Although the swine flu hysteria has settled down a bit, it’s still making headlines, as it was front page news here in the New York City area today. The amount of panic over this public health concern is surprising when you consider how most people continue to do things to themselves every day that are far more likely to be deadly. For example, most people are still eating one specific type of food that has been deemed totally unfit for human consumption. Now THAT’s scary.
Alas, fear-mongering and bad news sell, regardless of the true threat level, so the media has been pummeling us with stories about the flu pandemic (and I couldn’t help noticing that many health experts are now arguing that this is no worse than common strains of flu).
I wonder why the media doesn’t put this kind of effort and attention into more productive types of public health messages, like what to eat and what NOT to eat? And why don’t consumers respond with equal alarm when messages about our food are broadcast?
I find it odd the way people have been reacting to the flu news with fear and panic, even avoiding crowded public places like the gym and donning face masks when going out in public. Then they’ll remove these masks and proceed to smoke cigarettes and inhale food that’s potentially far more dangerous than any flu threat. Most people are literally eating poison every day without giving it a second thought.
Here’s the result: In the US alone, 1,700,000 new cases of diabetes, 233,600 diabetes-related deaths, 600,000 myocardial infarctions and 451,300 coronary heart disease-related deaths every year.
Trans Fatty Acids: The poison in our food supply that most people are STILL eating
Trans fatty acids (TFA’s) come mostly from the industrial partial hydrogenation of vegetable oils, which alters the natural cis configuration of the oils to the trans configuration. Trans fats are not found in nature, with the exception of some ruminant-derived TFA’s which are found in certain dairy products (usually contributing less than 0.5%of total caloric intake).
TFA’s have been studied for decades, but were largely ignored until the past several years. Since 2006, TFA’s have thankfully received a decent amount of publicity when they were in the news regarding new food labelling laws and the banning of their use in restaurants in some states.
New Studies on Trans Fats
TFA’s are not new news, but there have been new studies published this year on the dangers of TFA’s, two of them just in the last month. If you think swine flu is scary, consider the following facts from the latest research:
- Four recent studies indicated 24, 20, 27 and 32% higher risk of myocardial infarction (MI) or CHD death for every 2% energy of TFA consumption isocalorically replacing carbohydrate, SFA, cis monounsaturated fatty acids and cis polyunsaturated fatty acids, respectively.
- Even consumption of small amounts of TFA’s (2% of total energy intake) is consistently linked to coronary heart disease.
If heart disease isn’t enough, the research says that TFA’s will:
- Increase belly fat (visceral fat) and body fat
- Contribute to insulin resistance
- Increase risk of type 2 diabetes
- Adversely affect circulating lipid levels (increase bad LDL cholesterol)
- trigger systemic inflammation
- disrupt glucose-insulin homeostasis
- cause metabolic dysfunction
- Induce endothelial dysfunction
- Adversely affect almost every cell in your body, including hepatocytes, adipocytes, macrophages and endothelial cells.
Some states have enacted legislation banning the use of TFAs in restaurants. It was big news here in New York. As of 2008, 11 cities and counties have adopted regulations to restrict TFA use in restaurants. However, industrial TFA use is still widespread and lots of people are still scarfing them down every day.
TFA intake in the United States still averages 2-3% of total energy intake, 4% in some countries and as high as 8-10% in certain subgroups (who eat large amounts of baked goods, fried foods, pastries, doughnuts, etc). The government recommended maximum is 1% of total energy intake (2 grams!).
Some experts say there is NO safe level of TFA intake. They’re THAT bad.
If Trans fats are so dangerous, why is their use so widespread?
Nutrition author Udo Erasmus put it this way: “TFA’s are a food manufacturer’s dream: an unspoilable substance that lasts forever.” TFA’s are cheap and for countless food products, they can prolong shelf life, allow easy transport, provide solidity at room temperature, and increase suitability for commercial frying.
Although most people have heard of TFA’s, perhaps scariest of all is the level of ignorance and inaction about TFA’s to this day.
A study published in the Journal of The American Dietetic Association found that in 2007, 73% of Americans knew that they increased risk of heart disease, compared to 63% in 2006. That’s the good news.
The bad news is that this increased awareness has not been enough to translate into behavior change. “Knowledge about food sources of fats remains low” says Robert Eckel, professor of Medicine at the University of Colorado.
According to the ADA, as of 2007, 79% of Americans could not name 3 foods that contain trans fats. 46% of Americans could not name any sources of trans fats on their own.
Public health messages have been raising awareness, but they haven’t been enough. “TFA’s are bad for you.” Ok, so now what? What you really need are some simple behavior guidelines and a list of foods to eat very infrequently if you eat them at all.
Here’s a good place for you to start.
4 Ways to Avoid Trans Fatty Acids
1. Read ingredients lists. The primary source of TFA’s is partially hydrogenated vegetable oils. In particular, soybean, sunflower, cottonseed and palm oils are frequently hydrogenated. Your first step then, is to read food labels on any packaged products and look at the ingredients list. If it contains partially hydrogenated oils, it contains TFA’s.
2. Watch for label loopholes. WARNING: Food companies are lying to you on their product labels to make you think their foods are TFA-free. The front of their package may say “ZERO grams of trans fats,” and yet there is hydrogenated oil listed in the ingredients. How could that be? There is a label loophole where the government allows companies to claim zero trans fats if there is less than a half a gram per serving. So the food companies sneakily manipulate their serving sizes until the servings are so small that the TFA content falls below the per serving limit.
3. Eat mostly foods that do not have a label. At the risk of stating the obvious, if you don’t eat anything that comes in a box or package with a label, then you won’t ever consume manmade TFA’s. If your diet consists primarily of fruits, fibrous vegetebles, root vegetables, beans, legumes, brown rice, unprocessed whole grains, nuts, seeds, eggs, fish and lean meats, you’re home free.
4. Avoid foods that contain TFA’s most of the time. TFA’s are commonly found in baked goods (bakery), fried foods and packaged convenience foods, especially:
- cookies*
- crackers*
- biscuits*
- pastries*
- pies*
- doughnuts*
- packaged frozen foods (breaded chicken, breaded fish, etc)
- corn chips
- potato chips
- packaged popcorn
- some breads
- frostings
- french fries (fried potatoes)
- taco shells
- margarine
- shortening
- some salad dressings
- some candies
- some processed cheeses
* major food sources for American adults
In 2002 when I published the first edition of my ebook, Burn The Fat, Feed The Muscle,
I warned my readers of the dangers of trans fatty acids. I was not the only one either. Years ahead of the 2006 law requiring trans fats to be listed on food labels and the 2007-2008 restaurant TFA bans, numerous health professionals were already warning people to stay away from TFA’s.
Not enough people listened, and no doubt, skyrocketing rates of obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular disease can be largely linked to these artificial fake food additives.
Whether public health issues like the swine flu turn out to be as dangerous as the media hype remains to be seen. But there is not a shred of doubt that this decades-old health menace – trans fatty acids – deserves the scary nickname they’ve been given: FRANKEN FATS – and a campaign for better education and more action is no hype.
As researchers from Harvard said, “A comprehensive strategy to eliminate the use of industrial TFA in both developed and developing countries, including education, food labeling, and policy and legislative initiatives, would likely prevent tens of thousands of CHD events worldwide each year.
References
Americans’ Awareness, Knowledge, and Behaviors Regarding Fats, Eckel RH et al, Journal of the American Dietetic Association, Feb 2009 (2):288-296
Metabolic implications of dietary trans-fatty acids, Dorfman SE et al, Obesity, Feb 2009, 1-8. Cardiovascular and metabolism disease area, Novartis institutes for biomedical research, INc. Cambridge, Mass.
Fats that Heal, Fats that Kill, Udo Erasmus, Alive Books, 1994.
Health effects of trans-fatty acids: experimental and observational evidence. Mozzafarian D, Eur J Clin Nutr, May 2009: 63 suppl 2S5-21, Harvard Medical School
About Tom
Tom Venuto is a fat loss expert, lifetime natural (steroid-free) bodybuilder, certified personal trainer, freelance writer, and author of the #1 best selling diet e-book, Burn The Fat, Feed The Muscle: Fat-Burning Secrets of The World’s Best Bodybuilders & Fitness Models( e-book) and The Body Fat Solution (Hardcover, Avery/Penguin Books). Tom is also the founder and CEO of the Internet’s premier fat loss support community, the: Burn The Fat Inner Circle.
Great stuff Tom.Scary facts and figures about Trans fats and their effect on the body.The only cure for bad information is better information – thanks for sharing this.Kyle Battiswww.FatLossLunchBreak.com
Excellent article! I recently posted something on my blog where I mentioned that people should avoid trans fat and HCFS as much as possible as no amount is ok!
Tom,Great article with a lot of facts that I had no clue about! I was so hesitant about foods that might contain TFA’s that I have been practicing using your third recommendation and have just tried to avoid all foods that have a label.In the US, it’s pretty easy to incorporate into your grocercy shopping. Just stay on the outside isles of the grocery store! This is where all of the fruits, fibrous vegetebles, eggs, fish and lean meats are usually located. If you can manage to avoid the middle of the store for the majority of your grocery list then you should have plenty of meals free of TFA’s!
what about partial hydrogenated oils is that still the same thing?
Hi tom,Your information is second to none. You not only provide the facts but also how weird the world can be sometimes. Emergency masks, worldwide news reports on an outbreak of a strain of flu, advertising for a maybe cure of that flu, and obesity is the highest its been in years. Im lucky i dont fall into eating alot of those foods listed. but i might even cut down again on the sounds of how bad TFA”s can really be.Always a pleasure.Avid readerDavid Potae
Wow!!! I knew all these foods were bad was not quite sure why. Thanks what an eye opener. I have two young girls at school and am constantly struggling to provide them with a healthy diet … but packaged snack food seems to dominate over the healthy things as they are fussy. After reading your article I feel like going to the cupboard and throwing all the biscuits etc out and starting from scratch … and using the rule if it comes with a label don’t eat it … hope they adjust to this.
I got your Big Fat Lies mini course, read your blog for over a year and finally got my wish and got my hands on BFFM – and I haven’t seen anything new in the news since! I threw away the TFA, processed sugar and white flour!Did you notice that the “latest” news is that Americans are fat because they eat too much?! Even I knew that!Then, when they tell Americans to eat less, they say that they are already getting enough exercise. No word about weight training, or why to train with weights.I almost feel insecure thinking that I’ll never get fat again! Tom thank you for your sensible, timely and practical updates!
Hi Tom. Is it only partially hydrogenated oils that contain TFA’s, or is it both partially hydrogenated oils AND hydrogenated oils?
Tom you made a great point:, now a days, the risk of diabetes and heart disease is much greater then swine flu. and sadly the media just don’t give enough attention on those issues
Great article Tom however the very strong link between cancer and adulterated fats was never mentioned. The primary cause of cancer is the inability of oxygen to penetrate human cell membranes thus forcing the cell to create energy through anaerobic fermentation of sugars. Why? Because adulterated (TRANS) fats have replaced “oxygen friendly” fats in the cell membranes. This has been all proven through more than 50 years of rigorous scientific research. Reference: Two time Nobel Prize winning biochemist Dr Otto Warburg’s (M.D., PhD) 1966 Lecture to the Nobel Laureates addressing the PRIMARY cause of cancer. More Hard Science and INFO can be found @ brianpeskin.com for those interested in the link between TRANSFATS and CANCER. Also, it turns out that there is a very strong correlation between heart disease and cancer as well.
Yes, I know about trans fats. I have already written my Senators from GA. urging them to ban these fats–but so far, no response from one , and the other one appeared to not even know what I was talking about–he wanted me to believe that the FDA would take care of me. Now isn’t that just great comfort? I warn my family and friends about the dangers and hope they will become more educated about these fats.and oh yes, my wife and I went to a chain restaurant just last week. We ordered a low carb. meal, and ask them to be sure and serve real butter (which they do have on their menu) I was so sure that they had served what we ask for , I started eating without reading the label until the second helping of the butter, and that is when I seen the partially hydrogenated soybean oil. I stopped eating and call the manager, and I wasn’t really too kind. I handed her the check and we walked out.
This is a great point: that companies reduce the serving size to escape the label of carrying TFAs. Superb article.Another point you could consider covering is hidden TFAs in restaurant dishes. For example, a chicken butter masala in an Indian restaurant is assuredly not made entirely with butter. It is cooked in commercial ‘white’ oils and the butter is poured over the dish at the tail-end of cooking it. Where else do the TFAs lurk silently? I shudder to think of it!
Steve and evelyn – yes, partially hydrogenated oils contain trans fats
Dear Tom Venuto,Very excellent article highlighting the bad effects of trans fatty acids. How will public wake up to this most important matter concerning their health?Unless govenment passes a low banning use of TFA in preperation of any food stuff nothing will happen.Vijay
Great article. And while the Obama administration and Congress are trying to revamp the health care system, why don’t they look at banning trans fats, hormones and other food ingredients that are causing major health problems like obesity, diabetes, heart disease, etc.?Jeannette
Tom, great points as always.An important thing people need to know in order for them to start viewing artificial trans fats as poisons instead of something that’s acceptable to eat… and this is the fact that these artificial trans fats become part of your cellular structure in your body. We all need to keep in mind that cell membranes are comprised highly of fats and our types of dietary fats that we consume influence an entire cascade of processes in the body… hormone production, proper cellular functioning, etc.Some of my friends have almost thought that I have a “phobia” of trans fats because I almost always refuse to eat anything deep fried when we’re out… I’ll get a burger and veggies always instead of a burger and fries.The more you study the negative effects on your health of “trannies” in foods, the more you start to view them as pure poison, and your mind really starts to associate negatively with them.The sad thing is that although most people have a general idea that trans fats are “bad for you”, I don’t think most people realize the extent of what they do to you internally. What I’ve found is that once people hear an explanation of some of the negative things that are happening deep inside your body, I’ve seen them start to get that mental association of trans fats = poison.Tom also mentioned briefly that trans fats can be in artificially created form (hydrogenated oils) and occasionally in natural form from ruminant animals. I have a full article on that topic here:http://www.truthaboutabs.com/trans-fats.htmlLet’s avoid those artificial “trannies”!-Mike
thx for you excellent info I’m just heading straight for the kitchen now to throw the lot out, with the packaging to the recycle bin of course! Its amazing even when you try to eat healthy you slip into buying some of these items unintentionally just because you haven,t put your glasses on to read the fine print – clearly for speed shopping you adage of if its boxed don’t take it must work wonders from now on I’m going to stick to it.Teriffic advice
Really interesting, well researched and informative article. I am trying to educate my kids on these matters, they are all naturally lean and long but I’m trying to show what bad food does on the inside. Schools and canteens are the biggest culprits offering cheap nasty food that is sometimes all that is available. I will show them this, and they’ll probably roll their eyes a bit but it does go in somewhere!!!!Thankyou.
Hey Tom,Sad but true so many people are eating these foods daily, some by choice, some by ignorance and others who simply couldn’t care what goes into their mouths it seems some times.This is a great article I will be forwarding on to my personal training clients as it’s just one more thing that could be sabotaging all their good work even when they have the calorie balance right, etc.Regards, ClaytonPersonal Trainer | Adelaide, Australiatwitter.com/thewebchild
Tom,Since 2003, I’ve been aware of these dangers and have tried to avoid TFAs for my family and me. Unfortunately, my research on how to naturally rid our bodies of these TFAs has hit a wall and I am hoping you might have some insights on this.When I see how pervasive TFAs have been, I wonder how it could have become that bad, and then I trace it back to the “Greed Factor”, but that is a whole different book I need to finish authoring.Being older (50’s), but only a child in better health (6 years), I know I have eaten 10s, maybe 100s of thousands of grams of TFAs over my lifetime. My research suggests our metabolism can not burn this fat with exerise and it simply continues to collect inside our bodies.My research “wall” and my question to you is: What can help us rid our bodies of this artificial fat?Looking forward to your insights, I remain…Health consciously yours,George
Hi from sunny Spain,thanks for the great post. I worked on Capital Hill long ago and it is hard for normal voters be heard. Maybe we should begin a “natural simple health oriented” PAC to gain media attention. Let me know if you are interested, OK.Also love Jeannettes idea “And while the Obama administration and Congress are trying to revamp the health care system, why don’t they look at banning trans fats, hormones and other food ingredients that are causing major health problems like obesity, diabetes, heart disease, etc.?”gracias amigo,DanOhttp://www.MagicalSpain.com “healthy Spain cultural travel & events… Made-to-fit since 1998”http://www.Fitsexyu.com ” Empowering the Best of You”
Hi Tom, Thanks for the article. For me some of the confusion lies in the use of the term “hydrogenated”. Do you know if food manufacturers can call partially hydrogenated oils simply “hydrogenated”? (Which would be a great way of confusing concerned but inexpert consumers.)Also, just how dangerous are fully hydrogenated oils? Most articles simply interchange the 2 terms, but I was under the impression that it is the partial hydrogenation that is the problem and that fully hydrogenated oils are safe.Finally, exactly what is a “vegetable fat”? Is this another way for food manufacturers to mislead consumers? Are we actually consuming hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated oils, or is there another (safer) way to convert vegetable oils to fat?
Tom,Am starting to think this whole trans fat ban backfired. People now can go to a Mickey D’s and eat those fries and think they don’t have trans fat anymore. HA! The new formula is…Interesterified Oils which does not have to be labeled. Eating clean is easy, helping others is the hard part.Keep up the excellent work!Anthony
Anthony – that is a great point (which is why the best bet is to STOP EATING french fries and processed foods altogether (at least not as a regular staple in the daily diet)The legislation leads one bad processed ingredient to by replaced by another. But the education can h opefully get smore people to change their habits.We we’re just discussing TFA’s adn HFCS at my facebook page:Elissa Lowe wrote:” I’m reluctant to join in on debates about food additives/ingredients per se, as they often end up as “missing the forest for the trees” sorts of things. If partially hydrogenated oils and HFCS become unpopular, manufacturers will replace them with palm oil and sugar (and they already are)…which will allow them to advertise their products as free from trans fats and HFCS.Problem solved, right?Nuh-uh. This doesn’t make them “healthier” at all: sucrose contains almost as much fructose as the most commonly used form of HFCS, and a recent study by the USDA demonstrated palm oil was similar to partially hydrogenated soybean oil w/respect to its effects on blood lipids.The reality is that most of the products containing these ingredients are energy-dense, nutrient-poor junk anyway, that wouldn’t be good for your heart or waistline, no matter what. Tom’s point: “Eat mostly foods that do not have a label” is really the best advice.”
Thank you for the excellent information concerning oxygen metabolism and trans fats. Some years ago, it was reported that asthmatics should not eat certain foods (pastries and fried fast foods). No explanation was given.Looks like trans fats permanently alter oxygen metabolism. Keep them out of your children’s hands, too.
I think the whole issue with the Swine Flu scaring people vs. trans fat and heart disease in general is that people feel with something like Swine Flu, they are not in control. They are worried that it could break into a more serious form and since regular flu spreads so easily, they feel they could get it just by being unlucky. Therefore, they do not feel in control of the situation.With trans fat, most people have the attitude that “they can always change” and start eating healthier. While this lazy approach is probably wrong, society feels they are in control of the situation. It’s kinda like how a lot of people are afraid to fly even though statistics show it is the safest means of travel. Some people feel like they are not in control and would rather drive.You probably were not really looking to start a conversation on swine flu, just relate what our priorities shoud be focusing on. I just felt like voicing my opinion, lol.
Informative and “awakening” article. It’s time banning all fries in restaurant – consumers should be protected – manufactures have to be sincere and provide healthy products including ban on dangerous oil. Scientific words like – hydrogenated – have to be elaborated in easy language for the common people to understand – trans fats e.t.c. Consumer ignorance remains a bottleneck towards thwarting manufactures trans fats sales.Continue shedding light on trans fats – keep it up..good job. thanks.
Mel, thanks for pointing out the confusion between hydrogenated and partially hydrogenated”hydrogenation” is the general name for the process, but according to the recent Harvard Paper its the partially hydrogenated oils to watch out for”Most dietary TFAs derive from industrial partial hydrogenation of vegetable oils, which changes the natural cis configuration of 30-50% of the double bonds in JUFAs or PUFAs to the trans configuration.”If it contains “partially hydrogenated” on the label it contains trans fatty acidsa completely hydrogenated oil doesnt contain trans fatty acids, however, according to Dr. Udo Erasmus an expert on dietary fats, completely hydrogenated oil contains unnatural fatty acid fragments and other altered molecules, some of which may be toxic and contaminated by metal catalysts used in hydrogenation (aluminum). Erasmus notes that fully hydrogenated oils are still used in some foods such as chocolate to keep it the right consistency so it melts in your mouth and not in your hands
Tom,Thank you for this postl. Somehow, I wasn’t getting the point until I read this. I’ve totally avoided fried foods for over a year now. These were once a large part of my daily diet. I also thought I was totally avoiding trans fats. Once I lost over 100 pounds under NutriSystem, I became much more lax in my diet, including enjoying baked goods quite often. Now that I read the details in your e-mail today, I realize that I’ve probably been unintentionally consuming much trans fats. I now intend to view baked goods as I have viewed fried foods and avoid them entirely.Ken Morris
I told my wife stop buying Nuttela because the first ingredient was partially hydrogenated palm kernel oil. But they got smart and changed the label to modified palm kernel oil. fooled my wife but not me. How else are they going to modify the oil besides hydrogenating it?
Scary stuff alright! This is my whole problem with the cheat meal mentality. Why would you want to cheat on your diet if it means eating this rubbish? Cakes, chocolates, pastries etc, you’re only cheating your self out of results. I prefer to eat clean 100% of the time and leave the junk to those who can’t or won’t. Thanks for the excellent articles Tom. How do we get the legislators to listen?
Thank you Tom for an excellent reminder. I also appreciated the commentors mentioning TFA’s becoming a problematic part of the cell membrane.BTW, when I read the name of the article, franken-fats I thought it was going to be about fats in hot dogs!best wishes,Nili
thanks for your comments Dr. Nili.Franken fats = manmade monstrosities!:-)
GREAT article Tom! I’ve only been saying this to people around me, because I was so freaking tired of hearing about that damn swine flu. More so, there are more cases of MRSA related deaths, than there are swine flu deaths.Thanks for writing this article. VERY informative!
Thank you Tom for a great article. I have been aware of these dangers for quite a while but I am guilty of enjoying some of these bad foods every once in a while.I will try to avoid these in future and educate myself regarding the dangers of these modified manmade monstrosities.Be well!Nico
Hi, Tom!Thank you for another great article! I often find myself disgusted when my daughter comes home from school requesting I start buying some of the items her friends have in their lunches. One child comes to school with a lunch box containing the following items: bag of doritos, bag of chips & a pkge of Cupcakes. I asked her what else was in there? She said, “That’s it. His mom packs the same lunch everyday”. Seriously.. this does begin at home but it can either be reinforced or contradicted in schools. Many schools can’t even afford school supplies, so providing healthier alternatives is way down on the TO DO LIST. Luckily, my daughter was in one of the few schools able to provide healthier alternatives. My random evil junk food rant –> LUNCHABLES.. child abuse in a box.THANKS TOM!!
This past Thanksgiving I was visiting my sister and her family and they had purchased from the local Girl Scouts a ready-made frozen “#1 selling american pie” that she was going to bake.I happened to look at the nutrition label. OMG, it had I think over 10g of TFA per serving. I happened to look just out of curiosity of the fat content not necessarily checking TFA. I was shocked because I was under the impression now that everyone knew how bad TFAs were that (all) companies were changing their ways. The ingredient list was also quite scary. It looked like a chemistry ingredient list.I’m happy to say she threw it right away.
And you want to know the worst thing about this fat scam? They are decimating huge areas of rainforest in Borneo (among other places) to grow palm oil crops, thereby destroying the natural habitats of many species including one of our most sensitive and intelligent cousins, namely the orangutan which are being orphaned and killed off by this obscene trade TFAs. The rainforests also contribute in a big way to keeping our planet cool; erm, kind of important right now. And all this for what?? So the money-grubbing corporates can make cheap cookies and pizza for the masses. Its makes me absolutely incandescent.Hit the nail on the head with this flu nonsense Tom. Classic case of people unable to see the trees for the wood, again. Always missing the point and being distracted by some “scare”. Seems to me that all fat should be avoided except that which is naturally occurring within a particular foodstuff e.g. nuts and oily fish or which has been cold pressed and used within 6 weeks, otherwise it is all rancid. I am even wary of using xtra virg olive oil these days………its seems it can sit on a supermarket shelf for a while (what do you think? is it as healthy as we’ve been led to believe when its sold without a ‘use by’ of six weeks?)I have started to eat a lot more natural fat (and fewer carbs) and feel a lot better for it AND have lost weight without even trying.Thanks Tom for stimulating this debate.C
What gets me is the difficulty people have in eating right. Granted, some information is more obscure (see no trans fat claim for less than .5 grams), but your paragraph about what to eat is so elegant in its simplicity. Those are the eating rules to live by! It’s that easy and simple. There’s no need to keep researching it…Regardless of advertising methods, I remain baffled that intelligent individuals are still fat and don’t know why. And this goes far past TFA’s… If you regularly eat “$5 footlongs” (roll alone) at any restaurant, no matter how thin the spokesperson is, you’re going to gain weight. Why is this so hard to understand?Great work Tom. I sincerely enjoy reading your posts and appreciate the effort.MD
I do think people need to put things into perspective but then it is hard to see how people wouldn’t panic when there is so much news coverage about how people should be worried. I totally agree we should be more concerned with the amount of obese people in America, the strain this puts on the health system along with smokers and drinkers. We should take action against these things now while we are only starting with the problem, people should lose weight, stop smoking and stop drinking,
To Tom:The one’s who are in the BIGGEST dangers are the children’s since they always want sweets stuff, chips, and even a lot of the cold cereals have trans fat in it. So its best to be little strict with ur children’s. I am a vegetarian and its easy for me(my parents are vegetarians as well/for well over 15 years but for me it has been 1 1/2 year)I always read ur posts but never comment but day it seemed like we were thinking the same thing