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Science

Eat Less Red Meat, Scientists Said. Now Some Believe That Was Bad Advice. (nytimes.com) 315

The evidence is too weak to justify telling individuals to eat less beef and pork, according to new research. The findings "erode public trust," critics said. From a report: Public health officials for years have urged Americans to limit consumption of red meat and processed meats because of concerns that these foods are linked to heart disease, cancer and other ills. But on Monday, in a remarkable turnabout, an international collaboration of researchers produced a series of analyses concluding that the advice, a bedrock of almost all dietary guidelines, is not backed by good scientific evidence. If there are health benefits from eating less beef and pork, they are small, the researchers concluded. Indeed, the advantages are so faint that they can be discerned only when looking at large populations, the scientists said, and are not sufficient to tell individuals to change their meat-eating habits. "The certainty of evidence for these risk reductions was low to very low," said Bradley Johnston, an epidemiologist at Dalhousie University in Canada and leader of the group publishing the new research in the Annals of Internal Medicine.

The new analyses are among the largest such evaluations ever attempted and may influence future dietary recommendations. In many ways, they raise uncomfortable questions about dietary advice and nutritional research, and what sort of standards these studies should be held to. Already they have been met with fierce criticism by public health researchers. The American Heart Association, the American Cancer Society, the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and other groups have savaged the findings and the journal that published them.

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Eat Less Red Meat, Scientists Said. Now Some Believe That Was Bad Advice.

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  • No. The new study doesn't say that this is bad advice. What it said is that the data from previous studies is insufficient to make any conclusions with good statistical certainty.

    • by Train0987 ( 1059246 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2019 @02:59PM (#59262300)

      Giving that advice based on insufficient data from previous studies makes it... bad advice.

      • by courteaudotbiz ( 1191083 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2019 @03:17PM (#59262402) Homepage

        Over the years, a lot studies in the nutrition field have demonstrated one thing and its opposite. Margarine causes cancer, then it doesn't. Fat is bad, then it's good. Sugar is good, then it's bad, then it depends. HFCS is OK, then it's evil.

        Let's just eat whatever makes you feel good, and go with logic. Eat natural stuff, fruits, veggies, meat, fish. Avoid a bag of chips everyday, chocolate bars and soft drinks as much as possible. Exercise.

        Then, if you have cancer, you can say that you did your best. Even people eating perfect diets can end up having cancer. Live and eat happily.

        • Margarine causes cancer, then it doesn't.

          Margarine causes heart disease, not cancer.

          Also, you have the flip-flop backwards. First it was thought to be healthier than butter, until we found out it wasn't.

          Avoid a bag of chips everyday, chocolate bars and soft drinks as much as possible.

          Based on what evidence?

          • Margarine causes heart disease, not cancer. Also, you have the flip-flop backwards. First it was thought to be healthier than butter, until we found out it wasn't.

            I have found nothing on the Internet, probably the news is too old, I heard when I was young that studies have shown margarine causes cancer. Then not, then you risk heart disease.

            Avoid a bag of chips everyday, chocolate bars and soft drinks as much as possible.

            Based on what evidence?

            Frikin logic. Chips are full of sodium and trans fat. Chocolate bars generally have "sugar" as their first ingredient, as in "refined sugar", which causes all sorts of diseases, too long to list here. Same with soft drinks, diet or not. Diet soft drinks are the worse, cause the sugary taste make your pancreas believe there will be

            • Based on what evidence?

              Frikin logic.

              Science is about evidence, not logic.

              Chips are full of sodium and trans fat.

              Chips do not contain trans fat. Evidence that sodium is bad for you is inconsistent. It appears to be bad for some people (especially ethnic West Africans) but others can consume it with no problem (especially ethnic East Asians).

              Chocolate bars generally have "sugar" as their first ingredient

              Chocolate also contains healthy antioxidants. Some studies have found that chocolate can lower cholesterol and reduce memory decline.

            • by Austerity Empowers ( 669817 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2019 @05:53PM (#59263174)

              I have found nothing on the Internet, probably the news is too old, I heard when I was young that studies have shown margarine causes cancer.

              In AP Biology in High School, circa 1993, margarine was thought to possibly be carcinogenic on the basis that it contained a particular molecule (I don't remember which) that was a geometric isomer with something that definitely was proven to be carcinogenic.

              However, it was not (at that time) *proven* to be carcinogenic itself. I think it did get a lot of press, a lot of which was no doubt misreported by liberal arts majors trying to summarize science in a way that people would tolerate reading.

          • Interesting fact about the history of margarine

            It was the space food of the 18th century.

            " Margarine was invented in France by Hippolyte Mège-Mouriès in 1869, during the Franco-Prussian wars. He invented it in response to a competitive challenge from the French government under Napoleon III, who was looking for a cheap and stable substitute for butter, and offered a big prize to anyone who could pull it off."

            https://culinarylore.com/food-... [culinarylore.com]

        • by DickBreath ( 207180 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2019 @05:17PM (#59263002) Homepage
          > Let's just eat whatever makes you feel good, and go with logic.

          Okay! Let's get to the good advice!


          > Avoid a bag of chips everyday

          So if I avoid that one bag, I can still eat all the remaining bags of chips as usual?

          > chocolate bars and soft drinks as much as possible

          Very good! So I can add an extra chocolate to make up for that one less bag of chips?

          > Then, if you have cancer, you can say that you did your best.

          I can say that no matter what. I did my best. The very best. I've done better than anyone else. Anyone else in history. Nobody has done as good as I have. Honest. I've done so good that people call me all the time to tell me how good I've done. Trust me. The very best. I've done my best better than anyone else ever.


          Now please excuse me, I've got to take this call from Vladimir.
        • I would imagine if you looked back that these flip flops on healthy eating, timing roughly correlates with study grant expirations. Gotta get a new grant, so lets say eggs are good for us this time!

      • But...but...but.....

        The won't fit the narrative that to combat global warming (climate change, whatever you're calling it these days)....tha we have to stop eating meat, and go more vegetable!!!

        I'd be willing to bet and more than a little of the flak this report is getting isn't just for people concerned about human health effects of meat eating, but also of folks trying to link meat eating to climate change.

      • by Kyr Arvin ( 5570596 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2019 @05:11PM (#59262966)

        Giving that advice based on insufficient data from previous studies makes it... bad advice.

        It's not necessarily bad advice, it may even be the correct advice. But it's inconclusive advice, uncertain.
        Bad advice implies that it's not true. But it could be true, we just don't know for sure.
        If it were bad advice would be more coached like this: "They said lots of red meat and pork was unhealthy, we know that is not true."
        Or, to quote 1973's Sleeper:

        Dr. Melik: This morning for breakfast he requested something called “wheat germ, organic honey and tiger’s milk.”
        Dr. Aragon: [chuckling] Oh, yes. Those are the charmed substances that some years ago were thought to contain life-preserving properties.
        Dr. Melik: You mean there was no deep fat? No steak or cream pies or hot fudge?
        Dr. Aragon: Those were thought to be unhealthy... precisely the opposite of what we now know to be true.
        Dr. Melik: Incredible.

    • Wow, thanks. I didn't expect to see an accurate correction as the first post.

      Slashdot lives!!!

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      It is really the meat producers using delaying tactics to allow them to profit for a while longer

      look at the tobacco and fossil fuel industries for prior examples of this behavior

      The facts are already in that red meat consumption (poultry and fish have no carnitine) result in gut microbiome generating TMAO, a known precursor to heart disease [nih.gov]

      Since there is money on the line, expect astro-turfing galore with a fair amount of concern-trolling thrown in, because people dying of unnecessary heart disease is a-ok

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Indeed. It says that things are not actually as clear as was assumed. And since people like to eat meat (and humans are not vegetarians by nature, as a brief look at human teeth amply demonstrates), the quality of life aspect is definite in comparison. There is also the hard fact that everybody dies sooner or later, so eating meat will not "kill" you, it will, in the worst case, just cost you some time.

      This may also be a sign that nutritional sciences finally start to grow up and may actually start to gener

      • by XxtraLarGe ( 551297 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2019 @03:57PM (#59262648) Journal

        And since people like to eat meat (and humans are not vegetarians by nature, as a brief look at human teeth amply demonstrates), the quality of life aspect is definite in comparison. There is also the hard fact that everybody dies sooner or later, so eating meat will not "kill" you, it will, in the worst case, just cost you some time.

        A new study confirms exactly this! Study Finds Avoiding Red Meat May Lead To Longer, More Miserable Life [babylonbee.com]

      • by dgatwood ( 11270 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2019 @04:27PM (#59262788) Homepage Journal

        Indeed. It says that things are not actually as clear as was assumed.

        That's probably because whether a food is good or bad for you depends, in part, on your gut biome, which depends on such factors as your ethnic background (matrilineal, primarily), the places you have lived (particularly as a child, eating dirt), etc. So any expectation that all humans will handle foods in exactly the same way is likely based on flawed assumptions right off the bat.

        This may also be a sign that nutritional sciences finally start to grow up and may actually start to generally use sound scientific methods. So far they have been very mixed in result quality, see, e.g. the recommendations of margarine over butter (apparently a bad idea) or the wrong recommendation to reduce fats to a very low level because of blood cholesterol (apparently only weakly connected or not at all).

        The thing is, there are some fats that make your HDL/LDL balance better, and others that make it worse. The main problem is that when you remove fat, you reduce flavor, so things with less fat often end up being less healthy because of sugar and other things that they use to replace the missing fat.

        Also, because fat is a major contributor to making you feel full, reducing fat levels also tends to make you eat more, which is, in and of itself, a risk factor for obesity and, subsequently heart disease.

        So reducing fat tends to do more harm than good, though replacing certain kinds of fats with other kinds of fats can be beneficial.

        And there's no reason to assume that any of those effects are universal. :-/

        There are good recommendations (consume less salt, drink enough fluids), but it is hard to separate the good and the bad ones.

        Drink enough, but not too much, and eat less salt, but not too little. Sometimes, I start to wonder if the flavor-enhancing impact of salt actually causes its apparent negative impact by causing people to eat more than they otherwise would. *shrugs*

    • by jythie ( 914043 )
      Or more specifically, the new group is setting a research bar that is both impossibly high (without massively unethical human experimentation) and unreasonably simplified. They are only counting the most direct studies with the simplest analysis techniques as being 'valid'.
    • When data is inconclusive, the default state is what you should assume to be true - that eating meat makes no health difference until proven otherwise. That makes the advice to eat less meat, bad (unsubstantiated) advice.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    health is only one small aspect of why I'm vegetarian, non-cruelty is far more important to me

    • by EmagGeek ( 574360 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2019 @03:05PM (#59262330) Journal

      As a staunch meatatarian I have to agree. It's important to make decisions for the right reasons, and humane treatment of animals is a good reason.

      Fortunately I live in rural America where I can go pick out my cow at the local farm and it is humanely processed that day and whatever portion is mine is packed into my freezer. Most of the farms near me have at least a couple of acres per head in paddocks with 20-30 head each.

      If I want chickens, I go to my next door neighbor a mile up the road and pick one out from her chicken yard, and pick up some eggs while I am there.

      Industrial farms make me sick to my stomach. There are a lot of industrial chicken houses around here and the stench is overwhelming sometimes. Even worse is how they are transported - stuffed into open wire cages on the back of a flatbed tractor trailer and driven at 80mph completely unprotected from elements, and where it's a great day if only 10% of them die in transit (though the dead ones can still be used for utility meat - pet food etc). I know they're "just chickens," but we're still responsible for treating them humanely while they are alive.

      • You didn't even mention the best benefit of all to that arrangement -- fresh beef and chicken is a world apart in taste from what you'd find in the typical grocery store. Eggs as well!

    • by Aighearach ( 97333 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2019 @03:09PM (#59262348)

      Me too. I still eat fish. When people ask why I'm a pescatarian, or pesco-vegetarian, I tell them it is simply a moral luxury that I enjoy.

      If it was me or the deer, I'd eat the deer. But it isn't. I don't need to do that to get the nutrients needed for full health. I have a choice. And I choose not to kill warm-blooded animals for my food. They have surplus metabolism to spend enjoying life, or suffering it, as the case may be, and I see more personal benefit in not causing their suffering than in causing it.

      If it was only about health, it would be sufficient to avoid processed meats, or to really make sure, eat only traditionally-raised meat.

      Also the environmental impacts are important to me. That strongly affects my choice of which seafood to eat.

      • by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2019 @03:15PM (#59262386) Homepage Journal

        Um, you do realize that fish suffer when they are caught? They asphyxiate slowly. Not sure what "warm blooded animals" has to do with anything. What a bizarre justification.

        • by Comboman ( 895500 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2019 @03:41PM (#59262548)
          Um, you do realize that plants suffer when they are harvested? [bbc.com] You have to draw the line somewhere if you don't want to starve to death. Some people draw the line at animals/plants. Others at humans/non-humans. Others at vertebrates/invertebrates. Warm-blooded/cold-blooded is as valid a choice as any.
        • Um, you do realize that fish suffer when they are caught? They asphyxiate slowly. Not sure what "warm blooded animals" has to do with anything. What a bizarre justification.

          Do you abstain from eating fish? Or are you just engaging in hypocritical moral posturing?

          • No. Quite the opposite. I am just pointing out a fact. Did you see me make a moral statement? These people with their bizarre justifications are weird.

      • I eat quite a lot of fish, but only the free-range kind. I have issues with farming/raising animals for human consumption, but when taking food out of the greater nature, I don't make a moral difference between plants and different kinds of animal. Free-range meat is harder to come by, as I don't hunt myself, so fish is a lot more practical option.

        It also helps that we've always eaten a lot of fish in the family, as well as done recreational fishing. I know how it feels to kill a fish with your bare hand

      • by dgatwood ( 11270 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2019 @04:33PM (#59262820) Homepage Journal

        Me too. I still eat fish. When people ask why I'm a pescatarian, or pesco-vegetarian, I tell them it is simply a moral luxury that I enjoy.

        If it was me or the deer, I'd eat the deer. But it isn't. I don't need to do that to get the nutrients needed for full health. I have a choice. And I choose not to kill warm-blooded animals for my food. They have surplus metabolism to spend enjoying life, or suffering it, as the case may be, and I see more personal benefit in not causing their suffering than in causing it.

        Funny you should mention suffering. Deer don't have nearly enough natural predators, at least in the U.S., which means that without a lot of hunting, the deer population would quickly reach unsustainable levels at which the animals would be unhealthy.

        So in a manner of speaking, if everyone became vegetarian, the vegetarianism would arguably be the cause of their suffering. :-)

    • by Bengie ( 1121981 )
      "non-cruelty" to what? Vegetarians still cause harm to plants. If you say pain and suffering, you have to indicate some sort of relative value because life is pain. Your mere existence causes additional suffering to animals because of contention for resources. What about pollution you make, that contributes to the suffering of all animals.

      I appreciate the concept of reducing consumption and paying a bit extra for reduced cruelty, but I don't understand the irrational strong stance around "cruelty". They c
    • So you won't eat meat because animals have to be killed, but you'll happily cook live plants. Right.
      • I only eat live plants that were humanely processed by virgins on top of the Himalayas and blessed by the leaders of all the major religions. I sure am hungry...

    • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2019 @04:03PM (#59262684)
      I don't entirely agree with the health and ecological impact arguments for vegetarianism, but I can understand and partly agree with them.

      But I never understood the cruelty argument. Death due to old age is something almost unique to humans. The fate of nearly every living thing on this planet is to be eaten. And most of them [youtube.com] will be eaten alive [youtube.com] - suffering a terrifying and painful death. The idea that animals live together in peaceful harmony and that humans are the cause of all their suffering, is a fantasy propagated by people who watched too many Disney movies and haven't spent enough time observing how wild animals live and die in the real world.

      In contrast, a slaughterhouse is a pretty good way to go. The cattle walks up a ramp, a person puts a bolt pistol [wikipedia.org] against their head, and it's over. No pain, no suffering, just immediate loss of consciousness followed by death. So displacing habitat for wild animals by fencing off land for cattle, causing the wild animal population to shrink, and replacing them with cattle actually decreases the aggregate amount of animal suffering. And by corollary, getting rid of food cattle production and freeing up that land, thus allowing wild animal populations to grow, would actually increase the total amount of animal suffering.

      The cruelty argument only works if you ignore opportunity cost [wikipedia.org] in your reasoning. And your belief is that if you personally are not the cause an animal's death, then it will somehow live forever, never suffering, until it dies in its sleep of old age. The reality is that because people are concerned about minimizing the unnecessary suffering of animals, an animal dying to feed a person is almost certainly a less cruel fate than if you left the animal alive in the wild to die at the claws and fangs of other wild animals.
      • Some of those animals such as pigs and cows are sentient beings so getting executed in a orderly and "humane" process won't quell their fear of death, nor lessen the impact on those witnessing the demise of their fellow species.

        Perhaps one should ask oneself, would one rather live a sheltered life of above average longevity, devoid of self determination, or would one rather live a life of one's own choosing, full of uncertainties and possible early death.

    • by eddeye ( 85134 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2019 @04:04PM (#59262690)

      health is only one small aspect of why I'm vegetarian, non-cruelty is far more important to me

      This meat eater agrees. While I enjoy the taste of meat, I'm in it far more for the cruelty.

      Mmmmm.... torturelicious!

  • Red meat was good, then it was bad, now it's meh. Butter and eggs are the same way. I remember being told to eat tons of pasta and bagels. "Good clean energy for the metabolism" they said.

    Now I just eat as much fruit and veggies as I can stomach, and everything else in moderation. I suspect that's the only dietary advice that's gonna last for the long haul.

    Except perhaps "don't cram your face hole with massive amounts of ice cream and 2-liter quantities of cola products". Gave me gout until I cut
    • by jythie ( 914043 )
      This is part of the problem with anyone with enough money being able to set up an 'institute' and start publishing. Any time information comes out about health, the industry affected by it bankrolls people to counter and blame some other industry. Even the 'food pyramid' was a result of competing industries wanting to make sure that children would not be influenced away from their products.
  • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2019 @03:02PM (#59262322)

    Who are these assholes? In Science, if you find an earlier finding is not as good or clear as hoped, you publish a correction or better results. There is no acceptable
    alternative. Scientists are only very rarely lying scum. (Every group of people has bad apples... )

    Lying to people to not "erode trust" is something religions and other highly questionable human movements do.

    • by forkfail ( 228161 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2019 @03:08PM (#59262342)

      Perhaps this suggests that while science remains science, many see it as a faith narrative in many ways.

      Not really surprising - many attempted to use science to "displace God" and fill that niche. What did such think would happen?

    • Who are these assholes? In Science, if you find an earlier finding is not as good or clear as hoped, you publish a correction or better results. There is no acceptable alternative.

      What they said is that in practical terms it is impossible to do a rigorously controlled experiment. This would require a control group that wasn't allowed to eat meat, and a test group that had to eat meat, with people randomly assigned to each group, with a large enough number of people in each group to be statistically significant, and with the people in each group following the diet for a minimum of ten years (and preferably longer). In the real world, this is absurdly beyond the ability of any organi

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by rogoshen1 ( 2922505 )

      Most of these reports are not originating from any new research -- they're using the mystical dark art of statistics to combine data from multiple original studies (warts and all) to try to get additional ink or research bux.

      Sometimes they're found to have misread the tea leaves and articles such as this are published (again, primarily to get more ink and/or sweet sweet research bux)

    • Mod parent up. This is really basic.
  • by forkfail ( 228161 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2019 @03:03PM (#59262324)
  • I had some bad heart health marker news at my last appointment, so I'm not going to risk deviating from a diet backed by weak studies to one that isn't backed by any research at all. But I'm entirely unsurprised with these suggestions considering the research I did on heart health to hear that any accepted remedies don't matter as much as doctors suggest. Our strongest remedies don't really seem to beat out genetics or pure luck.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Meat != meat... (Score:5, Informative)

    by Slugster ( 635830 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2019 @03:12PM (#59262362)
    Processed meats are usually mixed with significant mounts of salt and other preservatives; including them in a dietary group with un-processed cuts of meat seems a bit of a reach IMO.
    It almost seems like they just wanted to convince you to stop eating meat of all kinds, and aren't much concerned about the actual evidence...

    As far as "studies" go, I'll take the 5000+ year Inuit study, thanks.
    Inuit/Dorset people ate basically nothing but meat and fat for at least that long.
    If doing so was bad for you, there wouldn't be any Eskimos around today. http://discovermagazine.com/20... [discovermagazine.com]

    There used to be a good wikipedia page about Inuit/zero-carb diets, but it has been removed and now the subject connects to a page about trendy modern Atkins and Keto bullshit.
    All that remains now is the page about Vilhjalmur Stefansson, which I guess they were afraid to take down-- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
    • Processed meats are usually mixed with significant mounts of salt...

      And in broken news, salt isn't bad for you either. Seriously, there was a study released a few months ago which basically said it doesn't really matter how much salt you eat, your kidneys can process it just fine and it doesn't affect your blood pressure. Don't drink ocean water, sure, but beyond that don't worry about it.

      I'm getting whiplash trying to follow all the dietary news these days.

      • it doesn't affect your blood pressure

        It does affect blood pressure, but only temporarily. Salt makes you retain fluid; more fluid in the same space means higher pressure, but only until you piss or sweat it away. The fallacy they told us all these years was that salt would cause hypertension, which it doesn't. However, if you already have hypertension, it may still be a good idea to avoid salt. (At least that's what I got from the recent news...)

  • Is any increase in risk bad? What are the absolute risks?

    In general, it's the people that want to tell you what to do that use relative risks. What is your absolute risk of dying from eating meat? What is the absolute risk of dying if you don't eat meat?

    Note: the absolute risk of dying is, by definition, 100%. So how do they define their criteria around that? The risk of "early death?" What does that mean?

  • by KixWooder ( 5232441 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2019 @03:34PM (#59262488)
    "Eat food, not too much, mostly plants."

    ..and I like to add: No soda, and nothing that comes in a box.
  • Exercise is more important .. gotta flush those arteries by getting the blood flowing.
  • ... it doesn't possibly not maybe cause cancer prevention, in well controlled studies, of course..
  • not that I eat this every day or anything. Maybe 3 days out of the week.

    Actually, when I think about it. I really don't eat red meat a lot. I do try staying away from processed meat(deli meat) as much as possible. To much salt. Try staying away from fast food, again. Too much salt. So my red meat consumption is actually very low. If I do eat steaks, I buy a better cut and cook it myself. Fry sear in olive oil and garlic, then bake. Burgers are mostly what I cook, or the cafeteria here at work wh
  • by jythie ( 914043 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2019 @03:44PM (#59262558)
    Seriously.. their conclusions pretty much come down to that argument. Either it is 'well, if you don't shoot people as part of a study and only look at people who have been shot, that isn't controlled enough' or 'well, blood loss is the real killer, not the bullet, and blood loss could come from everywhere',.. with a bit of 'we did a study that found people really like bullets, and popularity is important!. That seems to be the core of their 'inconclusive' conclusions.
  • Been saying this for awhile now. We, as humans, have a choice. Eat what our ancestors did for over a million years, which includes mostly meat with some plant material thrown in, or eat the grain crap that was developed only about 6,000 years ago. To make the grains palatable, we can add sugar, which only really showed up in the last 100 years.
    • Some people are for sale and also some are incompetent...

      Why are so many assuming this has merit?? Is it because you LIKE what they are saying??? Where are the all the annoying correlation vs causation comments?

      All the science points to meat being a rare thing we are not evolved for heavy consumption; just like the other primates. We have a primate digestive system; not a carnivore's. It's massively plants and insects with some occasional meat, just like them. We crave sugar and salt far more because th

    • Been saying this for awhile now. We, as humans, have a choice. Eat what our ancestors did for over a million years, which includes mostly meat with some plant material thrown in, or eat the grain crap that was developed only about 6,000 years ago. To make the grains palatable, we can add sugar, which only really showed up in the last 100 years.

      How quickly has human knowledge advanced in this 6000 years compared to the last 100?

      I remember my Western Civilization class from university, and people got a lot more work done once they found sugar, tea, and coffee. Before that people got their calories and water from beer, wine, and other fermented drinks. That's assuming they didn't starve to death, or some disease killed them.

      Heating water for tea and coffee meant it killed the germs in the water. Adding tea or coffee meant it tasted better and gav

  • ...when you pry it from my cold, dead fingers.

    I don't pay much mind to any of this. Over the 40-something years I've been mostly awake:

    1. Coffee was bad, then good,then bad, then good again.
    2. Read meat was bad, then meh, then evilz.
    3. Wine was bad, then good, then bad, now it's good again.

    How about this: Don't overdo it. Don't do it every day. Chances are if you live a mostly sane life, you'll be OK.

    If you're putting down a 2-liter of coke to wash down that value-sized bag of Doritos every single da

  • Sure, our digestive tracks are a lot like chimps, but we don't like to keep them caged up for long term dietary studies. We're a bit less like mice, which we can keep caged up but then we have to account for them being caged up. We're even less like flies or yeast - and nobody cares if we keep them caged up - but then we have to try to extrapolate the results to match us.

    So unless you know of a place where we can find a large number of identical humans who are willing to be experimented on, our dietary
  • I don't know, but I'd be willing to bet that if you look at who funded the research, you would find that Bradley Johnston, and/or the study at Dalhousie University, or both, were funded by some entity with a vested interest in the outcome: Livestock interests for cattle & pork.

    Without knowing who funded the research, you can know nothing of its inherent bias.
  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2019 @05:57PM (#59263194)

    You know, back in the bad old days, Soviet scientists miraculously had those frequent breakthroughs in research where the food that was in short supply was always incredibly bad for your health, but whatever there was a surplus of was the fountain of youth.

    This starts to feel like it's coming from the same department.

  • by hcs_$reboot ( 1536101 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2019 @09:51PM (#59263792)
    Where does the meat come from, grassland? battery farming?
    What did the animal eat, grass, hay?
    Was it injected with antibiotics? hormones?
    What part of the animal is used, lean meat? tenderloin? fatty?

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