that the foods—potatoes, pasta, rice, bread, pastries, sweets,
soda, and beer—that our parents always thought were fattening (back
when the medical specialists treating obesity believed that exercise
made us hungry) really are fattening. And so if we avoid these foods
specifically, we may find our weights more in line with our desires.</p><p>As
for those people who insist that exercise has been the key to their
weight-loss programs, the one thing we’d have to wonder is whether they
changed their diets as well. Rare is the person who decides the time
has come to lose weight and doesn’t also decide perhaps it’s time to
eat fewer sweets, drink less beer, switch to diet soda, and maybe
curtail the kind of carb-rich snacks—the potato chips and the candy
bars—that might be singularly responsible for driving up their insulin
and so their fat.</p><p>For the rest of us, it may be time to
take a scientific or biological view of our excesses rather than a
biblical one. The benefits of exercise include the joys of
virtuousness. I worked out today, therefore I can eat fattening foods
to my heart’s content. But maybe the causality is reversed here too.
Maybe it’s because we eat foods that fatten us that the workout becomes
a necessity, the best we can do in the battle against our own fat
tissue.</p></div><div id="article-details"><p>Gary Taubes is the author of <em>Good Calories, Bad Calories: Challenging the Conventional Wisdom on Diet, Weight Control, and Disease</em> (Knopf, October 2), from which this article is adapted.</p></div>




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    <entry>
        <title>No connection between eggs and serum cholesterol levels</title>   
        <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" title="No connection between eggs and serum cholesterol levels" href="http://anthabeth.vox.com/library/post/no-connection-between-eggs-and-serum-cholesterol-levels.html?_c=feed-atom-full" />  
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        <published>2008-04-26T12:14:27Z</published>
        <updated>2008-04-26T12:14:27Z</updated>
    
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        <p>I get riled up when people state something that &quot;everyone knows&quot;&#160; when my own research and the research of many doctors, scientists and laymen have discovered the exact opposite to be true.&#160; </p><p>There is no link between cholesterol that you eat and the serum cholesterol levels found in your blood stream.&#160; </p><p>Here are a bunch of links:</p> <p></p><p><a href="http://www.second-opinions.co.uk/eggs.html">http://www.second-opinions.co.uk/eggs.html</a></p><p><a href="http://www.second-opinions.co.uk/cholesterol_myth_1.html">http://www.second-opinions.co.uk/cholesterol_myth_1.html</a><br /><a href="http://www.second-opinions.co.uk/cholesterol_myth_2.html">http://www.second-opinions.co.uk/cholesterol_myth_2.html</a></p><p>Low cholesterol means more strokes <a href="http://www.second-opinions.co.uk/cholesterol_myth_4.html">http://www.second-opinions.co.uk/cholesterol_myth_4.html</a></p><p><a href="http://www.proteinpower.com/drmike/uncategorized/nutrients-in-egg-yolks-help-prevent-macular-degeneration/">http://www.proteinpower.com/drmike/uncategorized/nutrients-in-egg-yolks-help-prevent-macular-degeneration/</a></p><p>Often research is misrepresented in the media like the famous Framingham study. <a href="http://www.proteinpower.com/drmike/archives/2006/09/framingham_stud.html">http://www.proteinpower.com/drmike/archives/2006/09/framingham_stud.html</a></p><p>There&#39;s a movie being made called (at least of the time of this post) Fat Head: You&#39;ve been fed a load of bologna.<br />
    
    
    





        






    
    
    





        





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</p><p>There is also the International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics. <a href="http://www.thincs.org/">http://www.thincs.org/</a></p><p></p><p>There is a whole sticky at the forum devoted to cholesterol studies, updated to 2002.&#160; <a href="http://forum.lowcarber.org/showthread.php?t=54255">http://forum.lowcarber.org/showthread.php?t=54255</a></p><p>The Weston A. Price Foundation:&#160; <a href="http://www.westonaprice.org/knowyourfats/fats_phony.html">Cholestrol and Heart Disease: A Phony Issue</a></p><p>Gary Taubes has written several important articles, one is called the <a href="http://forum.lowcarber.org/showthread.php?t=40182">The Soft Science of Dietary Fat</a>, and the other is <a href="http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F04E2D61F3EF934A35754C0A9649C8B63&amp;sec=health">What if It&#39;s All Been A Big Fat Lie?</a> </p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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    <entry>
        <title>Footloose and Sugar-Free</title>   
        <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" title="Footloose and Sugar-Free" href="http://anthabeth.vox.com/library/post/footloose-and-sugar-free.html?_c=feed-atom-full" />  
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        <published>2008-04-06T00:15:30Z</published>
        <updated>2008-04-06T00:18:15Z</updated>
    
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            <name>AnthaBeth</name>
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        <p>Here is an article I found on the msn homepage after logging out of e-mail.&#160; This person has discovered a large part of the low carb equation and has read some good books that I&#39;ve heard about and fully intend to read someday when I get the chance,&#160; Sugar Blues being one.&#160; I thought that she mentioned Sugar Shock but I guess I mis-read The New Sugar-Busters as that title.&#160; I have read Sugar Busters for Kids, I think I have it somewhere, picked up from a discount bookstore.&#160; Anyways, here&#39;s the article.</p><p><br /><h1><a href="http://www.slate.com/id/2187878/pagenum/all/#page_start">Slate</a></h1><h1>Footloose and Sugar-Free <br /></h1><h1><span class="h1_subhead">The odyssey of my no-sweets diet.</span></h1><span class="byline">By Laura Moser</span><br /><span class="dateline">Posted Tuesday, April 1, 2008, at 5:41 PM ET
</span><span class="topimage" style="width: 205px;"><a href="http://www.slate.com/id/2187942/"><img alt="Illustration by Robert Neubecker. Click image to expand." height="231" src="http://img.slate.com/media/1/123125/123104/2180680/2187877/080401_MedEx_SugarTN.jpg" width="205" /></a></span><p>I
always thought I had a pretty virtuous diet—unless you counted the
cookie I had with lunch every day and the half-pint of ice cream after
dinner. My metabolism was efficient, so why worry? But then, last
summer, shortly after going off the birth-control pill, I woke up one
day with bad skin. When topical remedies failed me, I began to wonder
whether cutting back on sugar might help. The science behind the <a href="http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/magazine/articles/2007/12/16/a_clear_connection/" target="_blank">sugar-acne equation</a>
was apocryphal at best, but overhauling my diet still seemed worth a
try. And so, on the stroke of midnight this past New Year&#39;s Eve, I
resolved to give up sugar, long one of my favorite substances.</p><p>The average American consumes a shocking <a href="http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/52946" target="_blank">150 pounds of sugar</a> a year, or roughly <a href="http://www.cspinet.org/new/sugar.html" target="_blank">20 teaspoons</a>
every day. Such through-the-roof concentrations of added sweeteners may
contribute to all sorts of health problems beyond the obvious obesity:
high cholesterol and <a href="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12081853" target="_blank">cardiovascular disease</a>, diabetes, hyperactivity, insomnia, and, yes, acne. And that&#39;s not all: Sugar could also act as an <a href="http://www.esquire.com/features/ask-dr-oz/ESQ1206droz" target="_blank">immunosuppressant</a> and cause <a href="http://cbs4denver.com/seenon/sugar.asthma.lungs.2.680161.html" target="_blank">respiratory problems</a> like asthma. And a recent <a href="http://www.newsweek.com/id/73354" target="_blank">Harvard study</a> posited a link between simple carbohydrates and decreased fertility.</p><p>The <a href="http://www.cbc.ca/health/story/2003/03/03/diet_un030303.html" target="_blank">World Health Organization</a> has recommended cutting our sugar intake in <a href="http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E0CEFD9163EF93AA35750C0A9629C8B63" target="_blank">half</a>,
to no more than 10 percent of our total calorie consumption. But even
10 percent sounded like a lot to me, so I decided to rule out all high <a href="http://www.glycemicindex.com/" target="_blank">Glycemic Index</a>
substances that would spike insulin production—at least for the first
few weeks. That meant not just no Ben &amp; Jerry&#39;s but no booze, no
baguettes (or pizza!), no mashed potatoes, and minimal fruit and dairy.</p><div id="insider_ad_wrapper"><hr /><div id="insider_ad"><br /></div><hr /></div><p>In
a stroke of luck, a close friend volunteered to wean herself off sugar
at the same time. She also suggested that we formally chronicle our
efforts online to dissect every triumph and rough patch on our journey
to sugarlessness. And while our resulting <a href="http://sugarfreemonth.blogspot.com/" target="_blank">blog</a> was pathetically short-lived, our two-person support group indisputably served its purpose.</p><p>We
both learned pretty quickly that preparing our own food was the key to
eliminating sugar. For me, this meant a narrowing of my daily diet. If
I were some brilliant self-trained chef, I might&#39;ve used the experiment
to broaden my culinary range, but I&#39;m not, so I didn&#39;t. In any event,
like <a href="http://wikimapia.org/28910/" target="_blank">David Lynch</a>,
I&#39;ve never minded having the same meal every day. I like what I like,
and I was pleased to discover that a good deal of what I like is
naturally sugar-free. I began breakfasting on either scrambled eggs or,
far more frequently, steel-cut <a href="http://www.chieftain.com/life/1205906400/4" target="_blank">oatmeal</a>
sweetened with either defrosted berries or grated apple and cinnamon.
And despite my Seinfeldian passion for cereals—particularly those
ornate granolas that masquerade as health foods—I forced myself to pass
right over that aisle of the grocery store.</p><p>For the other major
meals, I ate a stripped-down version of my old diet—lots of salads
(homemade dressings only), three-ingredient soups, beans and brown
rice, chickpea stews, quinoa medleys, and whatever other &quot;slow&quot;
carbohydrates I managed to work in. (My one reach—a curried bulgur
dish—was an embarrassing failure, never to be repeated.) For snacks, I
had raw cashews and tamari almonds and guacamole and bricks of Gruyere
in various combinations.</p><p>Dull? Rather. A detriment to domestic harmony? Very possibly. My husband soon regretted introducing me to William Dufty&#39;s <em>Sugar Blues</em>,
the seminal (and hilariously camp) 1975 screed against all things
sugared. Though he admired my discipline, he constantly mourned our
cleaned-out pantry. Still, he couldn&#39;t argue with one unanticipated
benefit of our righteous new lifestyle: a dramatically lower grocery
bill—yes, even in these times of <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/13/business/13wheat.html" target="_blank">agricultural crisis</a>
and despite the outrageous asking price of almonds these days. Turns
out it&#39;s the packaged, processed foods that add up the fastest, the
two-bite scones and frozen pizzas and other such vanquished staples of
our household. Plus, maybe I was just eating less.</p><a name="page_start"></a><p>I
liked saving money, and once past the initial withdrawal period, I
started to feel pretty good about my random self-betterment scheme. In
no time at all, my skin was unmottled and my stomach improbably flat.
Why had I <em>ever </em>touched refined sugar? The simple sugars
present in natural foods—like the dextrose in milk and the fructose in
fruit—didn&#39;t trouble me so much. But processed foods heavy on the
sucrose and high-fructose corn syrup offered none of the health
benefits of fruit and milk. The caloric density of artificially
sweetened foods is itself a major problem, and in addition, they can
seriously screw with our insulin response over the long term. The more
refined carbohydrates we eat, the higher our insulin requirement, and
the harder, over time, our bodies must work to produce appropriate
insulin. According to <em>The New Sugar Busters!</em>, &quot;too much
insulin promotes the storage of fat, elevation of cholesterol levels,
and possibly the deposition of plaque in our coronary arteries,&quot; though
a doctor friend tells me that refined sugar is by no means uniquely
responsible for this chain of calamities. </p><p>Either way, I thought
I was sold. But then, on the morning of the New Hampshire primary,
seven days after my diet began, I woke up craving a Starbucks chai, and
I mean craving a Starbucks chai with every molecule of my being. I
called my friend, hoping she&#39;d talk me off the cliff. Before she could
pick up, I slammed down the phone.</p><p>Ninety seconds later, I was waiting in line at Starbucks, and I was <em>psyched</em>.
Would I care for any snack with my beverage? Well, now that you mention
it, I most certainly would! Since when was 7:32 a.m. too early to enjoy
a delicious triple chocolate cupcake? Five o&#39;clock somewhere, indeed:
That cupcake was gone before I&#39;d stepped back out into the blizzard.
For my first taste of sugar in a week, it was only so-so, but then I&#39;d
never been big into Starbucks pastries. I still couldn&#39;t wait for the
chai—that chai promised to be the most amazing, explosive taste
sensation of all space and time. But here&#39;s the thing. It wasn&#39;t. Like,
not at all. Truth be told, it was actually pretty nasty—monochrome and
syrupy and a tad poisonous-tasting. I sipped and I grimaced, but
eventually I gave up. I simply couldn&#39;t finish the drink—I, who have
never <em>not</em> finished a paid-for foodstuff in all my life! And
the weirdness wasn&#39;t yet over, either. A few minutes after dumping the
chai, I collapsed back into bed and passed out. Before 8 a.m.</p><p>Over
the course of that month, a pattern emerged. After about six days on
the wagon, I would leap out of bed gripped by a raging obsession with
some very specific proscribed food: pad thai, say, or a plain white
bagel or a Mrs. Fields&#39; semisweet chocolate-chip without nuts. I would
then hit the streets—often still in my pajamas—in pursuit of that food.
Once that food was in my possession, I would consume it on the spot,
with or without chewing.</p><p>Then, just as inevitably, would come the
crash. Proof of sugar&#39;s power—the flooding of my system with insulin
and the subsequent drop in my blood-sugar level—would knock me
off-balance and send me crawling back to bed. After extended periods of
living off complex, slow-release carbohydrates, I was clearly no longer
inured to these rollercoaster blood-sugar fluctuations. There was
another stumbling block, too: I just didn&#39;t like fretting over food all
day long. My whole life, I&#39;ve taken pride in not being one of <em>those</em> girls. You know the type I mean: the food-fixated, calorie-counting, scale-owners of our species.</p><p>And
so, after a month of extremes, I decided to take the middle path. When
I wanted to eat fruit, I would eat fruit. If I wanted a slice of pizza
or a meal in a restaurant or an entire log of goat cheese while
watching cable news, I was allowed that, too. As a result, I found
myself slipping up less often than before. I no longer lunged for the
bread basket, and I still mostly avoided desserts. (And, Starbucks
aside, straight-up desserts had always been my undoing, not soft drinks
or store-bought salad dressings or other common sources of &quot;hidden&quot;
sugars.) But I was no longer limiting these indulgences as some empty
test of self-control. It seemed I&#39;d just lost the urge. Who knew that
the sweetness of the milk in a cappuccino could be so satisfying? </p><p>These
days, I&#39;m mostly surprised by how well I&#39;ve kept it up. I&#39;m also
surprised by how completely unnecessary so much of the food I used to
eat was, and how little I miss those ice-cream benders. But I&#39;d be
lying if I claimed that my sugar cravings have vanished altogether.
Chai is one thing; chocolate is still chocolate. Yet even my
relationship with that essential food group has changed. Before going
sugar-free, I had never favored dark chocolate over milk. On the
contrary: I had only scorn for the pretentious <a href="http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2007/10/29/071029fa_fact_buford" target="_blank">Dagoba</a>
devotees of my acquaintance. Now, though, I wonder whether my
Butterfinger days are gone for good. Even a bar with the
once-unfathomable cocoa content of 73 percent tastes textured and
complicated and just sweet enough.</p><p>A sharpened sense of taste is
by no means my only gain. Have I mentioned my sparkling complexion?
When minor flare-ups recur, it is generally within eight hours of a
sugar binge. (Laugh if you like; the empirical evidence is too powerful
to ignore. And a <a href="http://www.slate.com/id/2178785/#Acne">recent study</a>
supports this still-vague link between good skin and a low glycemic
load diet.) Another unexpected boon: My periods are as regular as when
I was on the pill, and preceded by zero PMS.</p><p>But if I&#39;d hoped
eliminating sugar would motivate me to balance a five-hour-daily
meditation practice with a rigorous course of triathlon training (and I
sort of did), I can&#39;t help but be a little disappointed with the
experiment. I do not feel 10 years younger or sprightlier or even 1
percent invincible. I am still lazy and achy and frequently <a href="http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F01E5D91339F931A15752C1A963958260" target="_blank">hyperactive</a>.
Still, we measure progress in baby steps. And it&#39;s been more than two
months since I&#39;ve banged on the door of Mrs. Fields dressed only in a
nightgown and winter coat.</p> </p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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    <category term="science" scheme="http://anthabeth.vox.com/tags/science/" label="science" /> 
    <category term="low carb" scheme="http://anthabeth.vox.com/tags/low+carb/" label="low carb" /> 
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