Showing posts with label Beef. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Beef. Show all posts

Monday, April 1, 2024

Yet another reason to eat beef. It keeps you happy.

A 2018 study out of Stanford shows that those who have low carnitine levels were much more likely to suffer from major depressive disorder.  Did you know that beef is an incredibly important and good source of carnitine, and that people who eat plant-based diets have a very hard time raising their carnitine levels?  Yet another reason to eat beef.  It keeps you happy.

"Study linked depression to low blood levels of acetyl-L-carnitine," June 2018. 

CARNOSINE has been shown to protect the brain against aging and is not found in any significant amounts in plant foods

Carnosine improves aging-induced cognitive impairment and brain regional neurodegeneration in relation to the neuropathological alterations in the secondary structure of amyloid beta (Aβ), August 15, 2021.

Wednesday, November 25, 2020

Sacred Cow Documentary, 2020

Sacred Cow Trailer from Diana Rodgers on Vimeo.

A good documentary on how meat has been demonized in favor of high-caloric carbs, a trend that has effectively brought about metabolic disease, obesity, and diabetes on a grand scale.  You've heard this a thousand times, I am sure.  It's not like red meat is a panacea, and so though I am not sold on a keto exclusive diet, I do know that beef has its place in a healthy weekly diet.  Age concerns should be factored in, too, for the consumption of red meat increases iron overload in your body.  Nutrition journalist, Bill Sardi, explains that our bodies when young and growing in our teens require lots of red meat, iron, and calcium, and then at a certain age, like a kind of barrel, our bones are filled up with adequate amounts of these heavy minerals.  Our job after, say, age 40 for men is to maintain what we have but careful not to overload.  Iron overload is a concern because it is implicated in many age-related diseases, like cancer, type II diabetes, arthritis, gout, and others.  The key is to manage iron overload.  That can be achieved through diet by limiting, not eliminating, red meat.  If you like the taste of red meat and how it satisfies, then you can manage the iron overload by way of supplementing with IP6, a heavy mineral chelator.  Quercetin, vitamin C, and vitamin D are also iron chelators, but IP6  targets the condition pretty effectively.  

Post-menopausal women and men in their 50s have shared with me how their cravings for meat diminishes with age.  This may be their bodies telling them to avoid iron-rich foods.  

Of IP6/Inositol brands, I like Solaray's IP6/Inositol.  


Quercetin is another mineral chelator.  So if you enjoy your meats and you are of a certain age, you should be managing iron overload with one of these two supplements.  Caffeinated coffee also chelates iron, but the problem with caffeine is that it blocks vital Thiamine or B1 vitamins from getting absorbed into your muscles and nerves.  


If you're interested to learn more about managing iron overload so as to avoid age-related diseases, then check out these articles here.  A book list on the topic of IP6 appears at the bottom of this post.  

When husks (bran) were separated from rice, the B vitamins were removed, which led to deficiency diseases of pellagra and beri beri. However, in addition to B vitamins, these rice polishings (bran) provided phytic acid (IP6), also called inositol hexaphosphate, an important mineral binder and antioxidant. [Free Radical Biology Medicine 8: 61-69, 1990; J Biological Chemistry 262: 11647-50, 1987] IP6 is found in every living cell in the body and is also an important second messenger for the nervous system. The low consumption of whole grains has led to reduced consumption of IP6 and the development of iron, copper and calcium overload diseases (hemochromatosis, Wilson's disease, kidney stones, mitral valve, calcium cataracts) and other iron-overload sequelae such as hypertension, atherosclerosis, brain disorders, liver disease, colon cancer and other maladies. IP6-phytic acid has been mistakenly branded as an anti-nutrient because it interferes with mineral absorption among growing children. Nutritionists fail to recognize that most of the anemia in developing countries is caused by intestinal parasites, not the lack of iron, and that nature favors iron anemia over iron overload, since iron is a major growth factor for bacteria, viruses, fungi and tumor cells. Bran has never been fully restored to the food supply, and the world is still suffering from deficiency diseases.   

Here are a few books on IP6:

IP6 with Inositol, Question & Answer Book, L. Coles Stephen & David Steinman, 2015.  

IP6: Nature's Revolutionary Cancer Fighter, Abulkalam M. Shamsuddin, 1998.  

IP6 + Inositol: Nature's Medicine for the Millennium!  Discover How a Cocktail of Simple Molecules Can Prevent and Fight Cancer and Other DiseasesAbulkalam M. Shamsuddin, 2011.

Too Good to Be True?  Inositol + Cal Mag IP6, Dr. Kim Vanderlinden & Dr. Ivana Vucenik, 2004.

The Iron Time Bomb: How Iron Adversely Affects Your Health: How to Use Nature's Mineral Chelator, IP6 Rice Bran Extract, for Better Health, Bill Sardi, 1999. 

Thursday, December 31, 2015

"WTO . . . threatened to allow Mexico and Canada to hit the U.S. with more than $1 billion in tariffs"

Given the fact that the reach of climate change politics is global, and that much of it is run by the international communists, I do not have a soft spot in my heart for the global warming agenda.  I think that it serves sinister agendas and not the ones propagandized in the media.  For a full account of my opinion on that score, please see the documentary The Great Global Warming Swindle.  It's excellent.  It's free.  

On the issue of labelling, I think it's important because of accountability.  I mean it makes no sense really.  Do you think that Microsoft would reject labelling or Marlboro or Nike or Chevrolet?  Hardly.  But apparently the WTO has all the muscle over all the farmers here, Mexico, and Canada.  So the next time you go to the grocery store to get your burger meat or New York steak or T-Bone you won't know if came from Guadalajara, Montreal, or Chicago beef.  Some people are okay with this.  Are you?  

from Blacklisted News.  Check it out.
Some very meaty decisions out of Washington appear to be unhealthy for consumers and the environment.
First, Congress and President Barack Obama teamed up to repeal mandatory country-of-origin labeling for pork and beef products. The labeling requirements were eliminated through an attachment to the omnibus budget bill passed by Congress and signed by Obama earlier this month.
The move was prompted by threats from the World Trade Organization (WTO), which threatened to allow Mexico and Canada to hit the U.S. with more than $1 billion in tariffs if it continued to require beef and pork labeling for foreign producers. The WTO said the labels discriminate against meat from animals raised and slaughtered outside the United States.
The labeling repeal wasn’t the only action by Congress affecting the beef industry. Lawmakers renewed a provision that prevents the Environmental Protection Agency from requiring greenhouse gas emission reports from livestock producers, which are one of the country’s largest sources of methane and carbon dioxide. Livestock producers account for about 15% of the world’s emissions of greenhouse gases, more than come from automobiles.
The legislation means the U.S. government has no way of keeping track how much cattle and dairy farms are contributing to global warming. The government does collect reports from 41 other sectors of the economy, “making the meat industry the only major source of greenhouse gases in the country excluded from filing annual reports,” according to Reveal News.
-Noel Brinkerhoff
To Learn More:
U.S. Gives Meat Producers a Pass on Climate Change Emissions (by Nathan Halverson, Center for Investigative Reporting)