Methane only lasts a few years in the atmosphere. The natural state of North America is to be covered in ruminant megafauna. This is all about forcing bugs down our throat.
History so far:
Pre-20th century: Most people ate a diet low in carbs and high in animal fats. Heart disease and diabetes are almost non-existent.
Early 20th century: Seed oil is marketed as replacement for animal fat. Crisco and margarine are king.
Mid 20th century: Heart disease has become a thing. A sensible person would say, "shit, must be these vegetable oils!" Nope. American Heart Association declares that animal fats are the problem. Seed oils become even more popular.
Late 20th century: Heart disease has accelerated. In 1977 the United States Government declares that fats are the problem (hey, at least they are half right which is better than the government usually does). Low fat/high carb is recommended.
Later 20th century: Starting in 1980 the obesity and diabetes rates are a hockey stick (and you don't even have to merge to completely different data sets to get it). A sensible person would say, "shit, it must be the low fat/high carb!" Nope. In 1992 the food pyramid is released and it recommends low fat/high carb.
Early 21st century: Obesity and diabetes continue to soar! Obesity is the new bitcoin! To the moon! 2005 revised pyramid. low fat/high carb. 2011 Pyramid is trashed for circle. Low fat/high carb. Changing the shape of the recommendation didn't help strangely enough.
Future: Who knows what horror this Beyond Food and bug burger future holds for us. Just like the early 20th century push for seed oil was a successful attempt to sell agricultural bioproducts as food so is the 21st century push for plant protein. The pea protein in Beyond burgers is a byproduct of glass noodle production in China.
My point is NEVER EVER EVER trust "the experts" on nutrition because they will always be in favor of whatever is profitable.
Moving to a keto diet was the best thing I ever did. Lost almost a 100lbs since I started about 18 months ago. Regained about a foot on my belt. Went from an XL to a L shirt. Dropped from 42 pant size to a 36. Regrown hair all over my body. Also just less irritable and feel a lot better throughout the day.
Cut back on the carbs, cut out the sugar (unless you need it for yeast), and cut out the seed oils. Making your own tallow and lard isn't that hard.
Seriously though cooking bacon in an air fryer is a super easy way to get as much lard as you need and because the temperature is so well controlled it comes out very light colored plus you get bacon.
Pre-20th century: Most people ate a diet low in carbs and high in animal fats.
It's been "always" bread, at least in Europe. From Rome's "bread and games" to the communist bread-for-the-people symbolism (and anti-communist: https://www.rri.ro/en_gb/bread_during_communism-2555291 - similar in Poland with "We want bread!" during, well, bread riots).
In East Asia, it's of course rice.
Meat other than maybe fish was always a luxery for peasants and later workers, that is most people. Only recently it became common to eat meat daily (in rich countries).
Hell, even white bread used to be a luxery!
In Poland a common old prayer (a local version of of Lord's Prayer) is even to ask for never stop having bread and to have bread today.
As I said, our centuries old basic prayer is asking to provide for "our common bread". In the 19th century you had just a disruption of the supply of potatoes in Ireland (unlike ours black bread plus groat which is what the lower classes consumed until the 20th) and like half of the population either died or fled to America. Why do you think rice is "still" so important in China, Vietnam, and even the insular Japan?
You know the bread in the prayer is metaphorical right? And the Irish were forced to rely on potatoes because the better food was being exported. When people say low carb or high carb they are talking about total calories not actual food bulk. A large potato has less than 300 calories; that's a lot of potatoes to be high carb, especially the 60% suggested by the US government. Without a refining a lot of these carbs people would be eating would be a lot of bulk and not as much calories, and it's not going to be their main source of calories outside of famine. To get all your calories from potatoes you literally have to eat 6 lbs of potatoes. It's doable; it's just not normal at all and it was something the Irish had force upon them. That's why despite being high carb the "potato diet" works; it's hard just to eat all that bulk.
English peasants ate a ton of mutton. Analysis of cooking pots confirm this. Mutton, veg, cheese and some grains, but mostly mutton and vegetables. Anywhere where there is more marginal land than arable land is going to have a lot of meat eating. Everywhere that's near the ocean is going to have a lot of meat eating. One or both of those fits much of Europe (and much of the world really).
I actually remember how much relative luxery meat was from my own early childhood. We even had "meat-like products" (like vegan shit today) as substitutes. And we were a relative developed country, compared to most of the world.
And our peasants' "better food" was being exported too, you know?
And later, since more or less end of feaudalism (it took longer here), workers would strike and rebel demanding bread (in literal bread riots), and this wasn't because they were so bored of meat, but because (dark) bread and some kind of thin soup was all what they were eating in order to not starve. And this was the case of pre-20th-century England too, where since industrialization and capitalism (and potatoes) have arrived much earlier.
I've been in relatively poor health over the past year. As a late 20s male with no diagnosed ailments worth mentioning. A couple weeks ago I went really low carb for probably the first time in my life. Felt better than I have in recent memory. So good where the entire latter part of that week, I was legitimately thinking "I didn't think I would ever be able to feel this good ever again."
Also mixed in some intermittent fasting (and a 24 hour fast) so hard to tell exactly which had more impact. But I sincerely urge everyone who is feeling unhealthy to try making radical changes in your diet. I really recommend Dr. Berg's videos on YouTube if you're looking for a place to start.
I'm a big fan of showing people just how dumb they and their ideas are. Looking at the photo, I am pretty sure the farm who took photos of their cows with the diaper was doing exactly that. It looks like a parody. Also farmers tend to not be retards but instead are practical people.
Methane only lasts a few years in the atmosphere. The natural state of North America is to be covered in ruminant megafauna. This is all about forcing bugs down our throat.
History so far:
Pre-20th century: Most people ate a diet low in carbs and high in animal fats. Heart disease and diabetes are almost non-existent.
Early 20th century: Seed oil is marketed as replacement for animal fat. Crisco and margarine are king.
Mid 20th century: Heart disease has become a thing. A sensible person would say, "shit, must be these vegetable oils!" Nope. American Heart Association declares that animal fats are the problem. Seed oils become even more popular.
Late 20th century: Heart disease has accelerated. In 1977 the United States Government declares that fats are the problem (hey, at least they are half right which is better than the government usually does). Low fat/high carb is recommended.
Later 20th century: Starting in 1980 the obesity and diabetes rates are a hockey stick (and you don't even have to merge to completely different data sets to get it). A sensible person would say, "shit, it must be the low fat/high carb!" Nope. In 1992 the food pyramid is released and it recommends low fat/high carb.
Early 21st century: Obesity and diabetes continue to soar! Obesity is the new bitcoin! To the moon! 2005 revised pyramid. low fat/high carb. 2011 Pyramid is trashed for circle. Low fat/high carb. Changing the shape of the recommendation didn't help strangely enough.
Future: Who knows what horror this Beyond Food and bug burger future holds for us. Just like the early 20th century push for seed oil was a successful attempt to sell agricultural bioproducts as food so is the 21st century push for plant protein. The pea protein in Beyond burgers is a byproduct of glass noodle production in China.
My point is NEVER EVER EVER trust "the experts" on nutrition because they will always be in favor of whatever is profitable.
Moving to a keto diet was the best thing I ever did. Lost almost a 100lbs since I started about 18 months ago. Regained about a foot on my belt. Went from an XL to a L shirt. Dropped from 42 pant size to a 36. Regrown hair all over my body. Also just less irritable and feel a lot better throughout the day.
Cut back on the carbs, cut out the sugar (unless you need it for yeast), and cut out the seed oils. Making your own tallow and lard isn't that hard.
Oh. I didn't know futa cum was keto.
Seriously though cooking bacon in an air fryer is a super easy way to get as much lard as you need and because the temperature is so well controlled it comes out very light colored plus you get bacon.
I mean, technically it's an "animal product" right?
High in protein.
With the price of meats, gotta hit your protein goals somehow.
Congratulations, now you look like an ape probably.
Return to monke
You can say that about any field. Experts always tend to be the vocal sociopaths seeking money over human life.
It's been "always" bread, at least in Europe. From Rome's "bread and games" to the communist bread-for-the-people symbolism (and anti-communist: https://www.rri.ro/en_gb/bread_during_communism-2555291 - similar in Poland with "We want bread!" during, well, bread riots).
In East Asia, it's of course rice.
Meat other than maybe fish was always a luxery for peasants and later workers, that is most people. Only recently it became common to eat meat daily (in rich countries).
Hell, even white bread used to be a luxery!
In Poland a common old prayer (a local version of of Lord's Prayer) is even to ask for never stop having bread and to have bread today.
This isn't actually true. e: https://www.medievalists.net/2020/11/medieval-europeans-meat-consumption/ It's a modern idea that people in the past ate mostly bread. For obvious reasons it's true for ancient Egyptians and that's why there are literally mummies with heart disease.
As I said, our centuries old basic prayer is asking to provide for "our common bread". In the 19th century you had just a disruption of the supply of potatoes in Ireland (unlike ours black bread plus groat which is what the lower classes consumed until the 20th) and like half of the population either died or fled to America. Why do you think rice is "still" so important in China, Vietnam, and even the insular Japan?
You know the bread in the prayer is metaphorical right? And the Irish were forced to rely on potatoes because the better food was being exported. When people say low carb or high carb they are talking about total calories not actual food bulk. A large potato has less than 300 calories; that's a lot of potatoes to be high carb, especially the 60% suggested by the US government. Without a refining a lot of these carbs people would be eating would be a lot of bulk and not as much calories, and it's not going to be their main source of calories outside of famine. To get all your calories from potatoes you literally have to eat 6 lbs of potatoes. It's doable; it's just not normal at all and it was something the Irish had force upon them. That's why despite being high carb the "potato diet" works; it's hard just to eat all that bulk.
English peasants ate a ton of mutton. Analysis of cooking pots confirm this. Mutton, veg, cheese and some grains, but mostly mutton and vegetables. Anywhere where there is more marginal land than arable land is going to have a lot of meat eating. Everywhere that's near the ocean is going to have a lot of meat eating. One or both of those fits much of Europe (and much of the world really).
And at the same time of the Potato Famine, but in America: https://fords.org/civil-war-150-bread-bread-the-confederate-bread-riots/
I actually remember how much relative luxery meat was from my own early childhood. We even had "meat-like products" (like vegan shit today) as substitutes. And we were a relative developed country, compared to most of the world.
And our peasants' "better food" was being exported too, you know?
And later, since more or less end of feaudalism (it took longer here), workers would strike and rebel demanding bread (in literal bread riots), and this wasn't because they were so bored of meat, but because (dark) bread and some kind of thin soup was all what they were eating in order to not starve. And this was the case of pre-20th-century England too, where since industrialization and capitalism (and potatoes) have arrived much earlier.
I've been in relatively poor health over the past year. As a late 20s male with no diagnosed ailments worth mentioning. A couple weeks ago I went really low carb for probably the first time in my life. Felt better than I have in recent memory. So good where the entire latter part of that week, I was legitimately thinking "I didn't think I would ever be able to feel this good ever again."
Also mixed in some intermittent fasting (and a 24 hour fast) so hard to tell exactly which had more impact. But I sincerely urge everyone who is feeling unhealthy to try making radical changes in your diet. I really recommend Dr. Berg's videos on YouTube if you're looking for a place to start.
I'm a big fan of showing people just how dumb they and their ideas are. Looking at the photo, I am pretty sure the farm who took photos of their cows with the diaper was doing exactly that. It looks like a parody. Also farmers tend to not be retards but instead are practical people.
The fact this title exists make me want to uppercut these idiots.
Doesn't most come out the front? Maybe it is loony.