The blood type diet theory posits
that type B’s should thrive on dairy products. This sounds great to Americans
because the vast majority of white Americans (and Europeans) tolerate lactose (a
sugar found in dairy products). On the other hand, the highest percentage of
type B’s in the world is found in Asia. But since 90 percent of Asians are
lactose-intolerant I can guarantee you they will not thrive on dairy products –
just the opposite! This is just one way the blood type theory comes crashing
down to reality.
For other ways, we have reprinted, with permission, an article written by Michael
Klaper, M.D., below. Dr. Klaper graduated from the University of Illinois
College of Medicine in Chicago in 1972. He served his medical internship at
Vancouver General Hospital in British Columbia, Canada and took additional
training in surgery, anesthesiology, orthopedics and obstetrics at the
University of California Hospitals in San Francisco. Dr. Klaper has served as
advisor to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (N.A.S.A.) project
on nutrition for long-term space colonists on the moon and on mars.
The 'Blood Type Diet: Fact or Fiction?
The “blood type diet” theory has gained widespread attention from the public
since the release of “Eat Right For Your Type” by Peter J. D'Adamo, N. D. (G. P.
Putnam's Sons, New York, 1996). The book's basic premise - that Type O's are the
dominant, hunter-caveman type that require meat in the diet, that Type A's are
docile vegetarians, while Type B's are dairy-eating omnivores - has become a
manifesto for many people to rationalize including regular portions of meat and
other animal products in their diet. (“After all, my ancestors did it.”)
However, the “blood type diet” theory, and the book that promotes it, presents
many problems that prevent me from seriously basing any of my dietary choices
upon them.
One of the book's most disturbing characteristics is the frightening images that
the author calls forth without providing scientific documentation. For example,
D'Adamo hangs much of his theory on the action of lectins, proteins found on the
surface of certain foods that can cause various molecules and some types of
cells to stick together. He blames lectins for serious disruptions throughout
the body, from agglutination of the blood cells to cirrhosis and kidney failure
(page 24). He even scares the reader about these lectin “boogie men” with the
tale of ex-KGB agent Georgie Markov who was murdered with an injection of the
ultra-potent lectin, ricin. Then, on Page 53, D'Adamo states that, “...certain
beans and legumes, especially lentils and kidney beans, contain lectins that
deposit in your muscle tissues, making them more alkaline and less charged for
physical activity.” This is quite a serious scientific charge, and an alarming
thought if you are blood Type O - namely, that after eating a bowl of bean chili
or lentil stew, lectin proteins are depositing in your muscles and altering
their function, changing their acidity, and diminishing your capability for
physical action.
If one is going to make a statement like that - and publish it in a book
destined for the New York Times bestseller list and intended to change the
eating habits of a nation - I believe the author is obligated to present solid
scientific evidence of supporting their assertions, which D'Adamo repeatedly
fails to do. (An example of an author who presents credible proof is Dean
Ornish, M.D., who published in his book the “before and after” photographs of
X-rays demonstrating increased blood flow through arteries which had opened more
widely after patients had participated in his diet and lifestyle program.) If an
author is going to frighten millions of Type O readers about eating kidney
beans, lentils, and wheat, I think they are obligated to provide verifyable
evidence. To begin to convince me of the existence of his “lectin gremlins,” he
would have to publish photographs, taken through a microscope, of muscle tissue
biopsied from people with Type O, Type A, Type B, and Type AB blood after they
have eaten kidney beans and/or lentils. The photographs should clearly show the
lectin deposits in the muscles of people with Type O blood - and not in the
tissue samples from the muscles of people with Type A blood. If an author cannot
produce proof like this, or clearly cite the scientific references in the text
where other people have demonstrated such proof, his credibility, to me, is
severely diminished. D'Adamo presents neither photos nor corroborating studies
to support his speculations.
As for the rest of his statement regarding lectins changing the muscles, “making
them more alkaline and less charged for physical activity,” to substantiate that
assertion the author would need to publish or cite studies wherein
microelectrodes that measure acidity inside the cells were inserted into the
muscles of people of various blood types. After they all ate a meal of lentils
and kidney beans, if D'Adamo is to be believed, a significantly greater shift
towards alkalinity should be seen in the muscles of the Type O subjects. Yet, no
such studies are presented. If an author doesn't have this kind of proof, is it
responsible for him to make statements that may frighten millions of people from
eating high-protein, high-fibre legumes and other potentially valuable foods? It
may indeed be best for a particular person not to eat a particular legume - but
they should do so for solid nutritional/medical reasons (allergies, colitis,
etc.) independent of their blood type.
What finally pushes the “blood type” theory beyond the limits of believability
for me is the primary mechanism of physiologic damage that D'Adamo postulates -
namely, lectin proteins on some foods causing blood agglutination in certain
people of blood types who are “not genetically/evolutionarily suited” to eat
those foods. This is a very serious - and potentially life-threatening -
phenomenon that he proposes. Agglutination means that the red cells in your
bloodstream are irreversibly sticking together and forming clumps. Once they
begin to clump together, they don't come apart. (Note that this is very
different than blood sludging, or so-called rouleoux formation - a phenomenon
seen when the surface of the red cells become coated with fat or other
substances to make them sticky enough to temporarily and reversibly adhere to
each other's surfaces - but not to become permanently bonded through
irreversible intertwining of surface proteins, which is what happens in
agglutination.) Having your blood agglutinate as it circulates through your body
is not conducive to good health - or to long term (or short term) survival...
What is so bad about little clumps of red blood cells sailing through the
bloodstream? Red blood cells deliver oxygen to the cells of vital tissues like
the brain, heart and kidneys. To accomplish this delivery, they must flow
through the tiniest of blood vessels - capillaries so narrow that the red blood
cells must line up single file to get through. If the red cells are being
agglutinated by lectins or anything else, clumps of red cells will clog up the
capillaries and block the blood flow. Thus, the blood stream will be prevented
from delivering its life-sustaining cargo of oxygen to the tissues served by
those capillaries. Cells deprived of oxygen become damaged, and eventually die
(cell death is called “infarction” of tissue.)
Since most people are unaware of their blood types, let alone what foods are
“evolutionarily inappropriate” for them to eat, it is reasonable to assume that
on most days most people eat the “wrong foods” for their blood type (e.g., Type
O eating wheat, Type A eating meat, etc.). Thus, according to D'Adamo's theory,
most everyone experiences repeated showers of agglutinated red cells throughout
their bloodstream after most every meal - day after day, month after month, year
after year. If the capillary beds in your heart, lungs, kidneys, brain, eyes,
and other essential organs are subjected to barrage after barrage of
agglutinated red cells, they will eventually begin to clog up. These micro-areas
of diminished blood flow would at first cause scattered, then more concentrated
areas of tissue damage - with eventually many micro-infarctions scattered
throughout these vital structures. The brain, heart, lungs, kidneys and adrenals
would soon be irreparably damaged by these processes, resulting in potentially
fatal outcomes in millions of people.
Such a syndrome of organ failures due to lectin-induced micro-infarctions of the
brain, heart, kidneys, retinas, and adrenals would be well known to pathologists
and other medical scientists. It would not be a subtle disease. In the pathology
texts, there would be clear descriptions - complete with photographs taken
through high-power, optical microscopes as well as electron microscopes - of
damage from lectin deposits and blood agglutination in most major organ systems.
The existence and intricacies of such a widespread disease would be as common
knowledge among physicians and cell scientists as atherosclerosis is today. Yet,
I am aware of no such descriptions in the pathologic literature. No pathologist
I know has ever mentioned tissue infarction from lectin-induced red cell
agglutination as a cause of any disease in humans.
So when I read a “one size fits all” statement like on page 63, “Type O's do not
tolerate whole wheat products at all,” I have to ask, “What does he mean, 'at
all'?” Do Type O's eat a whole wheat cracker and fall on the ground holding
their abdomen and vomiting - or worse yet, suffer immediate brain damage due to
their blood cells agglutinating throughout their brain? How much wheat can a
Type O eat before their blood agglutinates? One hamburger bun? One noodle?
I'm not denying that many people do experience problems when they eat wheat.
They do, but they do so because they have a true wheat allergy, gluten
intolerance, or some other verifyable mechanism - not because of some sugar and
protein molecules sticking up from the surface of their red blood cells. Like
D'Adamo, I grant that wheat can be a problematic food for people with colitis,
and I often recommend eliminating it from the diet. Lectins may even play a role
in the inflammatory process for some people. However, before one tells millions
of individuals with Type O blood to never eat whole wheat - many of whom
apparently have no difficulty with whole wheat and who rely on breads as a major
source of energy and protein - isn't some convincing scientific proof required?
I feel that author D'Adamo at least owes his readers a text citation with
supporting evidence that wheat-induced colon dysfunction is a condition peculiar
to Type O's. Yet, his text is devoid of scientific endnote citations.
To convince me, he would need to show me photographs of intestinal tissue from
Type O people who have recently eaten wheat and who clearly have evidence of
lectin agglutination clogging up the function of their intestinal cells. I would
also need to see pictures of tissue biopsies from Types A, B, and AB whose
intestinal walls are seen to be undamaged and far less burdened with lectin
deposits than those with Type O blood. As far as I know, inflammation of the
intestine, like colitis, Crohn's disease, and gluten sensitivities, occurs in
people of all blood groups, not just Type O - and D'Adamo cites no convincing
proof to the contrary.
Author D'Adamo also makes three hard-to-believe statements concerning dairy
products - two which made me doubt his understanding of basic science and one
that raises concerns about the safety of his nutritional advice:
1.) D'Adamo states on Page 23 that, “If a person with Type A blood drinks it
(milk), his system will immediately start the agglutination process in order to
reject it.” If he wants me to believe a statement like that, he had best show me
pictures of Type A blood cells under the microscope agglutinating after the
person drinks milk, wherein Type O and Type B blood cells are shown not to
agglutinate. He again shows no such photos or other believable evidence of the
phenomenon. D'Adamo would also have to explain why Type A people who drink milk
(sometimes-massive quantities of it) do not suffer strokes and emboli as their
blood agglutinates throughout their vascular system. He presents neither proof
nor even plausible explanations for the above - very troubling in a book
presented as “based on science.”
2.) On page 151, D'Adamo states that, “...the primary sugar in the Type B
antigen is D-galactosamine, the very same sugar present in milk.” Actually, the
primary sugar present in milk is not D-galactosamine, but rather, lactose.
Lactose is a very different molecule than D-galactosamine, with very different
chemical properties. Even if there were significant amounts of D-galactosamine
in cow's milk, the antibodies in a Type A person's blood that agglutinate with a
Type B person's blood cells do so by reacting not with D-galactosamine alone,
but with a molecule of D-galactosamine combined with a molecule of the sugar,
fucose, projecting from the surface of the red blood cell. Just because Type A
antibodies will agglutinate with D-galactosamine+fucose on the surface of a Type
B red cell, does not mean Type A blood will agglutinate with the lactose (or
even free D-galactosamine) in cow's milk. (It is recognized that people of any
blood type may react badly to cow's milk and other dairy products - for a
variety of reasons, but likely not because lectins in the milk are agglutinating
their “wrong” type blood cells.)
3.) A statement that causes me great concern regarding the safety of D'Adamo's
dietary advice appears on page 37, where, despite widespread knowledge that many
non-Caucasians are intolerant of dairy products due to the normal disappearance
of lactase enzymes in their intestinal cells, D'Adamo recommends that “Type B's
of Asian descent may need to incorporate them (dairy products) more slowly into
their diets as they adjust their systems to them.” This seems like strange
counsel from an author trying to improve the intestinal health of his public. I
fear that the consequences for many of his unsuspecting, lactase-deficient
readers who follow such advice will be severe bouts of abdominal cramps and
diarrhea.
Another assertion in this book that make me not want to recommend it to my
patients is on page 53, where D'Adamo writes that:
“This condition, called hypothyroidism, occurs because Type O's tend not to
produce enough iodine.” The reality is that the body does not “produce” iodine
at all, any more than it produces calcium, magnesium, sodium, or any other earth
mineral. Iodine is a halogen element, related to chlorine and bromine, which is
taken up by plants from the soil and in the sea - which are then consumed in the
diet. To worry tens of millions of Type O readers that they “may not be
producing enough iodine” (which no one does) and are thus at risk for
hypothyroidism, is unfounded and, I feel, unnecessarily worrying. The causes of
clinical hypothyroidism are complex issues, probably involving autoimmune and
other mechanisms of injury to the thyroid tissue. To imply that eating red meat
and avoiding wheat (a “Type O diet”) will help the Type O person “produce
iodine” is unsubstantiated and may not only raise false hopes in the reader, but
may also increase the risk of meat-associated diseases.
Beyond the usual association with heart attack, stroke, osteoporosis, colon
cancers and other degenerative diseases, animal-based diets foster the growth of
pathogenic organisms in the intestine, which can injure the intestinal wall and
lead to the “leaky gut syndrome” - a condition of increased intestinal
permeability which allows injurious fragments of antigenic food proteins and
bacterial breakdown products to leak into the bloodstream (1). These foreign,
inflammation-inciting substances can, in turn, exacerbate rheumatoid arthritis,
lupus, and other autoimmune diseases in tissues throughout the body (2). The
bacteria in the colons of people who consume vegan diets are far less likely to
cause these kinds of diseases (3).
Repeatedly packing the colon full of meat residue from a high protein diet has
been shown to be highly correlated with cancer of the colon - among the leading
killers of industrial nations (4). In fact, animal protein seems to be “high
octane fuel” for the growth of many kinds of cancers (5). I fear that the
apparent improvement experienced by many people who use the “zone” rationale to
become big-time carnivores will ultimately be at the cost of damaged vital
organs and more lethal and degenerative diseases.
Beyond his views on biology, I was disappointed in D'Adamo's psychological
portrayal of people of vegetarian persuasion. In the book, he tells flesh-eating
Type O's that they have a “genetic memory of strength, endurance, self-reliance,
daring, intuition, and innate optimism...”, “the epitome of focus, drive...”,
“hardy and strong, fueled by a high protein diet” (is he describing a Type O
“master race”?), while he paints the “more vegetarian” Type A as submissive tofu
eaters, “biologically predisposed to heart disease, cancer and diabetes” (p.
97). He labels Type A's with personalities “...poorly suited for the intense,
high-pressured leadership positions at which Type O's excel,” (p.142), stating
that, in pressure situations, people with Type A blood “tend to unravel” and
“become anxious and paranoid, taking everything personally.” Finally, on page
143, he saddles the group with the dark image of Adolph Hitler, “...a mutated
Type A personality.” D'Adamo's system seems to create a “blood type astrology”
(“What's your type? O Positive? knew it! So am I!”) that imposes strange,
limiting stereotypes on very complex human beings.
Remember, there is nothing sacrosanct about the ABO blood typing system devised
by Dr. Landsteiner in the 1920's. It is only one system classifying more than
thirty proteins on the surface of cells that determine other blood groups, with
names like Auberger, Diego, Duffy, Kell, Kidd, Lewis, Lutheran, MNSs, P, Rh,
Sutter, and Xg. This means that food selections that may be “right” for the ABO
blood group system might be “dead wrong” for someone's Kell or idd antigens. Why
are we deifying the D- galactosamine-fucose molecules on the red cell surfaces
that determine ABO Type?
In my opinion, D'Adamo has spun an evolutionary fairy tale that leaves many
unanswered questions. What exactly is he proposing happened to Type O
hunter-gatherers when the Type people began growing wheat, barley and other
grains? Do Type O people eat a mouthful of barley and fall down in the dust,
unable to work and reproduce? Do they then become warlike and club the agrarian
people to death because lectins are clogging their intestines? Do the genetic
changes to Type A blood type magically appear just before a society grows new
grains (allowing them to eat the new grains in the first place), or did Type A
blood types emerge after the grains are grown, as the people with Type O blood
died out from their blood agglutinating in their brains? And why would so many
of the native Indians of North America, classic Type O hunters, go to the
trouble of cultivating high-lectin corn (maize)? Someone talk some science to
me, please...
Is the blood type the ultimate determinant of successful adaptation to a
particular dietary style? How do we explain the experience of people who say, “I
tried to be a vegetarian and it didn't work for me - so I added some meat back
into my diet and I feel better. I guess I'm a Type O caveman,” or “A
practitioner of 'live cell' analysis stuck my finger and I saw my blood
agglutinate! He said I must have eaten foods wrong for my blood type!” I hear
variations of these two statements several times per year. Do either of these
phenomena validate D'Adamo's blood type theory?
First, the red cell clumping on the TV screen... I have walked through many
medical meetings and health expos and seen this demonstration set up and
performed many times. A subject's finger is punctured and a drop of their blood
is placed under the microscope slide with the image projected on a large screen
or television monitor. The results can appear quite dramatic as a person often
sees on the TV screen their red blood cells, platelets, and other cellular
elements apparently misshapen and clumped together. It can then be an opportune
time to convince the startled person that their blood is laden with toxins or
deficient in vital minerals or some other nutrient - and then sell them the
“necessary” supplements that the “live cell analyst” happens to be purveying.
Though the images may be graphically convincing, the unsuspecting subject is
probably unaware that they may have just witnessed a biological parlor trick.
The “live cell analyst” has probably failed to inform them that the
“agglutinating” effect seen on the screen can be produced by a number of
factors, most having nothing to do with lectins, blood type, or any other forces
beyond the physics and chemistry of a drop of blood on a slide. Remember, that a
drop of blood on the microscope slide is very different than a drop of blood
flowing through your bloodstream.
While flowing naturally through the bloodstream within the arteries and veins,
the blood is shielded from light, is held at a constant temperature of 98.6 F.,
is under much higher pressure than room air, and is physically moving very
rapidly through the “piping” system of blood vessels. These are all factors
which profoundly affect the surface characteristics of the red blood cells,
making them less likely to stick together. The red cells' rapid motion through
the bloodstream also prevents antibody fixation, blood clotting factor
activation, and other pro-agglutinating forces from exerting much effect. When
the drop of blood is squeezed out onto the microscope slide, all these factors
are changed or eliminated. At that point, physical forces - cooler temperatures,
lower pressure, exposure to light, physical stagnation, activation of enzyme
systems, etc. - begin to affect the blood on the slide in ways that may make it
much more likely that the cells may begin to clump together - independent of
blood type or presence of lectins.
In addition to the above purely physical influences, other chemical factors may
be at work on the slide to create the appearance of clumping - independent of
the person's blood group. These chemical agents include:
1. The person's last meal. In particular, the fats from the egg yolk at
breakfast or the olive oil in the salad dressing at lunch may be invisibly
coating the red blood cells, making them stickier and more likely to adhere
together. Fats will make red blood cells of all blood types sticky and more
likely to clump together. In my experience, “live cell analysts” seldom ask the
subject about their last meal nor analyze it for the fat content.
2. Antibodies (immune proteins that can bind to cells) left over from a recent
viral infection or allergic reaction - but not associated with food lectins -
can coat red blood cells and make them prone to clump together.
3. Molecules with unknown chemical properties, introduced into our blood from
living in the “civilized world” - such as food colorings, food preservatives
like BHT (butylated hydroxytoluene), hydrogenated oils eaten in fast foods,
snacks, and restaurant meals, as well as birth control pills, aspirin, cold
medications, and over-the-counter remedies, etc. - may affect the tendency of
blood cells to clump, independent of lectins or blood type.
4. The acidity (pH) of the blood, the levels of calcium, sodium, and other
circulating minerals - even the concentration of salt in the “saline solution”
that the “live cell analyst” mixes with the drop of blood - can all dramatically
affect its behavior and appearance on the slide. Add to this the effects of
exercise, medications, even a prolonged time since the last drink of water -
it's no wonder the blood on the slide might look strange. There are hundreds of
unseen forces acting upon the red blood cells, platelets, and suspended plasma
proteins.
Under some conditions, the blood cells of some individuals might even tend to
clump together when viewed on the television screen. However, this does not mean
that individual is ill, suffering from a nutritional deficiency, or is being
agglutinated internally from the lectins in their diet. Unfortunately, this is
often not the message they receive from the “live cell analyst” about to make a
recommendation as to which one of their proprietary supplements to buy in order
to remedy the “condition.”
(This is not to imply that all people performing “live cell analysis” are
unscrupulous, but only that the technology creates a powerful imagery and it is
easy to abuse. There seems to be quite a number of people demonstrating the
televised technique for the public who are unaware of the subtleties of the
blood stream and the body - and thus not qualified to make clinical diagnoses
based upon what they are seeing on the TV monitor. Yet, it is very easy for “a
live cell analyst “ - for reasons altruistic, capitalistic, or otherwise - to
issue an ominous-sounding term or diagnosis to an unsuspecting member of the
public. I have had several people consult me, worried that their blood was
agglutinating inside their arteries, or that their “immune system was shot,”
based upon comments made at a health expo by a “live cell analyst” - who had
received little more than a weekend training course. The public should be made
aware of the limitations of the “live cell analysis” technique, so they are not
unduly frightened by what they may see on the screen or hear from the analyst.)
What of the people who say they feel better when they resumed flesh eating after
intervals of consuming vegetarian or vegan diets? Unquestionably, their
experiences have some important messages for us. But what are they? Here are
some possibilities...
It is known that, in some people, merely adjusting the proportions of proteins,
fats and sugars in any manner significantly new to their body can produce
noticeable improvements in the way they feel. Changing the proportion of raw vs.
cooked foods can similarly have beneficial effects. Some people who feel that
their health has improved after adopting a “zone” or “blood type” diet may
actually be benefiting from just eating less carbohydrates, more protein, etc.
We plan to investigate whether some of the individuals who re-introduced animal
products into their diet could have achieved similar effects by altering their
selection and quantities of plant-based foods.
We recognize that there are significant metabolic differences between people. It
may well be that some of these differences may propel certain individuals
towards flesh consumption. It may be, however, that the cause is not so much
genetic, as acquired after birth. Remember, virtually every person who reports
adding meat back into a previously vegetarian diet is an individual who was
raised on a meat-based diet.
Why is this important? The kind of foods one eats in their early years may set
biochemical patterns that last for a lifetime. For example, the human body can
synthesize from simpler molecules some essential substances like carnitine
(required for energy production) and some long-chain fatty acids (EPA, DHA,
etc., needed for hormone function, membrane synthesis, etc.). People who eat
meat ingest these substances, pre-formed, in the muscles and other animal
tissues they consume. It may be that the body of a person raised as a life-long
omnivore becomes functionally dependent upon a diet that contains these
pre-formed nutrients. As adults, if they suddenly change to a completely
plant-based style of eating, where the foods are essentially devoid of
pre-formed carnitine, EPA, DHA, etc., they may find themselves in a body with
enzyme systems unable to synthesize all the energy-generating compounds, fatty
acids, and other molecules they may require.
After months or years on a flesh-free diet, these individuals might experience
deterioration of their health or energy - only to feel better upon resumption of
meat ingestion. To the person, this may seem like confirmation that they are
“natural meat eaters.” Rather, it may be evidence of an acquired dependency on
flesh-borne nutrients formed through early eating patterns. If this is the case,
it may be possible to prevent, repair, or at least compensate for these
imbalances through provision of additional nutrients, removal of inhibiting
substances in the diet, varying combinations of food, etc., utilizing foods of
plant-based origin. There is much to learn about the subject and much research
needs to be done.
In my experience, these problems are not encountered in people raised on
vegetarian diets from infancy. This effect might be especially pronounced in
long-term omnivores who make an abrupt change to a vegan diet, as opposed to
those who taper flesh foods out of their diet more gradually. It may be that
some “omnivore-from-birth” people who desire to sustain themselves on a vegan
diet may have to make a more graded transition to completely plant-based foods,
sometimes over several weeks or months, to give the body time to “gear up” its
metabolic machinery. In other words, what appears to be a “natural need for
meat” may really be the need for an attenuated weaning process from animal
products in order to overcome metabolic patterns begun early in life, created
largely by cultural practices.
Through the Institute of Nutrition Education and Research, we plan to study
these phenomena in detail and will attempt to identify any nutrients that may be
required in larger amounts when consuming vegetarian diets. A goal of our
research is to develop science-based guidelines to aid anyone who chooses to
nourish their body on exclusively plant-based foods to do so with optimal
benefits to their health and well being.
An additional thought: Less than optimal function on a plant-based diet (or any
diet) may not stem from a “lack of meat” or a nutrient deficiency at all, but
rather from an individual's other health conditions, like digestive dysfunction,
malabsorption by the intestine, parasite problems, adverse immune reactions,
etc. To me, these are far more likely mechanisms that could explain the
“failure-to-thrive” syndrome occasionally seen in vegetarians and vegans -
rather than a genetic mandate to consume flesh determined by their blood type.
Much more research is needed to obtain the answers to so many questions in this
essential but subtle science.
Beyond the “blood type issue,” perhaps a deeper question about any book which
advocates a meat-based diet for the majority of the population is, “In today's
world, is eating meat, in any form, safe?” It appears that to base one's diet
around animal foods is becoming a high-risk activity, similar to unsafe sex or
driving without wearing a seat belt. Consider the smorgasbord of health hazards
available at today's meat counters. It's a safe bet that virtually every cut of
“fresh” meat produced commercially in North America today contains:
Residues of hydrocarbon pesticides and herbicides, linked to cancers and birth
defects,
Residues of antibiotics and growth-augmenting sex hormones fed to the animals
and stored in their tissues,
Fecal microbes, like the potentially lethal E. coli 0:157 and Salmonella
bacteria. (Hamburger roulette, anyone?)
The nightmare specter of the brain-destroying prion protein, the cause of
spongioform encephalopathies - “mad cow disease” in bovines - Creutzfeldt-Jacob
disease, or CJD in humans. (I feel sadly certain that what occurred in England
with mad cow disease will probably occur here in North America and other parts
of the world.)
Given these ever-increasing risks connected to meat consumption, I fear that the
theories and books that attempt to justify and promote the eating of flesh - for
whatever reason - could be opening the floodgates of ghastly epidemics five or
ten years from now. These plagues likely will have a magnitude that will dwarf
everybody's concerns about “being in the zone” or eating “right for your type.”
Finally, no matter what advocates of animal-based diets might say about the
merits of being in the “zone” or “eating right for your blood type,” from an
ecological standpoint, a meat-based diet for the world's population is
non-achievable and, for even a sizeable minority, is non-sustainable. The
world's soils, waters, and forests are being decimated to produce meat-based
diets. We are destroying the life support systems of our planet - of our
children's planet - for a mouthful of flesh. To me, the promotion of diets
centered around meat increases the chances of ecological catastrophes and thus
jeopardizes each of our futures.
I wish for everyone optimal health, happiness, and longevity. We owe it to
ourselves, to our children, and to all who come after them, to see how optimal
function and life span can be achieved on diets that are truly sustainable - for
individuals, for societies, and for the planet. It is, after all, the food of
all our futures.
-Michael Klaper, M.D.
References
(1) Galland, L. Intestinal
Dysbiosis and the Causes of Disease. Journal of Advancement in Medicine - Vol.6,
No.2, Summer, 1993; Inman, R. Antigens, the Gastrointestinal Tract, and
Arthritis. Rheumatic Disease Clinics of North America - Vol. 17, No. 2, May
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