jet

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] jet@hackertalks.com 1 points 5 minutes ago

It looks interesting, thanks for the tip!

(you’re not supposed to eat suet, by the way, as that’s burned)

Suet is the preferred fat for making pemmican!

[–] jet@hackertalks.com -2 points 1 hour ago

Have fun with your eventual colon cancer.

Do you have non-observational data to support this position that the lack of fibre is casual for colon cancer?

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 0 points 2 hours ago* (last edited 2 hours ago) (1 children)

You were removed from the community 8 months ago - https://discuss.online/modlog?page=1&actionType=All&userId=2971197

At the time the automation identified your user behavior as inorganic.

but mistakes can happen, perhaps the script was in error. would you like to be added back into the community?

Here is the guiding moderation philosophy of that community: https://hackertalks.com/post/13655318

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 2 points 2 hours ago

A smoking burn! Really raking them over the coals.

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 3 points 4 hours ago (1 children)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirepoix

mixture of diced vegetables cooked with fat (usually butter) for a long time on low heat without colouring or browning. The ingredients are not sautéed or otherwise hard-cooked, because the intention is to sweeten rather than caramelise them.

Vegetable pemmican?

4
home made Bone Broth (hackertalks.com)
submitted 5 hours ago* (last edited 5 hours ago) by jet@hackertalks.com to c/carnivore@discuss.online
 

Wonderful collagen!

Yes, some celery in the broth... still getting everyone onboard with no-plants. The person who added the celery into the broth doesn't even like celery, they were just following a guide. Baby steps.

 

After more than ten years of treating patients with a carnivore diet and studying the relationship between diet and chronic disease, I have learned that most of what we are told about healthy eating is not only wrong but is actively making people sicker.

summerizerCore protocol

  • The carnivore diet is simple: water, fatty meat, and nothing else.
  • Simple execution keeps results from breaking down through added complexity.
  • "Everything in moderation" is poor guidance because some things are harmful at any dose.
  • Junk food, sugar, alcohol, drugs, and cyanide do not become good because the amount is small.
  • Most failure happens in the margins, not from one obvious week of eating cake all day.

Margins and re-exposure

  • People often miss results because they eat too little meat, eat too little fat, or fear fat.
  • The body can only absorb so much fat before excess fat leaves through stools.
  • Soft stools without loose stools are the practical sign that fat intake is high enough.
  • Meat is not magic; the major benefit is removal of substances that cause harm.
  • Small returns to stevia, pop-tarts, salad, asparagus, grains, broccoli, sugar, or alcohol can matter.
  • Sensitive people can relapse from a small trigger, especially with Crohn's disease or other autoimmune issues.
  • A relapse after re-exposure is like lead poisoning returning after drinking from lead pipes again.

Why the diet works

  • Fatty meat gives the vitamins, minerals, proteins, and fats needed in bioavailable forms and useful proportions.
  • Supplements, powders, pills, and fortified junk cannot make Coca-Cola, dirt, or cereal into proper food.
  • The issue is not only missing nutrients; harmful compounds also arrive with the wrong foods.
  • Plants use defensive chemicals, and those compounds can be a problem for humans.
  • Meat supplies needed nutrients, while plants do not supply anything necessary that meat cannot supply.

Disease mechanisms and examples

  • Chronic disease comes from toxic exposure plus malnutrition caused by a species-inappropriate diet.
  • Low B12 can damage neurological development and neurodegeneration even when values sit near common ranges.
  • High blood sugar glycation damages arteries and blood supply, which drives diabetes complications called carbohydrate poisoning.
  • Ketosis and ketones can improve cardiac output and heart contraction in heart failure.
  • Lean mass hyperresponders challenge the cholesterol model because some high-LDL ketogenic patients do not progress and some reverse plaque.
  • Saturated fat is not the heart-risk story taught in medical school; the JACC work supports that point.
  • Autoimmune conditions fit plant-toxin and lectin mechanisms better than the idea that the body simply attacks itself.
  • Crohn's disease can improve when diet removes suspected triggers, including through elemental or exclusion-style diets.

Species-specific diet logic

  • Every other animal has a species-appropriate diet and gets sick when fed inappropriate food.
  • Zoos and parks warn people not to feed animals because wrong food makes animals sick.
  • Humans also have specific nutrient needs and specific things that harm us.
  • The modern rise of diabetes, heart disease, cancer, and obesity followed major dietary changes in recent decades.
  • A sick lion is not fixed with carbs, processed food, vegetables, or broccoli, and humans are not fixed by reducing nutrient quality.

Practical finish

  • Plants can work as medicine because medicine is a toxin that can bring more benefit than harm under the right circumstance.
  • Outside that circumstance, those toxins still cause harm.
  • Poor results require checks on strictness, enough food, enough fat, sleep, stress, and fresh air.
  • Some autoimmune cases need only red meat and water, and some need grass-fed and finished red meat and water.
  • The answer is not adding toxins or lowering nutrition; the answer is fixing what remains in the margins.

References

1
submitted 8 hours ago* (last edited 8 hours ago) by jet@hackertalks.com to c/carnivore@discuss.online
 

Does carnivore make you stronger or weaker? I hear all the time that you need carbs to perform at your best athletically. Is that actually true, or have we been misinformed?

summerizerLow-carb athletic performance

  • High-level performance without high carbohydrate intake is possible, and many records in concept rowing were broken while eating carnivore.
  • The carbohydrate advantage is strongest in prolonged high-intensity endurance sports such as marathon running, cycling, and fast cross-country skiing.
  • Those sports are a small slice of athletics, and many sports allow elite performance without constant high VO2max output.
  • A hard 500-meter row is intensely demanding, and low-carb adaptation can support that kind of output.

Fat adaptation and the crossover point

  • The crossover point is where increasing intensity moves fuel use from mostly fat toward mostly glucose.
  • The crossover point varies by person; at maximal intensity glucose remains the main fuel.
  • A well-adapted athlete may have a higher crossover point, possibly around 80% to 85% of VO2max.
  • That matters because team and field sports usually involve short bursts, not continuous marathon-level output.
  • Adequate adaptation is step one: research often uses about four weeks, while carnivore adaptation may take three to six months in real life.

Hydration, electrolytes, and bicarbonate

  • Muscles perform better when hydrated, and dehydration can cost 2% to 3% at levels where small differences matter.
  • Hydration can be handled with fluid and electrolytes before hard sessions.
  • About a liter of electrolyte water before a hard workout is the practical example.
  • Sodium bicarbonate, essentially baking soda, can buffer acidity when taken before exercise.
  • A small dose such as about a half teaspoon in water one or two hours before training can help, though gut tolerance matters.
  • Studies show bicarbonate can improve performance by a couple percent, which is large in world-class competition.

Meal timing and blood glucose

  • Hard all-out efforts are best done fed when performance is the goal.
  • Fasted training can be useful for some people, but fed training is better for maintaining blood glucose during hard work.
  • The key risk is relative hypoglycemia when liver glycogen is depleted and blood glucose falls.
  • Tim Noakes's large/small glucose-pool model separates muscle glycogen from liver glycogen and blood glucose.
  • The smaller pool, liver glycogen plus blood glucose, may matter more for performance than total muscle glycogen.
  • Meal timing helps protect that pool during high-intensity work that lasts long enough to matter.
  • Steak nutrients may not reach the bloodstream for roughly three to four hours, so timing a large steak several hours before training is the practical pattern.
  • Amino acids can stimulate alpha-cell glucagon release, which promotes hepatic glycogenolysis and raises available blood glucose.
  • This timing avoids the low-glucose crash during hard training.

Training boundaries

  • Low carb does not remove the need to train hard and train intelligently.
  • The best fit is most sports and most high-level efforts, not a sub-two-hour Olympic-style marathon.
  • Success requires being adapted, fueled, hydrated, and trained.
  • Training remains the biggest driver: train well, train smart, and do the work.

References

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 3 points 9 hours ago* (last edited 9 hours ago)

Diet has a huge impact on the brain and mood.

There is lots of research coming out on the metabolic brain connection, basically try a well formulated ketogenic diet for a few weeks and see if you feel better, keep a daily mood journal!. Many, many, many people do, especially around anxiety symptoms. See the metabolic mind organization for the current research results.

One warning if your taking medication: changing your metabolism can make medicine much stronger then anticipated, so work with your doctor to modify prescriptions as needed.

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 10 points 9 hours ago

$2000 for a phone is a big ask, unlock the bootloader and I'll think about it

 

Dr. Eric Westman sits down with Craig Emmerich, co-author of The Art of Metabolic Health, to discuss why metabolic health is often misunderstood by modern medicine and how low carb, keto, carnivore, protein, and fat-burning can change the way we think about chronic disease. Craig shares how his wife Maria’s health journey led them into the low carb world, why doctors still often fail to ask about food, how the body prioritizes alcohol, glucose, fat, and protein, and why ketosis is a normal metabolic state rather than something to fear. They also discuss dementia, kidney health, coffee, children’s nutrition, protein, and the power of real food in helping people take back their health.

summerizerOrigin and background

  • Maria’s IBS, acid reflux, PCOS, weight gain, and prescription-first medical visit made food the missing variable.
  • A vet asked what the dog was eating, Maria saw that her doctor had not asked the same question, and low carb resolved her problems while she lost about 60 pounds.
  • Recipe help became adoption fundraising, then more than 20 books; Craig later moved from engineering into biochemistry after Lyme disease led him deeper into carnivore.

Purpose of the new book

  • The Art of Metabolic Health combines Maria’s practical protocols with Craig’s fuel-metabolism and biochemistry work.
  • The book uses flexibility: keto, carnivore, and low carb sit on a spectrum, and any diet fails when people cannot sustain it.
  • Recipe design, coaching, testimonials, and individual adjustment work alongside the science.

Fuel priority and ketosis

  • Oxidative priority explains why alcohol burns first, glucose burns next, protein mainly supplies building blocks, and fat burns best when carbohydrate is low.
  • The pancreas acts like a traffic cop, moving fuels through blood that normally holds only about 100-120 calories at rest.
  • Sugar being burned early does not make it preferred; it reflects limited storage and higher risk when blood glucose runs too high.
  • Low-carb eating lowers the need to burn incoming glucose, raises fat oxidation, and can improve satiety, energy, focus, and afternoon stamina.
  • Ketosis is a normal human and mammalian metabolic condition seen with fasting and infancy, not an abnormal danger by itself.

Clinical signals and research gaps

  • Testimonials point to research opportunities in early dementia, Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, IBD, kidney dysfunction, diabetes, obesity, heartburn, PCOS, and hypertension.
  • Melissa’s assisted-living example moved from dementia-range testing to normal-range testing after six months of recipe-based eating with other modalities in the background.
  • IBD moved from testimonials to a published case series, while kidney-function chart review work did not show damage from low-carb care.
  • Protein comes first for amino acids, muscle, vitamins, minerals, and bioavailable nutrients, especially from animal foods.

Families, children, and friction points

  • Children need direct instruction in cooking and food quality, not years of sugar and junk followed by an expectation that healthy eating arrives at adulthood.
  • Coffee and caffeine can be harmless for many people, but sleep trouble, hunger, lipid shifts, mold, heavy metals, or immune stress make a coffee-free trial useful.
  • The book serves readers, clinicians, nurses, students, coaches, and families seeking practical metabolic-health education outside usual medical training.

References

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 2 points 10 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago)

The next research question is : how would a high carb diet with sglt2 inhibitors compare against a ketogenic diet without sglt2 inhibitors in IHF? i.e. are the benefits from the slgt2 based on ketone metabolism? we don't know. The east-asian's might also have non-impaired ketogenic metabolism without the sglt2s.

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 1 points 10 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago) (1 children)

Mendelian randomization (hypothesis generating) of epidemiology (a systematic review of epidemiology is still only as strong as the epidemiology itself, so not at all) in patients with heart failure on sglt2's. Lower ketone bodies had better HF outcomes, but also along ethnic lines (so other variables could account for it as well)

Not that these populations were not doing ketogenic eating patterns, or low carb, just their background ketone levels in their typical diet while on sglt2s, so high carb

The MR finding that genetically elevated ketones causally increase HF risk challenges the “ketones-as-superfuel” hypothesis and suggests potential harm from chronic ketone elevation. This aligns with emerging data from genetic mouse models showing that constitutive ketone overproduction or impaired use leads to cardiac dysfunction.

But that doesn't follow also from the paper

Ketone metabolism dysfunction was defined as β-HB levels in the highest tertile (>2.41 mmol/L) combined with acetoacetate:β-HB ratio <0.15, indicative of impaired ketone use.

SGLT2 inhibitors promote endogenous ketogenesis through multiple mechanisms including hepatic substrate availability modification and direct metabolic effects, potentially contributing to their cardioprotective properties.

So its possible the sglt2 is interfering with ketone use (hence the ketone build up in a high carb diet), resulting in their negative outcomes, but their opinion is against ketones in general.

Even if you take this epidemiology as truth - are you a east asian taking a sglt2 alongside a high carb diet while maintaining ketone levels > 2.25mmol/l?

 

Background - Heart failure with ischemic cause is associated with substantial cardiovascular mortality. SGLT2 (sodium glucose cotransporter 2) inhibitors demonstrate cardiovascular benefits, but interindividual response variability remains poorly understood. We investigated the relationship between baseline ketone body metabolism and SGLT2 inhibitor response in heart failure with ischemic cause across diverse genetic backgrounds.

Methods - We analyzed metabolomics data from 3847 patients with heart failure with ischemic cause across 23 countries (2020–2024). Ketone body metabolites (β‐hydroxybutyrate, acetoacetate, acetone) were quantified by liquid chromatography‐mass spectrometry. SGLT2 inhibitor response was assessed via a composite end point including cardiovascular mortality, heart failure hospitalization, and kidney function decline. Analyses included multivariate Cox regression, machine learning (Random Forest, Extreme Gradient Boosting), and Mendelian randomization, integrating Global Burden of Disease 2021 data across 5 genetic ancestry groups.

Results -Baseline β‐hydroxybutyrate inversely correlated with SGLT2 inhibitor outcomes (r=−0.67, P<0.001). The lowest ketone tertile demonstrated superior outcomes (hazard ratio [HR], 0.58 [95% CI, 0.51–0.66], P<0.001), and the highest tertile showed elevated risk (HR, 1.58 [95% CI, 1.39–1.79], P<0.001). East Asian populations exhibited 34.24% higher baseline ketone levels (2.47±0.83 versus 1.84±0.61 mmol/L, P<0.001) with attenuated treatment benefit versus European ancestry. Machine learning models achieved area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.8245 (95% CI, 0.8012–0.8478) predicting individual outcomes from baseline metabolomic profiles.

Conclusions - Baseline ketone body metabolism is strongly associated with SGLT2 inhibitor outcomes in heart failure with ischemic cause, with marked interancestry variability. Metabolomic profiling may inform precision medicine approaches to therapeutic decision‐making, pending prospective validation.

Full Paper - https://doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.125.048427

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 3 points 11 hours ago

As long as there isn't a significant carry cost, evolution will select for people who can subsist on the broadest inputs. It's reasonable to say plants are famine food, and humans have to survive famines on occasion.

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 1 points 13 hours ago

When traveling I usually get two esims from different providers, for some level of redundancy

 

David Baszucki - founder and CEO of Roblox - sits down with his son Matthew for the first time on a podcast together. They walk through Matthew's five-year journey with severe, treatment-resistant bipolar I disorder: the first manic episode in 2016, multiple hospitalisations, the dozens of medications, the 2017 incident in Los Angeles when David flew down on a rescue mission to find Matt homeless on the streets, and the discovery by Matthew’s mother Jan of ketogenic therapy that sent Matt's symptoms into remission. David and Matthew talk about how their family journey led to the establishment of the rapidly growing field of metabolic psychiatry their family now funds, and the daily metabolic practices both father and son use today.

summerizerFamily crisis and biology

  • Mental illness is physical and biological, like a broken arm, heart disease, or cancer, and the Baszucki family learned this through manic episodes, hospital doors, and uncertainty.
  • The first major break began around March 2016 after an earlier possible hypomanic blip, with equinox timing later becoming part of the watched pattern.
  • During mania, insight was almost absent; the experience read as a spiritual awakening until a 2018 care-center moment created awareness of illness and recovery need.
  • The 2017 Los Angeles episode was the scariest point: streets, lost belongings, a Starbucks rescue, careful de-escalation, and voluntary admission.

Keto turning point

  • Before keto, the system left Matt functional but sedated on about five heavy medicines, with mania still pushing through underneath.
  • After Jan found keto resources, a doctor, and a dietitian in 2020, Matt had enough insight to start in January.
  • Within 10 to 12 weeks, sleep normalized, the March danger window passed without extra medicine, executive function returned, and medication tapering began.
  • A resort carb mistake quickly brought hypomanic signals, then stricter keto with fish and butter restored stability in 1 to 2 days.

Care-system gaps

  • No doctor had offered keto, even after many hospital stays, 5150 experience, TMS, sauna protocols, nonstandard doctors, therapy, and 20-plus medicines.
  • Psychiatry functioned like a 1950s cigarette system, with revenue around recurring medicines and little incentive around food.
  • Psych wards fed root beer, chocolate milk, and other carbohydrate-heavy foods during brain-energy crisis.
  • Future care needs locked or residential settings where ketogenic food, dietitians, outdoor movement, and months of stability can produce hard data.

Metabolic model

  • Bipolar, depression, schizophrenia, diabetes, Alzheimer's, obesity, and cancer fit a larger metabolism-and-energy map.
  • Seasonal rhythms, March mania, September depression, hibernation, sunlight, sleep, social pattern, and exercise all point back to environment.
  • Agriculture, refined carbohydrates, sugar, corn syrup, and insulin resistance may overload people whose brains need steadier fat-based fuel.
  • The neurotransmitter story is too narrow; glucose metabolism, mitochondria, insulin sensitivity, inflammation, oxidative stress, glutamate, and nutrients matter.

Research path

  • Metabolic psychiatry is moving from family experience into papers, case write-ups, small trials, and randomized trials.
  • The Australian RCT, the UK 206-person imaging RCT, and the Edinburgh pilot work matter because mainstream medicine needs controlled data.
  • The pilot imaging work connects ketosis with lower brain glutamate in bipolar disorder, and seasonal metabolomics connects spring bipolar patterns with glutamate metabolism.
  • The cancer mitochondria example shows why the nucleus-only disease story can fail at cellular-energy level.

Daily protocol

  • The foundation is strict keto or carnivore-leaning eating, measured ketones, one or two meals, sometimes OMAD, and abstinence from drugs, alcohol, nicotine, and caffeine.
  • Diet ranks above sleep and exercise because strict diet allows some sleep disruption, while diet disruption breaks the system.
  • Exercise still matters: lifting, hard cardio, weighted vest hiking, sunlight, fasting, darkness at night, and aligned daily rhythm all help.
  • For work and life, ketones function like premium brain fuel, producing steadier optimism, problem solving, abstraction, and energy.

Advice and cautions

  • For bipolar, ease into keto over 10 to 12 weeks because early hypomanic symptoms can happen.
  • Use a dietitian, metabolic psychiatrist, or doctor when possible; keep ketogenic adherence daily like medicine for 9, 12, or 18 months before reassessment.
  • Parents should keep trying, seek multiple opinions, and explore a wide range of options including keto under doctor care.
  • The content is informational only; dramatic and dangerous effects can occur without proper supervision, so medical medication or lifestyle changes need clinician input.

References

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Using a bioenergetic approach and physiological, anatomical, archaeological, ethnographic, isotopic, botanical, genetic and zoological evidence my research has identified an obligated animal fat requirement in human nutrition beginning with the Homo erectus. In a recent paper published PLoS ONE (linked in bio), written in co-operation with researchers from Tel Aviv University: we applied a bioenergetic model to test the hypothesis that shortage of animal fat that developed locally in the Levant 400 thousand years ago due to the disappearance of elephants was an important factor in the evolution of a new modern human lineage. Presently, we continue with the application of the Obligated Fat Model in an attempt to understand more recent critical developments in humans' existence. Some of our present research results will be reported.

summerizerMan the fat hunter

  • The unusually large human brain is the starting problem: it stands out in the animal kingdom like the giraffe's neck.
  • The puzzle is why a successful 900 cc Homo erectus brain grew by about 50% into Homo sapiens while the chimpanzee brain stayed stable for roughly seven million years.
  • Humans were fat hunters; following animal fat explains the shift from Homo erectus to Homo sapiens.

Fat as the real target

  • Ethnographic and zooarchaeological work links hunting to fat before lean meat.
  • John Speth, Jack Brink, and Norman Tindale tie hunting choices to animal fat, body part selection, and abandonment of fatless animals.
  • Lean meat protein was not the central energy problem, because humans cannot convert unlimited protein into energy.
  • Protein intake is capped near 35% of calories; the remaining energy must come from plant foods and animal fat.

Obligatory fat and prey size

  • A Homo erectus living where plant foods were abundant could meet more energy needs from plants and needed less fat from animals.
  • A Homo erectus living where plant foods were scarce and large animals were common needed more animal calories and therefore fatter prey.
  • At 2,700 calories per day, a Levantine winter diet with 1,300 plant calories leaves 950 calories from protein and 550 from fat.
  • In the dry summer, plant calories fall to about 900, protein reaches its ceiling, and obligatory fat rises to about 850 calories.
  • Higher travel costs raise daily needs toward 3,000 calories, pushing obligatory fat to about 1,150 calories and making large, fat animals essential.

Elephants, deer, and the Levantine shift

  • Elephants were ideal prey because they stayed large and fat across seasons.
  • After 400,000 years ago, elephant bones are absent from Levantine sites such as Qesem, and the prey base shifts toward fallow deer.
  • Earlier Acheulian sites in the Levant received over 60% of animal calories from elephants and only about 15% from small animals.
  • At Qesem Cave, about 60% of calories came from 90 kg fallow deer and less than 40% from large animals.
  • Hunting many elusive deer was a different survival problem from hunting a few elephants that supplied both meat and fat.

Prime-age hunting as the fat solution

  • The unusual Qesem pattern is mature fallow deer, not random prey ages or mainly young and old animals.
  • Fat is the reason: mature animals of the right sex in the right season supply much more fat than random hunting.
  • J. Stanton's caribou calculation shows that alternating mature females from November to April and mature males from May to October raises fat calories from about 36% to about 56%.
  • This strategy requires recognizing sex, age, season, body condition, and herd patterns before the kill.
  • Experienced hunters can spot fat animals through body curves and coat sheen, and this knowledge must be learned.

Brains, tracking, and Homo sapiens

  • Small-animal fat hunting requires tracking, hypothesis formation, and constant revision from sparse clues under changing weather and soil conditions.
  • A serious tracker stores and uses an enormous catalogue of tracks and signs; Mammal Tracks and Sign shows the scale of that knowledge.
  • Qesem Cave also has advanced behavior: flint blades, Quina scrapers, controlled fire, meat sharing, and human teeth assigned to the Homo sapiens lineage.
  • The Zuttiyeh skull adds a related clue from another Acheulo-Yabrudian cave, near the divergence of Neanderthals and Homo sapiens.

Refining the expensive-tissue idea

  • Aiello and Wheeler connected big brains to high-quality food and high-quality food to big brains.
  • Fat sits at the center of "high-quality food": fat allowed large brains, and large brains allowed humans to obtain fat.
  • The African timeline has the same sequence: elephants disappear with the Acheulian, and Homo sapiens later emerges after similar fat-hunting pressures.
  • Human evolution traded the ability to process large amounts of fiber for brains capable of gaining animal fat.
  • The practical implication is direct: humans evolved to eat animal fat.

References

.

Here is the paper they published - https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0028689

 

Sharing my carnivore journey as an ex-vegan of 14-years who developed ulcerative colitis while vegan and only got it into permanent, natural remission once I started the carnivore diet.

She does have a more recent update, but google age restricted it..... that is curious.

summerizerBackground and scope

  • Vegan eating ended in May 2021, and carnivore eating began by early 2022, making this an almost two-year update.
  • This follow-up focuses on later, more nuanced benefits that were not obvious in the beginning.
  • Sharing the health history is not an attack on vegans; the point is the health change after diet change.
  • People with autoimmune disorders can use this experience as a possible lead for their own trial-and-error.

Ulcerative colitis and digestion

  • Carnivore is the only way of eating that put ulcerative colitis into actual remission.
  • Before strict carnivore, the worst symptoms had eased, but diarrhea and constipation remained.
  • Blood in stool went away as eating became stricter around unprocessed animal products.
  • Normal digestion depends on avoiding seasonings and most plant foods, because even small inflammatory triggers cause diarrhea, constipation, and sometimes digestive pain.
  • The regular exceptions are organic coffee and organic lemon juice in water, used for vitamin C and electrolytes.
  • Redmond Real Salt is the only seasoning-type item that does not cause the same inflammatory reaction.

Skin, complexion, and inflammation signals

  • Skin looks younger than at the end of vegan eating, with less under-eye puffiness and fewer visible aging signs.
  • Complexion changed from a yellowish tone to a rosier, more natural tone.
  • Clear skin is the normal baseline when the diet stays strict.
  • Breakouts and a rosacea-like effect occur when added foods or seasonings trigger inflammation.
  • Skin changes are a major reason to keep the diet limited to the tolerated foods.

Mental state, focus, and daily functioning

  • Anxiety has done a complete 180 compared with the vegan years.
  • University class speaking used to cause severe anxiety, loss of clarity, and difficulty getting through the moment.
  • Anxiety still exists at times, but it is easier to manage, and daily life is more levelheaded and focused.
  • Focus, memory, and productivity improved enough to support a clothing line, better content creation, and work on a second novel.
  • Vegan-era words about feeling better were tied to cognitive dissonance, because the physical look, mood, cravings, and health results did not match.
  • Carnivore benefits feel concrete because they show up in visible skin, daily mood, focus, and physical health.

Body composition, cravings, and PMS

  • Body weight was not high at the end of vegan eating, but bloating and puffiness were there.
  • Carnivore made the bloating and puffiness go away.
  • The body is easier to keep toned, and weight stays stable without calorie counting or fighting constant cravings.
  • Vegan eating involved calorie-counting, mental unsoundness, and severe cravings.
  • PMS improved over time, especially menstrual cramps.
  • Vegan-era cramps were severe enough to keep a person in bed, but now periods can arrive with almost no physical warning.

Hair, nails, skin density, and collagen

  • The hairline has continued to fill in, especially in the last few months.
  • Hair was already thick, but it feels thicker and denser than at the end of vegan eating.
  • Earlier vegan-era hair loss felt most noticeable around the crown.
  • Growing out a shaved side area made the hairline look worse for a while, but the hair is coming back in.
  • Better mental health changed the feeling about the shaved hairstyle, so the shaved area is growing out.
  • Nail ridges used to be common and now are rare.
  • Hair and nails grow faster than they did during vegan eating.
  • Hair, nails, skin, and teeth feel sturdier and denser, connected with collagen being back in the diet.

Teeth, mouth feel, and animal fat

  • The mouth feels cleaner on carnivore than it did with a vegan diet that included carbohydrates and sugar.
  • Beef tallow and animal fat leave a clean, almost sanitary feeling in the mouth.
  • Beef tallow also immediately calms anxiety when it arises, as happened before a podcast.
  • Cavities did not occur during vegan eating, but toward the end the teeth looked translucent and one tooth chipped.
  • Since starting carnivore, no tooth chipping or cavities have occurred.
  • Dental plaque is lower now, even though tooth brushing was already twice daily during vegan years.

Current limits and negatives

  • The diet remains strict because it causes the least inflammation and the fewest daily problems.
  • More plant foods could come back later if tolerance improves, but they do not work well right now.
  • Mikhaila Peterson is a useful comparison because strict eating can function as a way to avoid being sick.
  • The main negative is social and practical restriction, especially restaurants, seasonings, and eating out.
  • The practical restriction is acceptable because daily health is best on the current diet.

.

 

Dr. Eric Westman (Duke University) walks through his clinical perspective on low-carb and ketogenic dieting, focusing on how he thinks carbohydrates relate to obesity, diabetes risk, and body composition. He describes the approach he teaches patients, the “why” behind his food lists, and the behavioral hurdles he says often derail adherence. Along the way, he contrasts mainstream nutrition messaging with what he reports seeing in clinic, and he shares practical examples meant to make the framework easy to follow.

summerizerCentral problem

  • Keto conflicts with nutrition training from family, school, cereal boxes, television doctors, food guides, and normal American eating habits.
  • The clinical task is one teachable slide from 25 years of keto and obesity-medicine experience.
  • The scientific background runs from the 2023 ketogenic textbook to evolutionary diet lectures, hunter-gatherer patterns, paleo, primal eating, and Banting.

Low-carb history

  • Banting's Letter on Corpulence was a low-carb diet book from the 1860s, separate from Banting and Best in insulin history.
  • Osler and Allen had low-carb or keto-style diabetes-care papers about 100 years ago, before low-carb practice faded around 1960.
  • Pritikin and Ornish are legitimate ultra-low-fat approaches, while Atkins, Protein Power, South Beach, and later LCHF are the low-carb line in the clinical and research lifetime.
  • Run on Fat: Cereal Killers 2 uses Sami Inkinen and his wife rowing from San Francisco to Hawaii as a documentary example of low-carb endurance performance.

What changed the old training

  • Metabolic syndrome and insulin resistance changed medical training because the useful focus moved from total cholesterol and LDL to triglycerides, HDL, abdominal circumference, blood sugar, and blood pressure.
  • The modern food environment made Fruit Loops, Captain Crunch, Halloween candy, junk food, and ultra-processed food feel normal even though that environment is historically bizarre.
  • The message now has to reverse years of food advertising, television nutrition advice, school habits, family habits, and government food-guide messaging.

Food as a human recipe

  • Meatloaf makes the teaching simple: ingredients build the finished thing, and heat supplies the cooking process.
  • A human recipe starts with an egg, fertilization, incubation, growth time, water, protein, fat, and an energy source.
  • The timing is about 8 minutes of prep, 9 months of incubation, and 18 years or more of cooking.
  • The ingredients of a 70 kg human are mainly water, protein, and fat, not carbohydrate.
  • Carbohydrates are fuel, not body-structure ingredients.
  • Eating replaces body composition, and eating fuels the body.
  • Fuel can come from carbohydrate, fat, or both; body structure and fuel work better as separate teaching categories.

Essential carbohydrate and nutrition

  • A classroom thought experiment with a plant-killing virus forced the question of whether humans need vegetables.
  • The Institute of Medicine volume gives the key point that there is no essential carbohydrate when adequate nutrition comes from elsewhere.
  • Vegetables are not required when the necessary nutrition comes from other sources.
  • Animal-source protein and fat can provide the essential human nutrients needed in this model.
  • Protein comes first, and prioritizing protein works better in the clinic than abstract slogans about what the body keeps from food.

Obesity clinic application

  • In the clinic the average BMI is about 33 kg/m², and a 350 lb or 170 kg patient can carry a body composition dominated by stored fat.
  • Stored body fat is stored fuel, and obesity medicine helps patients access that fuel.
  • Weight loss can use pills, diets, shots, or surgery, but the core issue is whether the body draws down its stored energy.
  • For weight loss and obesity care, carbohydrates and fat can both be fuel, but sugars and starches are the fattening foods.
  • Since the body does not store sugar and starch as sugar and starch, extra sugar and starch are turned into fat and stored as fat.

Fat burning made simple

  • To burn fat weight, do not eat carbs.
  • People with excess body fat already carry stored fuel.
  • Naked and Afraid is a media example of stored-fat use during severe food shortage and rapid weight loss.
  • The body can burn carbs or fat, but it stores fat, so eating carbs must be burned through before stored fat is used.
  • Carb burning turns off fat burning, and extra carbs are changed into fat.
  • Fat burning is the accelerator, and eating or drinking carbs is the brake.
  • Eating or drinking carbs is like pouring water on the fat fire.

Communication and regulation

  • Teaching has to match the person: a truck-driver analogy, a clinic cabinet as the fat store, or a simple list of foods can work better than biochemistry.
  • In clinic, direct food instruction often works better than explaining every glucose and insulin step.
  • Products marketed for diabetes should have to show that they do not raise blood sugar, because diabetes is elevated blood sugar.
  • Diet marketing should face oversight when diet is as potent as drugs.
  • Cholesterol-lowering messaging such as Cheerios should give way to teaching what the body is made of and how it is fueled.
  • Mediterranean diet talk often lets the doctor move on without examining the evidence deeply.

Final clinical recipe

  • Individual metabolic variability matters, and Nick Norwitz's overfeeding video is an example of higher body temperature without weight gain.
  • Simple is not always easy because holidays, family, grief, and social habits bring carbohydrates back into daily life.
  • The food list has worked across decades because it removes the need to understand protein categories or metabolic pathways.
  • Carnivore is simple for the same reason: just eat meat.
  • The final rule is to eat to replace body composition and eat to fuel the body.

References

 

In this episode of The Feldman Protocol, Dave Feldman sits down with Peter Ballerstedt (PhD) — forage agronomist and founder of Grass Based Health.

The first 10 minutes are a great discussion of institutional censorship! We need to replace youtube with a open federated distribution model.

summerizerSuppression and stakes

  • The previous episode with Dave Feldman performed far below the channel norm, and normal traffic returned after the episode was removed from YouTube.
  • The loss of reach centered on livestock, global food narratives, and animal-source foods, not ordinary low-carb controversy.
  • The pressure point is simple: animal-source foods and ruminant agriculture cannot be erased from human nutrition or ecology.
  • The topic needs institutional guardrails because the facts are too strong for easy factual defeat.

Grass-Based Health and ruminant biology

  • Grass-Based Health reconnects agriculture, nutrition, and medicine around metabolic health and ruminant food systems.
  • Ruminants use pregastric fermentation, a multicompartment stomach, and microbial metabolism to turn grass, crop residues, and roughage into meat and milk.
  • The microbes supply volatile fatty acids as energy and microbial protein as high-value nutrition.
  • Methane is part of the rumen system, while the system also produces dense food and ecological services from land humans cannot farm for crops.
  • Ruminants do not need dietary essential amino acids in the human sense; they need fermentable fiber, nitrogen, minerals, and microbial balance.
  • Humans need essential amino acids and essential fatty acids, while carbohydrate is not an essential nutrient.

Protein quality and amino acids

  • The amino-acid question is not crude protein; it is whether the food delivers enough digestible indispensable amino acids for human requirements.
  • Lysine is the main limiting amino acid in many cereal-heavy patterns, especially wheat and rice patterns.
  • When one indispensable amino acid runs short, the remaining amino acids cannot be fully used for new body protein.
  • Animal foods match human amino-acid needs better than cereal and legume combinations.
  • Meat, eggs, dairy, and seafood form the daily MEDS pattern for reliable amino-acid density.
  • The rice-and-lentil example shows the weakness of crude plant-protein counting when lysine is the limiting nutrient.
  • Food packages list nitrogen-based crude protein, which does not equal usable human protein.
  • Crude protein can include non-protein nitrogen, while humans need absorbable amino acids.

Processing, plant protein, and DIAAS

  • Plant protein numbers vary widely by crop, variety, database entry, and processing conditions.
  • A large soybean dataset showed wide protein variation, so single plant-protein values hide major uncertainty.
  • Heat, browning, and Maillard reactions can bind lysine and make it unavailable, especially in cereal products.
  • DIAAS, the digestible indispensable amino acid score, measures individual amino-acid digestibility at the end of the small intestine.
  • DIAAS is better suited to human protein quality than crude protein or older fecal-score methods.
  • The burger comparison showed that an animal burger can carry the amino-acid weakness of a wheat bun, while an Impossible burger with a bun lost its good-source protein standing.
  • Beyond patties based on pea protein isolate did not meet the good-source protein standard in the example.

Food-policy origins

  • Frances Moore Lappé’s Diet for a Small Planet helped spread the protein-combining and grain-versus-meat story.
  • The McGovern-era Dietary Goals turned a social movement into food policy.
  • The policy environment absorbed population anxiety, environmental anxiety, and low-fat nutrition ideology.
  • The early dietary shift was not built like an engineering standard with hard failure testing.
  • Later guideline systems continued using protein-ounce equivalents that make beans and meat look metabolically interchangeable.

Land, ecology, and farming systems

  • Most land is not suited to crops, and most agricultural land should not be tilled.
  • The football-field land analogy places all agricultural land around the 38-yard line, arable land around the 11-yard line, and the best cropland around the 1-yard line.
  • Grazing livestock use land and biomass that humans cannot directly eat.
  • Crop systems need rotation, cover, fertility, and biological diversity, not endless corn-soy repetition.
  • Historical ley farming used clover, grass, grazing, manure, and crop rotation to build fertility before grain and root crops.
  • Brazilian crop-livestock work showed grass, cattle, and soybean integration with higher beef output and maintained soybean yield.
  • Livestock convert crop residues, byproducts, food-system leftovers, and ethanol distillers grains into food.
  • Removing livestock removes manure, draft power, dung fuel, rural assets, and resilience in many parts of the world.

Biomass and feed-food competition

  • Less than 5% of terrestrial net main productivity is human-edible.
  • Less than 15% of agricultural biomass is human-edible.
  • Wheat and corn fields produce mostly plant material humans cannot eat.
  • Globally, 86% of livestock feed is not human-edible, and for ruminants the figure is about 96%.
  • Feed-food competition is real in some places, but the global livestock picture is mostly upcycling.
  • A rapid plant-only global food shift would collide with manure dependence, draft-animal dependence, fuel needs, land limits, and rural livelihoods.

Animal-source foods, development, and adequacy

  • Animal-source foods are not luxury garnish; they are foundational foods for growth, pregnancy, child development, and nutrient adequacy.
  • Malnutrition in both poor and affluent settings often involves missing or insufficient animal-source foods.
  • Demand for animal-source protein by 2050 is likely underestimated because access itself changes development and health.
  • Colonial North America, with broad access to meat, fish, and fowl, illustrates the link between animal-source foods, stature, and development.
  • Blue Zones food stories can hide pork, fish, dairy, eggs, postwar scarcity, missing records, and religious food ideology.
  • Loma Linda and Seventh-day Adventist influence complicates vegetarian and vegan category meanings.
  • Many cultures do not count bacon, fish, chicken, or animal fat as meat in ordinary speech, which distorts dietary data.

Protein share, anti-nutrients, and nutrient response

  • Vieux and colleagues found that around half of total adult protein needs to be animal-based to meet non-protein nutrient targets.
  • Nordhagen and GAIN work tied low animal-source-food calorie share to micronutrient inadequacy.
  • Rueda and colleagues placed animal-source protein share closer to 60% to 80% for stronger nutrient quality.
  • Much of humanity falls below these animal-source-food protein-share levels.
  • As plant share rises, protein digestibility for the whole diet can fall.
  • Anti-nutrients can reduce mineral response, as in the oyster example with black beans and corn tortillas lowering zinc response.
  • Nutrient adequacy depends on the meal matrix, not isolated nutrient arithmetic.

Guidelines, ethics, and study limits

  • Dietary guidelines affect school meals, hospitals, military food, prisons, welfare programs, medical advice, and roughly 100 million U.S. people per day.
  • The saturated-fat cap blocks a straightforward animal-source-food message and pushes lean-meat, low-fat-dairy, and processed reformulation.
  • Fat-free and leaner food products were industry responses to official low-fat pressure.
  • Human nutrition trials cannot be run like livestock trials because humans cannot be locked, fed, sacrificed, and dissected for endpoints.
  • Livestock studies can control feed and body-composition endpoints in ways human studies cannot.
  • Lysine-deficient pig studies consistently produced fatter pigs with smaller loin-eye area.
  • Vegan-diet trials raise ethics problems when there is a reasonable expectation of harm without supplementation and medical supervision.
  • Supplementing deficient diets with eggs is ethically different from removing necessary foods.

Medical institutions and carbohydrate reduction

  • Therapeutic carbohydrate reduction can improve glycemia, insulin, triglycerides, fatty liver, and many metabolic markers.
  • LDL-focused systems can still block low-carb results even when most markers improve.
  • Dietary guideline hearings heard low-carb testimony and then continued as though the testimony had not changed the process.
  • Institutional responsibility is diffused across guideline committees, medical organizations, expert groups, funders, and legal risk.
  • A future amnesty pathway could let organizations revise guidance without making correction an admission of guilt.
  • The American Heart Association, National Lipid Association, and related expert loops shape downstream medical advice.
  • The ADA plate still sends carbohydrate-intolerant people toward a quarter-plate carbohydrate slot.

Ruminants, keto demand, and animal fat

  • Properly managed grazing supplies food, carbon flow, water infiltration, hydrology, wildlife habitat, and rural livelihood value.
  • Crop fields dominate ecosystems, while ruminant systems can share ecosystems with wildlife.
  • Steve Phinney’s 100-million-ketogenic-Americans question led to a rough production model for animal fat availability.
  • The rough model found enough animal fat for 100 million properly formulated ketogenic diets and enough remaining animal-source food for broader population targets, with a small olive-oil gap.
  • Current production maximizes lean output because saturated animal fat has been cast as a hazard.
  • In a carbohydrate-restricted setting, naturally occurring animal fat becomes food energy, not waste.
  • The agriculture and metabolic-health communities need bridges, not silos.

AI, education, and institutional knowledge

  • Large language models can reinforce old guideline knowledge because their training and directive layers absorb existing institutional material.
  • Open sources, published papers, and dynamic white papers can also retrain the knowledge layer when enough good material exists.
  • Dave’s future imaging-study example would test whether metabolically healthy high-LDL people develop plaque over five years.
  • The ALEPH 2020 dynamic white paper is the central resource for animal-source foods in ethical, sustainable, and healthy diets.
  • Land-grant universities and Cooperative Extension were built for local two-way education between communities and research systems.
  • New dietary guidance should trigger local metabolic-health screening, carbohydrate-reduction education, and outcome evaluation.
  • Mark Cucuzzella’s A1c-screening work shows how community testing can uncover undiagnosed diabetes.

Closing health and human needs

  • Metabolic psychiatry shows that brain health and body nutrition belong together.
  • Georgia Ede, Chris Palmer, Ignacio Cuaranta, Metabolic Mind, and related work give hope for psychiatric nutrition.
  • Proper nourishment is larger than nutrients, and diet alone does not fix active addiction or alcoholism.
  • Professional help, community dependence, and practical plans matter more than willpower.
  • The goal is to put agriculture, medicine, nutrition, and metabolic health in the same room before the current generation runs out of time.

References

 

summerizerSalt Beef as Everyday Preservation

  • Salt beef was ordinary 18th-century food, not only sailor, pirate, or soldier food.
  • Food preservation shaped everyday life, and salting was the dominant preservation method in the period.
  • Modern grocery-store dried beef and salted sausages still carry parts of the same preservation logic.
  • Eighteenth-century salt provisions were large chunks of meat packed in heavy salt.

How Salt Keeps Meat Usable

  • Salt pulls water out of meat, reducing the water available for bacterial activity.
  • Sodium chloride also moves into the meat and limits many kinds of bacterial growth.
  • Repacking the meat in salt, filling the keg with brine, and reducing air adds another layer of protection.
  • The method works through reduced water, salt saturation, and restricted oxygen.
  • Earlier cooks did not know the modern science, but they knew the method kept meat usable for months or years.

Salt Beef Compared with Salt Pork

  • Salting was used for beef, pork, fish, and sometimes vegetables.
  • Salt pork was in greater demand because it stayed softer, cooked more easily, and tasted better.
  • Joseph Plumb Martin includes a hard-circumstances example of soldiers eating salt pork raw.
  • Salt beef becomes harder, takes more work, and needs long soaking and long boiling before it becomes edible.

Cooking Salt Beef

  • Eighteenth-century cookbooks give few direct recipes for salt beef because the usual method was simple boiling.
  • Salt beef could be boiled plain, boiled with vegetables, or boiled with barley to make soup.
  • Hannah Glasse places salted meats in the boiling section and gives different boiling handling for salt meat and fresh meat.
  • Salt meat starts in cold water and comes up to a boil so more salt moves out into the cooking water.
  • Salt meat also needs brushing and long soaking before cooking, commonly 12 to 24 hours.

Shipboard Handling

  • Ships used seawater first when fresh water was scarce because seawater was still less salty than the meat.
  • Sailors could drag hooked salt beef behind a ship to wash salt away, though this risked loss and was impractical at scale.
  • Feeding 200 sailors or more meant many pieces of salt beef had to be managed every day.

Military Supply Scale

  • George Washington’s order to Reuben Colburn sought pork, flour, and 60 barrels of salted beef from the Kennebec River area.
  • The quoted barrels held 225 pounds each, making salt beef a large-scale military supply item.
  • Salt beef was delivered and stored in barrels because the preservation system depended on bulk packing.

Making Salt Beef

  • Beef was cut into three- or four-pound chunks, matching the size of the demonstration piece.
  • The meat went into a salting vessel, keg, tub, or household salting container.
  • Salt was rubbed into the surface and crevices, sometimes as finely ground powdered salt.
  • The meat sat packed in salt for 10 to 12 days or up to two weeks while moisture was pulled out.
  • Bad pieces were removed after inspection by smell, and good pieces were repacked with fresh salt.
  • A strong brine was added, salty enough to float an egg, and the closed keg held meat, salt, brine, and minimal air.

Using Salt Beef

  • Finished salt beef from a long storage period could become hard, brown, stiff, and wood-like.
  • Before use, the meat needed washing, soaking, and water changes when available.
  • A 24-hour soak made the meat gray and less appealing, but also more flexible and more edible.
  • Boiled pudding and sea pie gave salt beef a gentle low-temperature cooking environment.
  • Grilling or frying would make salt beef hard, dry, and very salty.
  • Boiling at 212 degrees gave the meat a gentler cooking method.

Taste Test

  • The demonstrated short-cured salt beef soaked for 24 hours and boiled for more than an hour.
  • The finished pieces were not overly salty and had an acceptable texture.
  • In soup or another boiled dish, the salt beef would blend in naturally.
  • A year-old piece would be much harder and would need much longer boiling.

References

 

We tackle the common 'anti-carnivore debate' arguments head-on, questioning the logic behind comparing human anatomy to that of carnivores. This educational video uses science to debunk claims, highlighting why such comparisons are flawed. Join us as we discuss nutrition from a carnivore perspective and address propaganda with facts.

summerizerFangs and claws

  • The online fangs-and-claws test links meat eating to lion-like jaws, fangs, and claws that humans lack.
  • That test fails when animal diets are compared with cinematic predator traits.
  • Silverback gorillas have huge canine teeth while eating mostly plant material; those teeth work as display and defense tools, not meat hooks.
  • Tarsiers have delicate hands without retractable claws while living as the only fully carnivorous primate, eating insects, birds, and lizards.
  • Penguins, dolphins, blue whales, seahorses, and raptors fit the same pattern: carnivory can work with flippers, conical gripping teeth, baleen, suction feeding, or beaks.

Human gut and stomach signals

  • The intestine-length talking point gives humans 9 to 12 body lengths of gut and lines humans up with herbivores.
  • Basic physiology gives the human intestine at about 26 ft, near five times a 6 ft body, beside lions and away from herbivore-style ratios.
  • Human stomach acidity sits near pH 1 to 2, matching the high-acid pattern used for meat digestion and pathogen control.
  • The colobus monkey sits near pH 5 to 7, fitting fermentation of fruit and plant matter, not the human pattern.

Nutrient requirements

  • Fruit and leaves do not supply the animal-form nutrients named here: B12, D3, K2, retinol, DHA, EPA, choline, creatine, carnitine, and taurine.
  • These nutrients are tied to nerves, DNA, red blood cells, calcium handling, vision, immunity, brain structure, liver function, acetylcholine, ATP recycling, fat transport, cardiovascular function, antioxidant defense, and bile salts.
  • A pbf or frugivore diet relies on synthetic supplements, fortified ultra-processed foods, stored body reserves, and inefficient conversion of plant precursors.
  • B12 is mandatory on a pbf diet because usable B12 does not naturally come from plant foods and deficiency can damage the nervous system.
  • Plant beta-carotene is not the same as retinol, and conversion to retinol can be weak, especially for people with poor conversion genetics.
  • Plant ALA is not the same as DHA and EPA, and conversion to long-chain omega-3 is low, so seafood or ruminant fat fills that role.
  • Choline, creatine, carnitine, and taurine sit in animal-food territory because plant amounts are low, absent, or inefficient for the listed functions.

Survival versus thriving

  • A supplement-dependent diet is survival by depletion, not thriving from complete food.
  • Tissue stores, especially B12 stores, can mask problems for years before metabolic cracks show.
  • Malnutrition and death cases among strict fruitarian or pbf public figures are real-world warnings.
  • Keto and carnivore communities form the opposite pattern: large numbers of people reversing chronic metabolic problems, including type 2 diabetes, on fatty meat diets.
  • A medical case study of malnutrition death from only ruminant meat is absent here.

Human advantage

  • Humans do not need fangs or claws because the species advantage is intelligence, tools, fire, and cooking.
  • Tools and fire made meat easier to access and digest, lowering digestive effort and fueling brain growth.
  • The human diet question is answered through brain-led technology and nutrient density, not fingernails, claws, or a lion comparison.
  • A ribeye needs common sense, a knife, and a fork, not saber-tooth anatomy.

References

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