Re: Organic, Soil Nutrients, Mineralization, malnutrition, part 1

Bargyla Rateaver (brateaver@earthlink.net)
Fri, 15 Oct 1999 20:15:34 -0700

even more to the point is the account of Pottenger's Cats. This scientist
proved his point about diet. He tested cats with varying diets and proved
unequivocally that it was their diet that made the difference in the cats. The
photos are very revealing. He fed some cooked meat, while others got raw meat.
There is a striking evidence--the bone degeneration is something no one could
deny.
Really everyone should know about this piece of research. So very well
done. Undeniable results from just diet.

Klaus Wiegand wrote:

> Food Processing and Malnutrition
> The Economic Destruction of The Food Chain
> By John Coleman
>
> From 1811 to 1816 groups of English artisans known as Luddites
> rallied against the machinery of the industrial revolution. The
> advent of intensive mechanisation brought not only the end of
> skilled craft labour, but ultimately set in motion the
> widespread malnutrition of the westernised worlds.
>
>
> In 1898 the first edition of Peter Kropotkin's Fields, Factories
> And Workshops Tomorrow was published. In it he says:
>
> "The necessary machinery was created, and the British
> production of manufactured goods went on at a gigantic
> pace. In the course of less than seventy years- from 1810
> to 1878- the output of coal grew from 10 to 133,000,000
> tons; the imports of raw materials rose from 30 to
> 380,000,000 tons; and the exports of manufactured goods
> from 46 to 200,000,000 pounds. The tonnage of the
> commercial fleet was nearly trebled. Fifteen thousand
> miles of railways were build."
>
> With the move of rural peoples into the factories, and the
> cities that grew out of them, the demand came for these
> populations to be fed from the remaining, and now labour scarce,
> farming communities. One particular problem of this new system
> was that fresh wholefoods do not keep for more than a few days
> without serious spoiling. The only economic solution was the
> industrialisation of food production, to replace the loss of
> labour, and rationalising the food supply. The need was to
> decrease the bulk of the food materials and improve their shelf
> life. It was grains that would remain the staple foods of
> industrial society. Grains could be harvested easily, milled
> locally and then shipped into the cities as flour. By the time
> the factory worker got his "daily bread", most of what little
> nutritional value grains possessed had been damaged by oxidation
> or heat. The advent of white bread, brought about due to roller
> mills, may also have brought about the first cases of polio (see
> 'Immunization: The Reality Behind The Myth' by Walene James, for
> links between diet and disease and natural immunity).
>
> The problem of food preservation was solved mainly by either
> denaturing foods so much that they no longer supported bacterial
> or fungal life, (Heating, refining, extruding, irradiating,
> hydrogenating) or by canning or embalming the foods in poisons.
> Later improvements on these techniques means that there are some
> foods in modern society that simply will not decompose, thus
> demonstrating their unsuitability to support life. All of this
> was missed in an era where people were keen to reap the benefits
> of technology and understood very little, if anything, about
> nutrition. So long as enough food was eaten for men and women to
> work the factories, all was well.
>
> The forces of nature are not to be disobeyed without the
> severest of consequences, and so it was that the very means that
> delivered modern humans from toil against feeding themselves
> lead directly to severe physical degeneration. While the old
> diseases of serious malnutrition waned, the lesson of feeding
> properly had not been fully explored. This situation remains
> even today, despite the large amount of money spent on
> scientific research people are still clueless as to what
> constitutes healthy food. Even worse than not knowing which
> foods are healthy, the true destructive danger of refined and
> processed foods has not been publicised despite these dangers
> being known for over half a century. Another effect of
> industrialisation was the creation of a new super rich
> capitalist class amongst the masses of impoverished working
> classes. The capitalist class depends upon industry for its
> survival and is determined to defend it at any costs to
> humanity.
>
> In 1945 a book called Nutrition And Physical Degeneration was
> published. The author, Weston A. Price, D.D.S., had studied in
> very great detail the effects of industrial foods upon primitive
> peoples used to eating their traditional wholefood diets. His
> research uncovers the horrifying effects that refined foods such
> as flour goods, sugar, candies, canned foods, preserves and
> other devitalised foods have on the humans who eat them. As a
> dental surgeon he concentrated on tooth decay and deformities of
> the skull. Even today, modern citizens, lacking knowledge of
> basic human anatomy, are unaware of the degeneration that
> continues to destroy health and undermine continued survival. It
> has even been though that these degeneration's are a genetic
> inheritance, such is the ignorance of the masses that they blame
> nature for errors of their own commission. The effects of
> malnutrition are far from just facial deformities and include
> generally poor development of the skeleton, enfeebled internal
> organs and severe mental retardation. Other concerns are
> expressed by Dr. Price when he suggest links with malnutrition
> and lower IQs, personality disturbances, criminality,
> tuberculosis (and general susceptibility to disease),
> infertility, difficulties with giving birth and birth defects.
> Since nutritional status affects all metabolic processes, it is
> a factor in all diseases and human pursuits.
>
> Making use of a few of Weston Price's images and observations,
> it shall be demonstrated that modern man remains grossly
> deformed despite and because of inadequate nutritional
> education. The 50th edition of Nutrition And Physical
> Degeneration has 526 pages, of which only a tiny sample of
> Weston Price's work will be presented. Various doctors have
> written glowingly of this book:
>
> "Most of us cannot remember what life was like without
> sugar and refined foods without chemicals added. Weston
> Price's book drives home that the beginning of many
> degenerative diseases started with the introduction of
> processed foods. A must for anyone seriously interested in
> the effects of foods on health." Robert F. Cathcart, M.D.
>
> "A powerful teastament to the adverse effects of our modern
> diet upon health. As shocking and relevant in its
> implications today as when it was first written." Melvyn
> R. Werbach, M.D.
>
> "Nutrition and Physical Degeneration is an incredibly
> important classical work. It was a major force in turning
> my head around, and it deserves to be in every classic
> library on nutrition." Warren M. Levin, M.D.
>
> Weston Price studied over 14 different peoples of which we shall
> look at just three. In most cases the traditional peoples had
> fed on any edible things found locally. These range from a
> diversity of animal parts to fruits and ancient agricultural
> products. Animal organs, yucca roots, water grasses, insects and
> many diverse but unrefined foods are eaten. In most cases these
> traditional feeding patterns produce sturdy and well formed
> populations free of the ravages of degenerative diseases that
> plague modern society even today. The eating of uncooked foods
> whether of animal or plant origins is significant in all cases,
> with cooking predominant in agriculturalised peoples. Of all the
> peoples studied, the so called "Eskimos" with their massive
> reliance on animal foods had the poorest physical build and
> longevity, but still managed to produce stronger bodies than the
> average westerner.
>
> In the book Stone Age Diet by Leon Chaitow, we learn about the
> early origins of physical degeneration as a result of
> agriculture. He says that tooth decay was rarely found in
> Neolithic times before man started farming, but that decay was
> commonly found in the teeth of fossils after the start of
> agricultural settlements (Robert Coates, 'What is Natural
> Diet?', Nutrition and Health, Vol 1, 1982). Chaitow also points
> out that until agriculture began some 10 to 12 thousand years
> ago, and people for the first time crowded into towns, many
> infectious diseases were extremely rare (C. Wells, 'Bones,
> Bodies and Diseases', Thames and Hudson, 1964). Tuberculosis is
> only known from the late Stone Age and not at all in Paleolithic
> times (P. A. Janssems, 'Paleopathology, Diseases and Injuries of
> Prehistoric Man', John Baker, 1970) and Malaria is only thought
> to have started with the clearing of forests and creation of
> pools for mosquitoes to breed in (Robert Coates op. cit.). John
> Robson, M.D., of the University of South Carolina suggests that
> the abandonment of wild fruits as a dietary component may be
> responsible for many of the present day problems of modern man
> (John Robson, 'Journal of Human Nutrition', February 1978). The
> idea that primitive mankind lived under the constant threat of
> disease and starvation is a myth created by modern age
> technophiles to cloud the issue that malnutrition and disease
> are in fact the modern normal.
>
> Today American middle-class white women with their diets high in
> protein and fats give birth to babies that are more unhealthy
> than poor immigrant women. (JAMA, December 21, 1994)
>
> The food industries and the chemical companies that control much
> of modern industry seem to have such control over medical
> opinion and influence in society, that healthy nutrition, the
> most basic requirement of humans, is still spared little thought
> today. They exert this power via official bodies such as
> agricultural and medical regulatory agencies. This has ensured
> that the scientific evidence pointing to the dangers of food
> processing and intoxication with dangerous chemicals has been
> dampened down to the extent required to maintain public
> confidence. Industrial food processors employ huge teams of
> scientists, often engaged in research on animals, in order to
> demonstrate the safety of their products to regulatory bodies
> which ignore the abundant evidence of human degeneration. With
> the grain barons able to threaten a national food crisis at
> will, their ability to control social policy is potentially very
> great.
>
> In the USA it is illegal to use radical dietary therapy to treat
> serious illnesses like cancer. Similar attempts to open such
> centres in the UK have also been thwarted by the industrial
> medical interests. Apparently eating properly is dangerous
> "quackery". In the book Dirty Medicine Martin J. Walker says of
> wholefoods in modern diet:
>
> "By the mid-sixties in America, old ideas about wholefoods
> and the high quality nutritional status of vegetables and
> fruits were being revitalised by the 'health food'
> revolution. Representatives of the chemical and
> pharmaceutical industries tried to ensure, however, that
> those who believed in the 'health food' concept did not
> link concepts of nutrition with those of disease. ...
> Today there are two schools of nutrition, the 'old' and
> the 'new'. Almost all the 'old school' nutritionists are
> linked to the processed food industry and represent vested
> interests. Although such people claim to be guided by
> science, their theoretical position consists of highly
> generalised assumptions. At the centre of these
> assumptions is the 'balanced diet'."
>
>
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