I'm curious about this one. I love and appreciate the benefits of eating meat as a large percentage of one's diet, but I don't get the "veggies are bad" argument. Humans haven't evolved - physically - beyond a state where our diet consisted of meat, nuts, fruit, leaves/bark_ and vegetables. I DO completely see the toxicity of "meat substitutes" and all the nasty stuff they're preserved and cooked in. But if your food came from actual nature it's probably fine. Beyond beef? Definitely a shitcoin. But a carrot in your beef stew? Sounds pretty grounded and well balanced (also yum) to me

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Get to know Dr. Anthony Chaffee:

https://youtu.be/j1cqNDDG4aA?si=4rzixLd3J6LEiaYY

Thanks - will give it a watch

If you like what you hear, check out his podcast, The Plant Free MD. That's what carnivore-pilled me

Sounds good. I typically go in skeptical-but-open-minded, so I appreciate the content

nostr:npub1qqvt0m3nlvjnssmrn33w9yh7cuq2dx5nkz8wxax9hk5hrjdnj4jqz8cn3w link to Dr. Chaffee (pure carnivore) is good. I err somewhere in between him and Dr. Saladino (animal “based” - animal products + low inflammatory plant foods). I don’t believe fructose is good for anything really. Fruit/honey/dairy is a treat; occasionally for mineral and electrolyte replacement. Vegetables are for garnish, texture/flavor, and some medicinal use-cases. I’m careful to scale macros paired with plants to counteract antinutrient effects and downsides of fiber - or I just don’t eat them because they seem like wasted dollars/calories. Unless you’re super active and live near the equator, I don’t think fruits/nuts should be anything more than a seasonal treat. Eat what grows locally, or better yet grow it yourself. (Saladino infographic)