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Modern wheat a "perfect, chronic poison," doctor says

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  • Modern wheat a "perfect, chronic poison," doctor says

    (CBS News) Modern wheat is a "perfect, chronic poison," according to Dr. William Davis, a cardiologist who has published a book all about the world's most popular grain.

    Davis said that the wheat we eat these days isn't the wheat your grandma had: "It's an 18-inch tall plant created by genetic research in the '60s and '70s," he said on "CBS This Morning." "This thing has many new features nobody told you about, such as there's a new protein in this thing called gliadin. It's not gluten. I'm not addressing people with gluten sensitivities and celiac disease. I'm talking about everybody else because everybody else is susceptible to the gliadin protein that is an opiate. This thing binds into the opiate receptors in your brain and in most people stimulates appetite, such that we consume 440 more calories per day, 365 days per year."

    Asked if the farming industry could change back to the grain it formerly produced, Davis said it could, but it would not be economically feasible because it yields less per acre. However, Davis said a movement has begun with people turning away from wheat - and dropping substantial weight.

    "If three people lost eight pounds, big deal," he said. "But we're seeing hundreds of thousands of people losing 30, 80, 150 pounds. Diabetics become no longer diabetic; people with arthritis having dramatic relief. People losing leg swelling, acid reflux, irritable bowel syndrome, depression, and on and on every day."

    To avoid these wheat-oriented products, Davis suggests eating "real food," such as avocados, olives, olive oil, meats, and vegetables. "(It's) the stuff that is least likely to have been changed by agribusiness," he said. "Certainly not grains. When I say grains, of course, over 90 percent of all grains we eat will be wheat, it's not barley... or flax. It's going to be wheat.

    "It's really a wheat issue."

    Some health resources, such as the Mayo Clinic, advocate a more balanced diet that does include wheat. But Davis said on "CTM" they're just offering a poor alternative.

    "All that literature says is to replace something bad, white enriched products with something less bad, whole grains, and there's an apparent health benefit - 'Let's eat a whole bunch of less bad things.' So I take...unfiltered cigarettes and replace with Salem filtered cigarettes, you should smoke the Salems. That's the logic of nutrition, it's a deeply flawed logic. What if I take it to the next level, and we say, 'Let's eliminate all grains,' what happens then?

    "That's when you see, not improvements in health, that's when you see transformations in health."

    Source
    The Hackmaster

  • #2
    I read all kinds of stuff like this from www.naturalnews.com and www.truththeory.com.
    July 7, 2019

    https://www.4shared.com/s/fLf6qQ66Zee
    https://www.sendspace.com/file/jvsdbd

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    • #3
      As far as I can tell, his claim that gliadin produces an opiate response is based on a study done 30 years ago on slices of rat brains, using the chemical components of the protein. If follow-up clinical studies were ever done, I can't find them. I'm guessing the 440 calorie, appetite stimulus claim is based on the fact that he sells more books if he says it.

      I really want to see actual, clinical studies done on this stuff. I keep hearing loads of bullshit tossed around, and I'd just like to somebody do real research and contribute real, scientific knowledge for a change, instead of writing books or selling supplements that purport to cure all ills. I keep having friends, who I've heard talk about eating Oreos by the sleeve in the past, talk about how much bloody weight they lost on wheat-free, vegan, primal, lemonade and hot sauce, etc. diets, and none of them ever stop to think that maybe, just maybe, thinking and caring about what they shove in their gob has more to do with it than the amazing weight-loss power of the lima bean. Hell, a few years ago the big fad was that salt was poison. I never hear about that one any more.
      Last edited by Pyriel; 11-25-2012, 11:04:58 PM.

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      • #4
        Looking for real research isn't easy. Even if you find it, some people exaggerate things or lie about the results to get it published and out into the scientific community to get attention and more funding into whatever else they do. Research and results can be bought.
        July 7, 2019

        https://www.4shared.com/s/fLf6qQ66Zee
        https://www.sendspace.com/file/jvsdbd

        Comment


        • #5
          Real scientific journals do occasionally get duped, or they publish studies in the interests of being fair that are severely flawed. The advantage with scientific literature is that your methods and so forth are on the table and can be evaluated. If you don't include them, then you'll be asked why not, your errors will be pointed out, and the system eventually corrects itself. It's not always as fast as people would like. Sometimes it takes years for another researcher to fix a flawed paper, and sometimes the errors are so egregious, and the conclusions so outlandish that nobody bothers, which tends to piss off believers. The fact that scientific community isn't perfect and sinless is no excuse for just pulling facts and figures out of your ass, and claiming that they're unassailable because you've been a doctor for 30 years, or whatever.

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