U.S Government has went low Carb but on the down low.

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  • KarlaYP
    KarlaYP Posts: 4,439 Member
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    Fat Head is a great movie! They took it off of Netflix, I hope they bring it back!
  • walker1world
    walker1world Posts: 259 Member
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    tlflag1620 wrote: »
    They're only talking about "added sugar" with the 10% of calorie limit. And since labels in the US don't separate out added sugar from those naturally occurring, those who are relying heavily on packaged foods are still probably going to get more than the recommended limit. Even if they change the labels to reflect how much of the sugar is "added" vs naturally occurring, 50g of "added sugar" PLUS all the sugars and starches naturally occurring in food (especially since they still recommend an over abundance of grains and fruit, and make no distinction between starchy and non starchy veggies and are still suggesting low fat or fat free dairy (sigh)) it is still going to be high carb.

    It is nice to see the limit on cholesterol lifted, as well as the limit on overall fat, but since they are still limiting saturated fat (no more than 10% of daily calories) most people will see the lifting of the fat limit as a license to eat more garbagy oils. I do really believe the tide is turning tho - they just can't do it all at once.... Gotta save face you know ;)

    Ok, I go with what you said, I ask you to think about the domino effect that thus starts cause right now we have everything you said plus 150 grams more sugar a day.
  • walker1world
    walker1world Posts: 259 Member
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    slimzandra wrote: »
    As a child of the 60s-70s. I really love this post about sugars in America. I think the list is really great!

    kevin trudell wrote:

    .. I grew up in the sixties. In the sixties, children ate sugary cereals made of grain and sugar every morning of their lives. Sugar Pops, Frosted Flakes, Trix, Lucky Charms, Cocoa Puffs, Cocoa Krispies, Capn' Crunch, Rice Krispies, Frosted Mini-Wheats, etc., etc., etc.

    EVERY....DAY...OF...OUR...LIVES!

    We ate bland, smushy white bread, in massive quantities,

    EVERY...DAY...OF...OUR...LIVES

    We ate Devil Dogs, Twinkies, Hostess Cupcakes, Ring Dings(the full sized ones,) Yodels, doughnuts, brownies, pies, pecan swirls, Fudgesicles, Hoodsies, Ice cream sandwiches, Fritos, potato chips, Cheetos, pretzels, Cheese-its, Snickers, Milky Ways, Reeses Cups, Spaghetti, macaroni and cheese, American Chop Suey, biscuits, rolls, buns, Kool-aid, Mountain Dew, Coke, Root beer, Orange Crush, pizza and on and on and on. Any time someone tries to tell you that people thirty or forty years ago ate less sugar or refined grains than they eat today, tell them I said they have no idea what they are talking about.

    This just is not true. We know exactly how much sugar all types were produced every year going all the way back to the 1920. There is alot more produced and consumed today then there ever has been. This antidotal rendering of history only pettifogs the issue.
  • walker1world
    walker1world Posts: 259 Member
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    KetoGirl83 wrote: »
    I don't think they include grains in the "sugar" category. And even if the scientists do mean sugar=carbs/carbs=sugar, the general public will not understand it that way.

    50 grams of sugar max (the white stuff) plus grains in all forms and fruit will be a very high carb diet. Better than the same amount of carbs from junk food, but not by much. "Healthy whole grains, bla-bla-bla" that's what I was eating when I was diabetic and 315 lbs.

    Bread and orange juice may have a higher glycemic index than table sugar (for all intents both ARE sugar from our bodies perspective) but that is still presented as a "healthy breakfast" and I don't see them saying "skip the bread and OJ, eat eggs and coffee with CO instead".

    They just mean "eat less of the white stuff", as in "please control the amount of candy you eat".

    Still, a step in the right direction is a step in the right direction and, most importantly, as several have said, it will, hopefully, make people ask the right kind of question. :)

    It still is a good first step.
  • walker1world
    walker1world Posts: 259 Member
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    My first thought on seeing this yesterday was "Hmmmmm, wonder when Uncle Sam will cut off federal subsidies and price supports for the farmers who grow the stuff?" My guess is half past never.

    I think this is the first steps down that road. It is following the same pattern the Tobacco conversation went. They first need to disconnect the government from the problem before they can go after it.
  • TBeverly49
    TBeverly49 Posts: 322 Member
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    Thank you for your information Walker1world. I am sooo glad that most of my grand kids (10 of them) have slim lines (picky eaters), but, one. She is a 9 year old sweet tooth hound. But, its still not sinking into mom and dad's heads, that pre-made waffles with syrup in the morning, pre-made lunch type kit with fruit and a pastry for lunch, and maybe a pizza or homemade pasta dishes for dinner is not helping her. Why.?? Its the convenience for them. Schools start so early "who has time to fix a breakfast and have them out the door before mom or dad leave for work?

    Plus the cost of eating right has become outrageous for young family incomes. let alone the rest of us. Then because we are wanting more natural organic foods to keep all the cr** out of our systems, we have to pay more of a premium price. At least that is I see it here in WA state. I want to go back to the early 1950's.
  • walker1world
    walker1world Posts: 259 Member
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    Batlady49 wrote: »
    Thank you for your information Walker1world. I am sooo glad that most of my grand kids (10 of them) have slim lines (picky eaters), but, one. She is a 9 year old sweet tooth hound. But, its still not sinking into mom and dad's heads, that pre-made waffles with syrup in the morning, pre-made lunch type kit with fruit and a pastry for lunch, and maybe a pizza or homemade pasta dishes for dinner is not helping her. Why.?? Its the convenience for them. Schools start so early "who has time to fix a breakfast and have them out the door before mom or dad leave for work?

    Plus the cost of eating right has become outrageous for young family incomes. let alone the rest of us. Then because we are wanting more natural organic foods to keep all the cr** out of our systems, we have to pay more of a premium price. At least that is I see it here in WA state. I want to go back to the early 1950's.

    I read your note and I see my son. I think you are right convenience is the first factor. Once children get hooked on sugar it's hard to break the addiction. I am a sugar addict. I have to fight off the urge for sugar. I can't have it in the house. I will eat it. Even when I eat a good breakfast of real food I find my self craving sugar.

    I say it starts at a very young age, you might think 1 or 2. No I am talking the first day that the baby is given formula rather than breast milk. Have you ever noticed that formula is sweet breast milk is not. It's a sad state that children are sent down the road of sugar addiction before they can hold a bottle.

    I hope as we cut the daily sugar intake the goverment recommends to 10 percent and companies start printing labels thay show a bottle of serving of baby formula has 50% of the daily recommended allowance of sugar people will start asking the questions that will lead them to low carb.
  • GaleHawkins
    GaleHawkins Posts: 8,160 Member
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    Hey we are all different what worked for me may not apply to others but within 2 weeks after I went off grains and sugars cold turkey Oct 2014 my cravings for sugar and all carbs started to fade. Within 4 weeks I was no longer hungry between meals or craved sweets, bread and other carbs. I was a carb addict I would say and was 63 at the time. Today my health seems better than in the past 20 years and blood lab work has moved in the right direction.
  • Dragonwolf
    Dragonwolf Posts: 5,600 Member
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    Batlady49 wrote: »
    Thank you for your information Walker1world. I am sooo glad that most of my grand kids (10 of them) have slim lines (picky eaters), but, one. She is a 9 year old sweet tooth hound. But, its still not sinking into mom and dad's heads, that pre-made waffles with syrup in the morning, pre-made lunch type kit with fruit and a pastry for lunch, and maybe a pizza or homemade pasta dishes for dinner is not helping her. Why.?? Its the convenience for them. Schools start so early "who has time to fix a breakfast and have them out the door before mom or dad leave for work?

    Plus the cost of eating right has become outrageous for young family incomes. let alone the rest of us. Then because we are wanting more natural organic foods to keep all the cr** out of our systems, we have to pay more of a premium price. At least that is I see it here in WA state. I want to go back to the early 1950's.

    I read your note and I see my son. I think you are right convenience is the first factor. Once children get hooked on sugar it's hard to break the addiction. I am a sugar addict. I have to fight off the urge for sugar. I can't have it in the house. I will eat it. Even when I eat a good breakfast of real food I find my self craving sugar.

    I say it starts at a very young age, you might think 1 or 2. No I am talking the first day that the baby is given formula rather than breast milk. Have you ever noticed that formula is sweet breast milk is not. It's a sad state that children are sent down the road of sugar addiction before they can hold a bottle.

    I hope as we cut the daily sugar intake the goverment recommends to 10 percent and companies start printing labels thay show a bottle of serving of baby formula has 50% of the daily recommended allowance of sugar people will start asking the questions that will lead them to low carb.

    You've clearly never tried breast milk. It's actually rather sweet.

    The difference is the type of sugars used, as well as the type of protein used. Formula uses corn syrup (lots of fructose), while breast milk is lactose (no fructose).

    You are right, though, in that it does start at the very young age. Thankfully, they seem to have stopped pushing the cereal -> fruit -> veggies -> meat food introduction pattern and now encourage going straight to things like veggies and meat (pureed, of course) when introducing food to infants.
    lowjax75 wrote: »
    There is a video online (used to be on Netflix, not sure if it still is) called Fathead. It is by Tom Naughton. It's a great video and pretty entertaining as well. He talks about the original discussion back in 1977 and that many doctors were against it. It was the government making a decision and one of the major lobbies that was pushing for the nutrition guidelines was the Grain Industry.

    I still can't figure out why there were so many servings of grain recommended. :wink:

    And here's a link on the Health Department's own website that talks about the changes implemented. It's pretty funny that in 1979 they formed a panel to study the relationship between diet and health and by 1980 they had already defined the guidelines. Because one year is enough time to see the impact of diet and health... :smirk:

    http://health.gov/dietaryguidelines/dga2005/report/HTML/G5_History.htm

    I think Fathead's available on Youtube, now, actually.

    Dr. Peter Attia's talk The Limits of Scientific Evidence and Ethics of Dietary Guidelines also goes into detail about how the food pyramid was almost entirely politically motivated, though arguably not as amusing a watch as Fathead (to be fair, not totally dry, either, at least in my opinion). One of the big quotes I recall that he points out is along the lines of Congress basically saying "ain't nobody got time for reading scientific studies" before passing the laws/guidelines regarding nutrition. They literally passed these bills without reading them. WTF?!