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I love this guy!
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http://www.nytimes.com/2015/09/24/fashio....html?_r=0

Why Everything Is Bad for You

By Jim WINDOLF    SEPT. 22, 2015


When I was growing up in the same New Jersey suburbs so expertly described in Todd Solondz movies and Tom Perrotta novels, the usual lunch for me was a sandwich consisting of Wonder Bread spread thick with Land O’ Lakes butter, a wad of Oscar Mayer bologna and a slice of American cheese. The beverage was whole milk, Tang or Coke. A stack of salty Pringles rounded off the meal.


Even if I had known back then that people who eat a lot of processed meat tend to die of heart disease or cancer, and that processed cheese is held together by emulsifiers that may lead to kidney problems, and that white bread has almost zero nutritional value, and that soft drinks are sludge, and that Pringles may not qualify as potato chips, I wouldn’t have cared. I had a lot on my mind, what with school and all the playing, and I had yet to develop the fear of death.

But now that I’m an adult who apparently has nothing better to do than bathe in the light of computer screens 16 hours a day, I have plenty of time to scroll through articles eager to convince me that food is killing me. Like everyone else, I believe every word in those articles. And when my gaze reaches the fifth paragraph, the one that inevitably quotes the university professor who has conducted the latest fear-inducing study, I nod slightly and tell myself that somehow I knew it all along, that I always had a feeling that this meat, or that vegetable, was quickening my demise. Which is strange because at the same time, I believe that food is keeping me alive.

We’re all going to die. And we all eat food. Therefore, food must be the culprit. That seems to be the absurd syllogism that lies beneath the surface of many articles in the health, food and science press.

By now we can recite the list. Too much red meat may lead to stroke, cancer and heart disease; until this year, chicken sold in supermarkets may have included arsenic; and even small amounts of pork, when undercooked, can give you trichinellosis, which is no picnic.
Fish that live high on the food chain, the especially delicious ones like king mackerel and tuna, may contain mercury, which leaves us with little choice but to order the squishy creatures at the bottom of the sea, like clams, oysters, mussels, cockles, lobsters, crabs and, don’t forget, those tasty periwinkles.
But while some health advocates are gung-ho about the bivalve shellfish, others remind us that they tend to soak up toxins, viruses and bacteria that may afflict people who eat them with three types of shellfish poisoning. The toxins that cause the poisonings, furthermore, “are not destroyed by cooking,” the Canadian Food Inspection Agency warns.

So there’s that.

Fruits and vegetables in general present a dilemma:
the ones that are commercially grown may include pesticides linked to attention deficit hyperactivity disorder; the organic variety may be no better, according to a Stanford study that found “little evidence of health benefits” for those with an organic diet. Like those federal agents who brought down Al Capone on a charge of tax evasion, we are not above indicting certain food items for reasons having nothing to do with the health risks they may pose. Almonds, for example, are packed with protein, but if you imagined that you could eat them without compunction, you are not familiar with an article in The Atlantic, “The Dark Side of Almond Use,” by Dr. James Hamblin.

He reports that a single almond soaks up 1.1 gallons of water before he goes on to argue, quite persuasively, that anyone who eats this tree nut exacerbates the disastrous ecological conditions brought on by the drought in almond-rich California. Salad eaters are perhaps equally numb to environmental concerns, according to a recent Washington Post article, which makes the case that the lettuce crop takes up too much arable space for the nutrition it delivers.

Even water has become a target. Recent articles point out that drinking eight glasses per day, long thought to be a good idea, is a fool’s game, and that too much water can kill you. Such stories stick in the mind because of their inherent irony: The very things that provide us with sustenance, they seem to argue, may be out to get us. I hope you don’t mind the idea of dining on dung beetles, caterpillars and locusts, among other such critters, because that’s what the United Nations recommends in an exhaustive report. We need to get over our aversion to entomophagy, its authors argue, if we are to survive on an overpopulated planet wracked with climate change.


Cooks.com, jumping on the bandwagon, offers a recipe for a protein-rich dish, earthworm chow. Another foodstuff of sorts now considered less of a problem than, say, meat, is dirt. Actual dirt. Until recently, the practice of eating it was classified as pathological. No more. It turns out that geophagia is widespread, relatively harmless and may protect the body from toxins. Health-scare stories, even those that are not overblown, draw their special power from the fact that we go through the days denying our mortality. Each one reminds us anew that there’s no way out.

Unable to avoid this tragic and absurd-seeming condition, we lash out against our fates by finding fresh reasons to make a villain out of the one thing that is doing its part to keep us alive: food.

We add salt to the psychic wound when we momentarily trick ourselves into believing that bugs, worms and dirt are the only things fit for human consumption.

I’m not falling for it anymore. I’m going back to bologna and cheese.
Cognitive dissonance.
Such a funny article! I love it. Favorite quote :
We’re all going to die. And we all eat food. Therefore, food must be the culprit.

I've recently heard an argument to eating foods "closer to the sun" ie. consuming foods which either take their energy directly from the sun (plants) or at least near the sun (insects and the like, which apparently pack more protein per gram than animal meat). I'm not really one to count calories or keep strict track of what I'm eating, but I do enjoy this argument, it coincides with my knowledge on the food chain itself, namely that as you go higher and higher along the predatory chain, you are required to consume more and more food to obtain energy.... in my own experimentation I've noticed that I can consume three "low calorie" meals of veggies and the like per day and feel more energetically replenished than if I were eating meat, or more "processed" foods. From time to time though I find I go into my 'Pillsbury Doughboy State' where I feel like i need to eat 'shitty' foods, and reason that I need to physically pack on some pounds now as a result of needing spiritual energy later  BigSmile

However on the flip side, I've had conversations with energetic and shamanic healers who state that it really doesn't matter what sort of foods you eat, but rather, the intensity of which you put intention into what you're eating....one healer basically eats whatever she wants, and at age 60 doesn't look a day over 30... however in my mind this is representative of a highly disciplined being who understands the intricacies of magick...so in the meantime, I'm confined to trying to eat 'healthy' foods Tongue yummy!!
I've come to the same conclusion that it has to be the intention going into the food that you choose to eat.

there is someone on this forum that likes to guilt trip people into becoming vegetarians and i meditated on 2nd density awareness for a long time why would the plant have any less feelings than the animal? it is ridiculous to say there is a difference there is no difference.

both beings are grateful to provide sustenance as they pass, how much gratitude is there is based on how much thanks is provided.

sparks of the one infinite live, breathe, eat, drink, s***, hear, the creator at all times. it's arbritrary to think one set of 2nd density life forms should not be for consumption while other 2nd density life forms are okay for consumption.

it's just racist... that's why you have these usual diets of cow pork and chicken, and they have to pick these like smart animals. it's sad.

but then like people complain about things eaten in the west, and compare it to the east. cockroaches are related to shrimp.... by genus.

anyway sorry for the rant.
(02-05-2016, 11:13 AM)BlatzAdict Wrote: [ -> ]I've come to the same conclusion that it has to be the intention going into the food that you choose to eat.

there is someone on this forum that likes to guilt trip people into becoming vegetarians and i meditated on 2nd density awareness for a long time why would the plant have any less feelings than the animal? it is ridiculous to say there is a difference there is no difference.

both beings are grateful to provide sustenance as they pass, how much gratitude is there is based on how much thanks is provided.

sparks of the one infinite live, breathe, eat, drink, s***, hear, the creator at all times. it's arbritrary to think one set of 2nd density life forms should not be for consumption while other 2nd density life forms are okay for consumption.

it's just racist... that's why you have these usual diets of cow pork and chicken, and they have to pick these like smart animals. it's sad.

but then like people complain about things eaten in the west, and compare it to the east. cockroaches are related to shrimp.... by genus.

anyway sorry for the rant.

DUDE!!!! Haha I had to go and find this video as it is totally in line with what you're saying! Sorry veggie people, but we gotta eat something.

The discussion about vegetarianism and veganism has been split into the appropriate thread here.

I highly suggest that anyone involved in the discussion who has not read that thread, as well as the "In regards to eating meat" thread, to do so if you are interested in discussing this topic.