Low Carb Food
"Low-carb vs. Low-fat Diet. It's a Knockout!
What about unprocessed, non-manufactured foods?
Low carb food - With all the focus on low-carb versus low-fat diets in the news these days, you
might think those are the only two options to consider when it comes to losing weight and reversing obesity.
Proponents of one diet or the other debate over the merits of their particular dieting strategy,
but neither seem to recognize that the entire "low-carb versus low-fat diet" argument only serves as a distraction from the real solution to
weight loss: shifting to a unprocessed, non-manufactured foods.
The real test about weight loss should compare diets consisting of processed foods versus
unprocessed foods. What is a processed food?
It's a food that is manufactured and typically sold in pretty packaging at a very high markup
price over the cost of its basic ingredients. Breakfast cereal is a processed food.
Most frozen foods are also processed foods. Dinner mixes, macaroni and cheese boxes, canned
soups, lunch snack boxes, packaged meats, crackers, breads and many other grocery items are all processed foods.
So what's wrong with processed foods? First off, they are usually manufactured with heavily
refined, processed ingredients such as white flour. This refined white flour has had virtually all of its nutrition stripped away during the
milling process, leaving only empty calories that have been shown to promote nutritional deficiencies and chronic diseases like colon cancer.
Processed foods are also typically made with large quantities of added sugars or other
sweeteners. Many contain high-fructose corn syrup or common table sugar to add flavor.
Many such foods are also manufactured with hydrogenated vegetable oil, a dangerous form of
dietary fat that promotes nervous system disorders end aggressively attacks the cardiovascular health of human beings.
These are oils that have been artificially modified through an unnatural process that makes them
foreign to the human body, and yet virtually every cracker product, cookie, margarine, or baked goods product contains hydrogenated oils. It's
the mass-poisoning of America, brought to you by your local grocer.
That's not all: processed foods also contain chemical flavor enhancers such as monosodium
glutamate as well as preservatives, artificial colors, and other chemical additives.
Packaged meats, for example, are made with sodium nitrite, a highly carcinogenic chemical that
promotes aggressive cancer in the human body.
Put it all together and you get a food product that's dangerous to the health of any human
being, regardless of whether it's low-fat or low-carb. In reality, virtually all processed foods are unhealthy for human consumption, even if
they are low-fat or low-carb.
Thus, the argument about low-fat diets versus low-carb diets ignores the far more important
question: processed foods versus unprocessed foods.
What is an unprocessed food? These are foods made from natural ingredients -- the way foods are
found in nature. All fresh fruits, vegetables, nuts, whole grains, herbs, and fresh meat products are unprocessed foods.
These foods are all high in fiber, high in antioxidants, and yet exhibit low caloric density
which promotes healthy body weight and reduces the risk of obesity. These foods offer much higher vitamin and mineral content than processed
foods, all while avoiding the unhealthy additives, oils and sweeteners found in processed foods.
So, as usual, the so-called health authorities in this country are arguing about the wrong
thing. While Americans continue to debate the merits of low-carb versus low-fat diets, the real truth about how to lose weight never gets openly
discussed: and that is to stop buying manufactured foods and turn to natural foods / whole foods the way they are found in nature.
Quiz time: can you guess why there is never a discussion about moving away from manufactured
foods? Simple: manufactured foods are extremely profitable.
Grocery stores make far more money on manufactured foods than fresh vegetables. And because
these food products are so profitable, they are heavily advertised and promoted to consumers (who tend to blindly purchase whatever product is
frequently advertised on television).
Money from the manufacturers of such products provides financial support for virtually every
newspaper, magazine, and television network in the nation.
The mainstream press depends on revenues from food manufacturing companies, including junk food
companies and soft drink companies that sell products strongly correlated with the development of chronic diseases like cancer, diabetes,
osteoporosis and obesity.
Thus, the business of selling disease-promoting, obesity-encouraging foods is extremely
profitable to everyone in the industry. To openly discuss the strategy of moving away from processed, manufactured foods would alienate most
advertisers who support these information publishers, and it would drain profits from grocery stores as well.
And that's precisely why you continued to see the headlines dominated by the rather worthless
discussion of low-fat versus low-carb diets. It's a classic shell game deception, all orchestrated for your entertainment by the very same
industry that's giving you chronic disease.
Look, when you get right down to it people who are losing weight shout, "Low carb and lovin it!"
Here's To Your Health, Ethan Miller Low Carb Oracle
To discover what the low carb industry
doesn't want you to know CLICK HERE!
Low carb food
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