Can organic food help you lose weight?

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  • AnvilHead
    AnvilHead Posts: 18,344 Member
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    ...Think of the situation as a little bit of morphine dulls pain and is beneficial in the small amounts used in the case of an injury---but a large amount of morphine will kill you...
    Then why wouldn't the same analogy apply to the pesticides used in non-organic farming? You can't have it both ways. The amount sprayed upon an entire crop may be considerable, but the amount on one piece of fruit/vegetable would be proportionately minute. There is misinformation, hysteria/scare tactics and outright lies on both sides of this issue - both sides have an agenda and profit motivation.

    Stepping away from all the silly histrionics for a moment, the answer to the OP is that organic food can help you lose weight the same way conventionally-grown food can - keep it at a caloric deficit. There's nothing "magical" about organic food.
  • SanteMulberry
    SanteMulberry Posts: 3,202 Member
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    ...Think of the situation as a little bit of morphine dulls pain and is beneficial in the small amounts used in the case of an injury---but a large amount of morphine will kill you...
    Then why wouldn't the same analogy apply to the pesticides used in non-organic farming? You can't have it both ways. The amount sprayed upon an entire crop may be considerable, but the amount on one piece of fruit/vegetable would be proportionately minute. There is misinformation, hysteria/scare tactics and outright lies on both sides of this issue - both sides have an agenda and profit motivation.

    Stepping away from all the silly histrionics for a moment, the answer to the OP is that organic food can help you lose weight the same way conventionally-grown food can - keep it at a caloric deficit. There's nothing "magical" about organic food.

    I have absolutely NO connection to the organic food industry or the alternative health industry. How can you rationally say that pesticides are good for the body? You absolutely do NOT know what the accumulated affect would be--it has never been tested. You can not compare pesticides to drugs like morphine with which medical practitioners have had long experience. Besides, do we even know what the long term affect is with various pharmaceuticals? No. Again, they are rarely, if ever tested unless you count the 100,000 people per year whose death is directly caused by prescription drugs. (You can look up and verify that statistic).
  • SanteMulberry
    SanteMulberry Posts: 3,202 Member
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    [/quote]
    [/quote]
    "Ugh. People in Asia and India have been refining sugar cane into sugar syrup since at least 3500 BC. Granulated sugar has been made since about 500 BC. It came to Europe in the Middle Ages, became common in the 1600's, and was considered an essential staple for regular people from the 1700's on. Long before the 20th century.

    As for the article you posted, all that proves is don't inject pesticides directly into your fat cells. How does that change when you factor in the toxin filtering and eliminating ability of the liver, that the experiment conducted completely ignored?"
    [/quote]
    [/quote]

    Sugar was not made in any quantity until modern times. Before that, it was NOT plentiful or cheap. Obesity was a rich man's disease until sugar did become plentiful and cheap. For most of the world's history, the vast majority of mankind had the problem of not being able to obtain the nutrients of a healthy diet or sufficient calories. Are you seriously implying that we should deliberately take in toxic substances (and remember we don't know what "safe" limits are as it has not been tested) and then hope our liver and kidneys are able to filter them out??

    Be my guest, play roulette with your health and your life---but please don't try to convince others that they should do the same. Do you work for the sugar industry? How about the pesticide industry? The conventional food industry? I can assure you that I have absolutely no monetary interest in advocating that people be cognizant of the threat that I sincerely believe that pesticides pose to our health.

    I have seen enough research and observed that much of our population lacks the health that their grandparents and great grandparents enjoyed because they had access to wholesome food that was NOT tainted by chemicals. In just one parameter of health---that of fertility---we are failing miserably. Many physicians are alarmed over the drop in testosterone levels in young men as well as fertility due to low sperm counts. If sperm counts in young men fall at the same rate that they have been falling in the past three decades, few young men will be capable of fathering children, in decades to come. Researchers believe that this drop in testosterone levels and sperm counts is due to "zenoestrogens" in the environment---primarily due to pollution from pesticides and pharmaceuticals that enter the water systems and food chain.
  • emtjmac
    emtjmac Posts: 1,320 Member
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    Why does this thread keep coming back?!!? WHY??! AAHGGGGG JRWORJFOEJRFOREJ
  • SanteMulberry
    SanteMulberry Posts: 3,202 Member
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    Why does this thread keep coming back?!!? WHY??! AAHGGGGG JRWORJFOEJRFOREJ

    You're welcome not to read it. :tongue:
  • AnvilHead
    AnvilHead Posts: 18,344 Member
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    ...How can you rationally say that pesticides are good for the body?...
    Show me where in my post I said they were "good for the body" or anything even remotely similar. You're twisting words in an attempt to win a non-existent argument.
    You absolutely do NOT know what the accumulated affect would be--it has never been tested.
    If it has never been tested, how are you so utterly convinced that the accumulated effect is so deadly? No tests to prove it also conversely means no tests to disprove it.
    You can not compare pesticides to drugs like morphine with which medical practitioners have had long experience.
    Please show me where I ever mentioned morphine (or any other pharmaceutical), or compared pesticides to it (or any other pharmaceutical). Again, you're twisting words in an attempt to win a non-existent argument.

    The bottom line is that you have an opinion. Quite a strong one, judging from the content and volume of your posts. Nonetheless, your opinion is no more substantiated by science than others' opinions. As you yourself have said, there have been no scientific tests to determine the long-term effects.

    Reply as you wish, I won't be posting in this thread again. I really have no dog in the fight, just trying to bring reason as a counterpoint to some of the hand-wringing hysteria.
  • tigersword
    tigersword Posts: 8,059 Member
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    "Ugh. People in Asia and India have been refining sugar cane into sugar syrup since at least 3500 BC. Granulated sugar has been made since about 500 BC. It came to Europe in the Middle Ages, became common in the 1600's, and was considered an essential staple for regular people from the 1700's on. Long before the 20th century.

    As for the article you posted, all that proves is don't inject pesticides directly into your fat cells. How does that change when you factor in the toxin filtering and eliminating ability of the liver, that the experiment conducted completely ignored?"


    Sugar was not made in any quantity until modern times. Before that, it was NOT plentiful or cheap. Obesity was a rich man's disease until sugar did become plentiful and cheap. For most of the world's history, the vast majority of mankind had the problem of not being able to obtain the nutrients of a healthy diet or sufficient calories. Are you seriously implying that we should deliberately take in toxic substances (and remember we don't know what "safe" limits are as it has not been tested) and then hope our liver and kidneys are able to filter them out??

    Be my guest, play roulette with your health and your life---but please don't try to convince others that they should do the same. Do you work for the sugar industry? How about the pesticide industry? The conventional food industry? I can assure you that I have absolutely no monetary interest in advocating that people be cognizant of the threat that I sincerely believe that pesticides pose to our health.

    I have seen enough research and observed that much of our population lacks the health that their grandparents and great grandparents enjoyed because they had access to wholesome food that was NOT tainted by chemicals. In just one parameter of health---that of fertility---we are failing miserably. Many physicians are alarmed over the drop in testosterone levels in young men as well as fertility due to low sperm counts. If sperm counts in young men fall at the same rate that they have been falling in the past three decades, few young men will be capable of fathering children, in decades to come. Researchers believe that this drop in testosterone levels and sperm counts is due to "zenoestrogens" in the environment---primarily due to pollution from pesticides and pharmaceuticals that enter the water systems and food chain.
    Ugh. As an historian, I'm begging you, please read a history book. SUGAR DROVE THE WORLD ECONOMY before oil took over in the late 1800's. Sugar has been affordable to everyone starting in the 1500's, became popular in the 1600's, and has been considered essential since the 1700's. Sugar was traded in tremendous quantities throughout the world in the 1600's and 1700's, building up the sugar industry, the rum industry, and a large part of the slave industry. The sugar trade led to massive innovation and technological advancement in machinery in order to keep up with increased demand and improve profit margins similar to the oil industry from the late 1800's through today.

    Islands like Haiti, Jamaica, Barbados, and other islands in the Caribbean were essentially sugar processing plants, and without sugar, none of those islands would be settled today. By 1750, sugar was the most popular commodity traded in Europe, even more common than grains (sugar made up over 20% of the total world economy.)

    As for obesity being a "rich man's disease," that's true. However, it had nothing to do with sugar. See, from the 1500's through the 1800's, most people had to work hard manual labor all day, every day in order to make enough money to survive. People worked from sunrise to sunset, 7 days a week, and were lucky to eat 1 meal per day, usually lunch. Get up at dawn, work for several hours, eat, work the rest of the day, go home and sleep. The rich didn't have to do that. They had those poor people to work for them, so they got to lounge around their houses, eating several meals a day (breakfast was a meal invented by the rich, who had the luxury of being able to sit down and eat soon after waking, rather than working.) So the dynamic that you find, poor people ate less, and were moving more, while rich people were eating more, while moving less. And if that sounds like basic weight loss advice, it's because it is. It's also the simple truth of the matter. A banker, sitting in an office all day, will be far more likely to be obese than a farmer, working in the fields all day. Calories in, calories out.

    Most of your research seems to come from biased sources, you might want to branch out a little bit.

    As for the fertility question, I'd love to see some actual cited studies on that, as there are much better explanations than pesticides. Things like the increase in women in the work force, economic downturns, overpopulation laws, and birth control availability all have an impact on birth rates and fertility rates.
  • penget
    penget Posts: 1 Member
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    Definitely, for the last few months I have had a organic veg box delivered: it makes me eat more veg, it tastes better so I'm more likely to eat more veg and it stops me going to the supermarket so often so I'm not tempted by all the bad stuff - its worked for me and I'm the worst at comfort eating - hope this helps
  • wholelottarosa
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    Organic produce may not be any healthier, but it would still be a good idea to stop by at one of those organic supermarkets or whatever you call them in the US and have a look around.

    I don't eat meat, so when I look for something to put on my bread in a regular supermarket that pretty much leaves me with cheese, peanut butter, cheese, sweet things, cheese and more cheese. (I'm Dutch. It's what we do).

    When I went to an organic shop I found all these awesome vegetable spreads that are quite low in calories but taste amazing. Also, they had loads of fake meats that taste pretty good and have all the proteins but a third of the calories in meat.
    I've also had a look at the labels. Most of the products use different (and more importantly fewer) sweeteners than the ones in the supermarket and fewer additives.

    While it is more expensive, it tastes better (at least to me) and gives me some variation.
    If you'd told me ten years ago I would one day eat red beet horseradish spread and love it, I would probably have laughed at you but I usually can't wait for lunch when that's what I brought with me to work that day. :)
  • SanteMulberry
    SanteMulberry Posts: 3,202 Member
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    Tiger'sword,

    You said: "As for the fertility question, I'd love to see some actual cited studies on that, as there are much better explanations than pesticides. Things like the increase in women in the work force, economic downturns, overpopulation laws, and birth control availability all have an impact on birth rates and fertility rates. "

    You didn't read my post very well---I said SPERM COUNTS ARE FALLING. That has nothing to do with "women in the work force, economic downturns, overpopulation laws, or birth control availability". From an article in the U.K Guardian, reproductive epidemiologist, Michael Joffe is quoted,""My guess would be that it's more likely to be something in the food than something in the air or water," You can read the rest of the article here: http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2004/jan/08/thisweekssciencequestions3

    There's tons of scientific literature on falling sperm counts on the web---Google is your friend.
  • SanteMulberry
    SanteMulberry Posts: 3,202 Member
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    Tiger'sword,

    You said: "Most of your research seems to come from biased sources, you might want to branch out a little bit. "

    You wouldn't begin to understand the amount of research I have read on the topic. Try reading up a bit yourself. Start with the subject of "Xenoestrogens" and the number of chemicals in our environment that act like them in the human body. There is a great deal of university research (largely unbiased, except for that which is sponsored by Big Agra, Big Chem and Big Pharma) on the subject. I know a number of people in the field who are doing research on the health effects of these chemicals. It is very serious research and it is often frightening in its implications. You may be an historian, but you are not medically literate.

    Here, I'll help you start your education: From Wikipedia---"The potential ecological and human health impact of xenoestrogens is currently under extensive study by many scientific institutions and independent researchers. The word xenoestrogen is derived from the Greek words ξένο (xeno, meaning foreign), οἶστρος (estrus, meaning sexual desire) and γόνο (gene, meaning "to generate") and literally means "foreign estrogen". Xenoestrogens are also called "environmental hormones" or "EDC" (Endocrine Disrupting Compounds). Most scientists that study xenoestrogens, including The Endocrine Society, regard them as serious environmental hazards that have hormone disruptive effects on both wildlife and humans...."
  • Nancer1954
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    They pump the meats we eat with growth hormones to make them grow bigger, faster. Those hormones go into our bodies as well when we eat the food. It is all about mass production and the all mighty dollar for the consumer. Plus they fill the beef with all sorts of antibiotics which are not healthy for us either. I do not eat organic meat, but I am thinking seriously about switching. I know it is expensive, but I want to be healthy. Really, it would be wise and more affordable to become a vegetarian and not eat meat and get your protein from beans and other foods. But I like meat and I don't know if I could do that. It is your choice, good luck with your weight loss journey and whatever you decide.
  • tigersword
    tigersword Posts: 8,059 Member
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    Tiger'sword,

    You said: "Most of your research seems to come from biased sources, you might want to branch out a little bit. "

    You wouldn't begin to understand the amount of research I have read on the topic. Try reading up a bit yourself. Start with the subject of "Xenoestrogens" and the number of chemicals in our environment that act like them in the human body. There is a great deal of university research (largely unbiased, except for that which is sponsored by Big Agra, Big Chem and Big Pharma) on the subject. I know a number of people in the field who are doing research on the health effects of these chemicals. It is very serious research and it is often frightening in its implications. You may be an historian, but you are not medically literate.

    Here, I'll help you start your education: From Wikipedia---"The potential ecological and human health impact of xenoestrogens is currently under extensive study by many scientific institutions and independent researchers. The word xenoestrogen is derived from the Greek words ξένο (xeno, meaning foreign), οἶστρος (estrus, meaning sexual desire) and γόνο (gene, meaning "to generate") and literally means "foreign estrogen". Xenoestrogens are also called "environmental hormones" or "EDC" (Endocrine Disrupting Compounds). Most scientists that study xenoestrogens, including The Endocrine Society, regard them as serious environmental hazards that have hormone disruptive effects on both wildlife and humans...."
    Exactly what do xenoestrogens have to do with SUGAR? I've been talking to you about sugar, not the pesticides. If you're going to question someone's literacy, you should make sure that your reading comprehension is actually correct first. Then again, I guess it's just easier to insult someone by talking about a completely unrelated topic, rather than actually read what has been written. Also, if you're going to question someone's "medical literacy," how do you expect to maintain any sense of credibility when you quote wikipedia? Wikipedia is never a valid academic source. But then, if you WANT to quote Wikipedia, from the VERY SAME ARTICLE, "The results do not support with certainty the view that environmental estrogens contribute to an increase in male reproductive disorders, neither do they provide sufficient grounds to reject such a hypothesis." So, there's no conclusive evidence whether they are actually dangerous or not. More research needed. You're picking and choosing only the portions and citations that fit your preconceived notions, which is very much the opposite of how actual science works. If you're going to question someone's scientific literacy, you may want to start with your own.
  • tigersword
    tigersword Posts: 8,059 Member
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    They pump the meats we eat with growth hormones to make them grow bigger, faster. Those hormones go into our bodies as well when we eat the food. It is all about mass production and the all mighty dollar for the consumer. Plus they fill the beef with all sorts of antibiotics which are not healthy for us either. I do not eat organic meat, but I am thinking seriously about switching. I know it is expensive, but I want to be healthy. Really, it would be wise and more affordable to become a vegetarian and not eat meat and get your protein from beans and other foods. But I like meat and I don't know if I could do that. It is your choice, good luck with your weight loss journey and whatever you decide.
    Growth hormones are illegal in animals grown for meat, and have been for decades now. As for antibiotics, irrelevant. I'd rather an animal be treated for an illness, rather than allowed to be sickly. Which meat do you think would be healthier? And why are antibiotics bad? Don't you take them when you are ill? Ever use hand sanitizer?
  • tigersword
    tigersword Posts: 8,059 Member
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    Tiger'sword,

    You said: "As for the fertility question, I'd love to see some actual cited studies on that, as there are much better explanations than pesticides. Things like the increase in women in the work force, economic downturns, overpopulation laws, and birth control availability all have an impact on birth rates and fertility rates. "

    You didn't read my post very well---I said SPERM COUNTS ARE FALLING. That has nothing to do with "women in the work force, economic downturns, overpopulation laws, or birth control availability". From an article in the U.K Guardian, reproductive epidemiologist, Michael Joffe is quoted,""My guess would be that it's more likely to be something in the food than something in the air or water," You can read the rest of the article here: http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2004/jan/08/thisweekssciencequestions3

    There's tons of scientific literature on falling sperm counts on the web---Google is your friend.
    From the very first paragraph of that article: "The researchers were quick to point out that the study might not be typical of the whole population, but it once again sparked fears of ever-decreasing male fertility and is not so far from the truth." Not typical of the whole population. In other words, meaningless. Also, from the same article, "There was no decline in America or Finland in parallel studies." Meaning that other studies couldn't reproduce the result. Again, you're cherry picking only what you want to hear, and ignoring everything that disagrees with your biased viewpoint.
  • Jester522
    Jester522 Posts: 392
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    My freind told me today that if you eat all organic food you will lose weight. Is this true?
    You're friend is retarded. Eating 3000 calories of fried chicken will make you gain the same *amount of weight as 3000 calories of free range chicken, eggs, and fruit.

    Edit: typo
  • hughtwalker
    hughtwalker Posts: 2,213 Member
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    My freind told me today that if you eat all organic food you will lose weight. Is this true?
    You're friend is retarded. Eating 3000 calories of fried chicken will make you gain the same about of weight as 3000 calories of free range chicken, eggs, and fruit.

    There is a way of putting things - this foregoing seems to be the typical MFP way. The friend is merely mistaken and/or misinformed - why do you have to pronounce judgements in such insulting terms? please?
  • jenbusick
    jenbusick Posts: 528 Member
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    If you're eating organic food, you're NOT eating a lot of things that are bad for you and that can contribute to weight gain, in particular, high fructose corn syrup (the evidence is piling up on that one -- that stuff is bad for humans), but also, a lot of food additives and estrogen mimics.

    Compared calorie for calorie there's no difference, but your health and probably your weight will definitely benefit from eating organic.
  • SideSteel
    SideSteel Posts: 11,068 Member
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    Compared calorie for calorie there's no difference, but your health and probably your weight will definitely benefit from eating organic.

    If there's no difference in energy value then how can there be a weight related benefit?
  • jenbusick
    jenbusick Posts: 528 Member
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    They pump the meats we eat with growth hormones to make them grow bigger, faster. Those hormones go into our bodies as well when we eat the food. It is all about mass production and the all mighty dollar for the consumer. Plus they fill the beef with all sorts of antibiotics which are not healthy for us either. I do not eat organic meat, but I am thinking seriously about switching. I know it is expensive, but I want to be healthy. Really, it would be wise and more affordable to become a vegetarian and not eat meat and get your protein from beans and other foods. But I like meat and I don't know if I could do that. It is your choice, good luck with your weight loss journey and whatever you decide.
    Growth hormones are illegal in animals grown for meat, and have been for decades now. As for antibiotics, irrelevant. I'd rather an animal be treated for an illness, rather than allowed to be sickly. Which meat do you think would be healthier? And why are antibiotics bad? Don't you take them when you are ill? Ever use hand sanitizer?

    Actually, antibiotics are included in animal feed not for treatment of disease, but to promote weight gain. This is legal in the United States, although it should not be, and this practice (not the practice of giving antibiotics to kids with ear infections or similar) is what is contributing to the frightening increase in "superbugs" -- infectious organisms that are resistant to all classes of antibiotics. Like you, I don't object to treating animals when they are ill; however, I do object very strenuously to the use of antibiotics as food additives exclusively for the purpose of growth promotion in livestock. That is why I buy meat NOT fed on antibiotic-enriched feed.