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464 lines
42 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1159
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Title: HPR1159: Food - Health - Nutritionally Dense food
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1159/hpr1159.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 20:46:25
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---
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Hello and welcome to this episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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My name is Dudeman.
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I have a little podcast on technology over Hacker at Dudemanovie.cz where I talk about technology
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but one of my big pet interests is animal husbandry feeding my family kind of a self-sufficiency.
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I love playing about with gadgets and do-dads, Arduino, Arch Linux, distros, you know,
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I love gadgets, I can't put them down but the point of my podcast is to be interested in all
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technologies, not just modern ones and if you've listened I did an episode on hacking and programming
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recently but trying to stretch out the appeal to beyond just say one particular programming language
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but applying it to our whole life and in this episode I would like to bring to you a subject
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very close and dear to me and my family which is food, what is healthy food and what should we eat
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to be healthy. Now I know something we've been studying and doing in a very practical sense
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for the last ten years. The book I'm going to mention now, the original one is called Western
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A Price Nutrition and Physical Degeneration and I'm going to describe a little bit about it
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but it's a wonderful book, I'll write some notes and you can find the descriptions in the show notes
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but you know there are different schools of thoughts you know if you're a vegetarian or vegan
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that there's so many different diets and fats and I am with my wife kind of the person who
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is eternally trying to stay open-minded and looking to every aspect there was a point in our lives
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where we were dabbling with vegetarianism and macrobiotics and being interested in some of these
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things but we didn't find anything else which was which was as sensibly written and logical as what
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I'm going to try to describe to you now so if you are a vegetarian or you're that way inclined
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if you just keep an open mind and I'm not trying to convert anybody here but I think it is important
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to mention some of these things and to kind of start a dialogue or a conversation and
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mention some alternative for which isn't in the mainstream at all but if you're able to look
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a few of these websites I'm going to mention then you might be fascinated by some of the research
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and the evidence to back up what I'm going to talk about so basically I guess I should say you
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know if you enjoy butter and cream and full-fat milk and you know fat on your meat and you know
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good old-fashioned foods and bacon you know I hear some Linux-y type tech podcast people talking
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about bacon you know who I'm talking about door to door and other people you know I love bacon as
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well and I want to give you a way to actually allow yourself to eat these things because they are
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actually very important but like many things you know there's an element of truth in in everything
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you know everything sometimes there's kind of half truth and you know it is true that the milk
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today is unhealthy and that's it's connected with the way it's produced and that the way the
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animals are grown and the way it's produced and you know it's pasteurized and homogenized and
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the cows aren't given proper food and is not even the correct type of cow you know but if we fix
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those things and return back to how cows were kept 100 to 100 years ago or how we keep our cows
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today because we have a few in our shed outside in the meadows in the summer just for our own
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personal personal satisfaction when we drink our lovely cold milk full of cream and I can see
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there are beautiful rosy faces of my children but if if if we talk about foods and and know the
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difference that it's we're not talking about industrial meats here we're not in talking about
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industrially processed milk you know so if I'm talking about these kinds of foods which are demonised
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now I'm not talking about the way they're the way they're produced nowadays but the way that they
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should be produced on a small scale and to a much higher quality but you know there's a there's
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lots of talk about cholesterol and low fat diets and you know rather having vegetable oils instead
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of the the old traditional saturated fats lad and butter unfortunately if you spend any time now
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looking into some of these these evidence I'm going to try and describe to you now it's all a
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great big myth this this this information that's being pushed out to the mainstream media and
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the mainstream people about what is healthy um to be honest if you listen to any dietary
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recommendations you'd probably be a lot better off if you just ate the exact opposite and the
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the obesity epidemic and many of those other things are more attributed to the high sugar diet
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and the high corn and grain diet and and starchy bread and what have you and then fats there is
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actually a wonderful book called I think it's eat fat lose fat basically the premises you you
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don't get fat by eating fatty things you know you get fat by eating nutrient nutrient undense you know
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food which isn't good for you because something strange happens in your body
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and your body's reaction is to actually cling on to to all the energy which goes into your body and
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and not process process and burn it at all and that is how you get fat and this is contrary
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possibly to a living you've heard before but that is my job is to to mention something perhaps a
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little radical or perhaps a little unusual to poke you all in the ribs a little bit and get us
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all to think but the subject I really want to talk about and describe briefly now is the book
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called Nutrition and Physical Degeneration by Western A price and Western was a dentist a very
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successful dentist in the US I mean the 1920s and 30s I believe and I'm eternally grateful to him
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because he he did what isn't done now very often it seems to me by scientists he did a truly
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scientific piece of work which helped in thousands of thousands of people now and he went and he
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found healthy people which were in isolated communities which hadn't yet been touched by modern
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civilization by the civilized foods like white sugar and processed white breads and the canned
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goods and and of course the lifestyle which went with that but they because usually because of
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geological location they were isolated you know there was one Austrian or Swiss group I think
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community and they were down in a valley and it was inaccessible only by foot in the summer you
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know so the whole of the year accepts you know good weather in the summer it was inaccessible so
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they had to be completely self-sufficient and dependable upon themselves and they had been through
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generation after generation and you know they didn't have tooth decay of course as Western his first
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concern was tooth so he took with him his entourage traveling those days it wasn't as it is now
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you know you don't jump on a plane and a bus and get driven into the place these places were
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inaccessible and I guess he planned for weeks or months how to get there which people's to visit
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all this communication and collaboration to to even meet these people and of course he didn't have
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an iPhone or an SLR camera to easily take pictures but he took thousands of pictures in the old
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fashion way on these glass sheets had them shipped back as well as taking samples of the foods
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these people were eating so he can analyze them back in the labs later and I believe he visited
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about 14 or so isolated separated geographically around the world groups and the things he noticed is
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they didn't eat all the same foods but what they did did had a few things in common and they ate
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nutrient dense food and that wasn't and also they they process the foods in specific ways
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which we have especially in modern modernized processing plants and the way we we want to speed up
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the process now for our foods we have actually forgotten you know I'm quite lucky here in the
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Czech Republic because some of this information you know is still kind of common knowledge and
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practiced although it's it's probably overwhelmed by the amount of alcohol and sugar that is consumed
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here in the Czech Republic unfortunately I believe in in Europe Czech Republic is the second
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only to the United Kingdom for obesity rates and and what's it called the sugar defect that people
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have diabetes that's well anyway so he he visited those 14 groups and of course he discovered
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very few dental cavities in the young and the old you know people 90 years old or a hundred
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with perfectly healthy teeth you know maybe damaged because they might have fallen over and
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bashed the tooth out occasionally or you know but had very very few you know in the one or two
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percent dental cavities and they had dirty teeth because maybe their their food their dental
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hygiene was low and they didn't it wasn't normal to be brushing all the time and keeping them
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clean because it's actually a myth the the damage to teeth I I'm understanding from all of this
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it doesn't occur necessarily from the outside the the the terrain exists because we don't have
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the correct food to keep our bones and our and our teeth and our hair and you know all of the
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parts of our body strong and that allow and then it creates a terrain where you're nearest and
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cavities and then attack us from the outside it's really fascinating sometimes for my wife and I
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you know we we study all this and then we we listen to the advice that dentists give you know and
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there was there was in the Czech Republic here on a website my wife found and it was you know
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dentist advice how to look after your teeth there was like 10 or 20 points and the 20th you know
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the lowest priority was mentioned of you know nutrient you know good food but he didn't specify
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at all what that good food was well anyway I'm going to try here and mention the good nutrient
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dense foods and and then some of the foods which are problematic and we will probably want to
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just to give you an idea of the kind of direction I'm going to go in then I thought I would
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mention the the differences in the shapes of the people and the tendencies towards the the way
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that the children will grow and then what happened to those to the the children of just 10 years after
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they those isolated groups of people change their diets after they've been penetrated by the
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modernization you know they the roads have been built through to their previously independent and
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isolated communities and they started trading you know trading their furs and whatever they
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produced locally and sometimes even their food they they started to trade their good food for
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canned and processed goods which were had been mass produced and as a result it was quite a
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shocking what happened to them to be honest but so the good foods you know some of the things we
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want to focus on as nutrient dense foods are you know milk butter fat but all of these all of these
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sources of food are from non industrialized and well cared for animals you know so in a sense
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I believe and and empathize with a lot of the values that vegetarians have and the the sort of
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disgust towards the way that a lot of farming or animal husbandry practices are are carried out
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nowadays and so if I'm suggesting non vegetarian type things it's with the understanding that
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that those practices are done in a humane and a high quality way we personally keep a few cows
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Jersey cows very high fat high fat milk but only for our own consumption and we we do eat the
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bulls and the meat but we don't keep them just for that you know I don't enjoy killing animals but
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I hope as you listen in listen on that you're you'll come to understand that for growing people
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and for even aging or for adults wanting to conceive easily healthy children then it is very
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important to have these nutrient dense foods so maybe I should have planned this all a little bit more
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and really try to make it a multi-part episode but that's not my way I'm gonna ramble a little bit
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thank you for bearing with me some more of the foods you know often maligned nowadays are
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internal organs you know liver kidneys heart the the blood of the animal and again you know
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we have been trained not to think about these things but in the past those those parts of the
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animal if an animal has to be tortured were valued much more highly than just fat it's in
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this meat sorry and talking about meat it is actually he found that Western price that it was
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very important to have not lean meat but very important to eat meat with the fat connected to it
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again that's something else which is much maligned nowadays and it's often true that to find
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the truth if you simply follow the money and you know just think for yourself a little bit
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what is easier to produce and mass process you know so that they can maximize the profit margins
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well it's very difficult to mass produce healthy fresh you know dairy and high quality meat and
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you know insanely and beautifully butchered with compassion towards the animals it's not really
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conducive to mass production you know and of course these are probably influencing factors why
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the information has been told to us as to what is healthy has gone in the direction it has you
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know more towards more easily available you know grains and soya and more vegetables and fruits
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unfortunately what Western A price discovered is the the foods that we are now eating and
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are being told that are healthy to us nowadays these primitively you know isolated peoples weren't eating
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you know so I carry on describing the things they were eating so it's butter milk you know
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animal saturated fats and plenty of them really much higher quantities and we'd ever consider
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at least in these modern days but maybe we should reconsider that in turn on organs you know liver
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kidneys brains eyes it's another thing if you have weak and an alien eyes you know the best way
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to get what your eyes eyes need is to eat and consume the the elements of your in eyes you know
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our brains you know and a lot of these foods are considered to be kind of aphrodisiacs you know
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they they give us this potency and energy and there is a reason for that because you know they contain
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you know the sort of life given for the next generation I hope you understand what I mean there
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without being crude but these things are very true and this this nutrient dense food which gives us
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that vitality and I don't just mean in a sexual way but gives us that vitality and energy and
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passion for life those are the things that we should be consuming not the the food types which
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kind of slows down and make us feel suffragic and keep us calm you know so that's an idea of some
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of the the foods but there's also emphasis on how to prepare bread properly for example you know
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there's a problem with high gluten in in bread and a lot of the old original grains
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what they call there's a greenish grain here
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rye that's the world I was looking for a rye bread you know it was and some of the old varieties
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wheat as well but they used to cook with much lower gluten but of course you can't cook such
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fancy smooth kind of pastries which are more sort of sticky and sort of finer if you use rye
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because it's basically the gluten which holds it all together I believe anyway it's it's also
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in modern modern times you know we're told that you need to have whole wheat bread well if you
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read in any commercial whole wheat bread it's it can be quite difficult to digest and and it needs
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to be processed properly and steps in you know very simple old-fashioned technology and it's called
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sourdough and you know if you enjoy bread and you're prepared to kind of accept a different
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a different idea of what what it can taste like some old-fashioned taste look up sourdough
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and it's amazingly simple to make all you need is a best freshly ground low gluten grains make
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your own flour of course make it whole wheat leave every bit in it and you just add water you know
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wait a few days let those natural bacteria come in and it's really not much more to making bread
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than just allowing the natural bacteria to come in mixing the flour getting you know a bit thicker
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letting it rise banging it in the oven you know before my wife took over the bread making about
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five years ago six years ago I was making the family bread for a good few years before she really
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took hold of this whole food as I'm describing now and now she does a wonderful job of making bread for
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us also vegetables you know vegetables are healthy but we do need to understand they aren't
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nutrient dense there might be some some elements in even them if they are grown in really high
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quality you know ground and they can be quite difficult to digest you know and Western A price
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he found that they were vegetables and a lot of grains I's probably too much to not enough time
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now on too many details to go into but they would be fermented they would be sort of dry that
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there were different ways of processing them in order to remove either like difficult to digest
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elements you know for example beans they need to be soaked in a certain way to remove indigestable
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elements which also make them not the taste very nice you know and vegetables it's beneficial for
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many of them to actually be fermented and it actually makes them taste much better additionally a
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lot of this processing even my wife has been discovering recently the processing of meats
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not only did it allow those vegetables to be stored very easily for longer periods of times but
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it meant that they were partially digested and more available and easier to digest less of a burden
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on our digestive systems and our bodies and all the goodness more available if they were
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processed in this way and there was less need for fridges and refrigerations so there really is
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a lot more to for example smoking and and curing meat than just for its taste benefits you know
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my wife has recently the last pick we killed she has been curing in vinegar for a few days
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and different mixtures the meat and when she cooks it is just so quick to cook and it's so
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soft and tasty and juicy it's amazing I can't believe all these years we've been having just
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you know you know unsoaked and processed in vinegar meat from for many animals you know it was
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so much nicer so hopefully I've mentioned just some of the foods which I mentioned in this book
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that the the people's ate but and of course the the things that they didn't eat were the highly
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processed foods mostly containing sodium which isn't really the the sort that people are
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reaching in the days you know sodium is just the the salt element I'm not a chemist or anything but
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I understand it's it's devoid of the minerals you know and salt is actually just like I said
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earlier there is a half truth that nowadays a highest salty now diet is bad for us it is actually
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true high sodium which is the modernized highly processed salt just like processed sugar
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is bad for us what we really need is salty now diet is very important but we need a high mineral
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salt and unprocessed processed in in a much more natural software so those minerals and elements
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which are very important for us aren't destroyed so we salt is good you know and but we don't
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want the the bad highly processed salt with no minerals of course sugar white sugar have a look
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up a sugar blues and what sugar does to our bodies you know the strain it creates on the adrenal
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gland I believe that's the gland and the sort of the escalating the ups and the downs have a
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search for sugar blues and the effects on on the cravings and the desires for for foods which
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contain sugar and salt you know we don't have to think too much to try and understand why
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is sugar and salt being put to such large quantities in the highly processed foods because
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it is very addictive it creates this sort of rush of energy when we have it and then you know
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fairly shortly afterwards of consuming any of those foods we we sort of plummet down and this
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continue for a few years 20 years 10 years however long of upwards and downwards you know it
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creates a terrible strain on our bodies and our adrenal glands and you know if we let it go on
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unchecked and it can create more complicated problems but it creates an addiction you know
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because we've always craved when they never satisfies us you know so and of course high gluten
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processed and low quality bread that's another it's an anti nutrient and and not conclusive not
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conducive to healthy people you know but now maybe you're asking well I'm making all these
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statements how do I know and how can you tell what is it doing to people you know what do what
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people look like who have grown up on healthy food and what are the characteristics the the body
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shapes the the tendencies in people who have had bad food well western a price he discovered this
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as well as having very very straight and strong and well spaced teeth you know the the people
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he found had no need for for dental correction they had no need for braces and or removing teeth
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and straighting them like even in his day in the US in the 20s and 30s he was that they were
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using braces I understand and and many people had crowded teeth and to be honest you know it's
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very difficult nowadays even you know if you if I asked somebody you know why do people young
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children why aren't the teeth straight in our mouths why do we need at a certain age to remove
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a few teeth either side and then to put these metal constructions on and straighten them you know
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didn't god didn't nature whoever it is you know design human body just perfectly you know
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well why doesn't it grow straight well western a price discovered and proved and recent people
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who have been practicing what he suggests have discovered in their own children that there have
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been no need for braces so a few of the practices well maybe I should carry on describing the the
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shapes of people so as well as having teeth which actually fitted in the mouths of these people
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in good condition so they didn't need braces to straighten them or anything like that
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low amounts of cavities he also found that people would generally shorter and broader
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were very fine figures you know the the the the the men were short and stocky and stout and they
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looked really capable not necessarily because they were working terribly hard but they had that
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sort of ruggedness and strength and durability about them which which you don't often see
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in modernized peoples I know it's possible to go to the gym and to bulk ourselves up to look
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tough but that's that's not the kind of toughness I'm talking about it's even it's easy it's
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interesting you know even here in the Czech Republic all the older people are extremely short
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you know because of socialism here they they had up to about 20 years ago before the
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capitalism was introduced in a rush there was a lot the the foodstuffs were much higher quality
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you know the the modern ideas of what is healthy and what isn't the healthy hadn't been
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introduced into the Czech Republic so they were eating lots of cream and fat and butter and
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they were eating lots of those foods of course along with sugars and processed foods but
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um you know in the countryside where where those people had access they looked different to the
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people in the cities so they were shorter broader and the reason I mentioned this is because my my
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wife my Czech wife's grandparents you know she remembers how her her grandfather was so short
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and so broad you know and he was sort of almost as broad as he was short but he wasn't necessarily
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stronger I think you know but he was just short and broad and you can still see that as as you
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walk around and see the old people especially in away from the big cities and in the countryside
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so western A price he discovered that the people in these primitive groups isolated societies
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and communities they were shorter broader so you know we don't have to think too far but answer
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me this when I was growing up everybody else seemed to be taller than me you know my my parents
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and everybody seemed to think well why aren't why aren't I as tall as everybody else and everyone
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else is shooting up but I'm not growing as quick as they are you know but it's actually a good thing
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you know it's actually good not to shoot up and be massively tall because it's actually a degenerative
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disease or degenerative problem connected with malnutrition and you know maybe your your eyes
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are going around and you head and you're thinking dude man what are you talking about this is
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absolute nonsense well I ask you just to to study a little bit this little book and the website
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westernaprice.org and see for yourself if you have any interest or if if you're a tall intrigued
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by these things I mentioned and you know so there is a phenomenon now with young people seemingly
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getting taller and taller as generation goes on and western A price discovered this and noticed
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himself and noticed it in the same groups once they started eating different foods and made the
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connection there's a phenomenon now that often the youngest child in the family is the tallest
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and the the oldest the first child is the shortest and this is if you consider the nutrition
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that the oldest son might have had slightly better nutrition from his mother being the the first
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child and progressively as the mother has a few more children and often she would have the children
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too close to each other this is this is another idea I should quickly mention that before children
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were conceived in these societies you know they would be a little bit strict there was nice
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examples in the the I think the the Austrian Alp villages that they would marriages weddings would
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occur in the late summer and you know they were they knew why they had marriages in the late
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summers because the young children the young young people who were getting married they would have
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all seasoned to have you know the best milk and butter and cheese from the from the fast growing
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grass from their cows you know they'd have the all the energy and the life from that that spring
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and summer you know to to nourish their bodies so that once they got married of course the first
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thing they're going to do or one of the first things is to go and start practicing creating children
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and when you conceive children they wanted to make sure that the young people the young people's
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bodies and sort of health had been pumped up by good food they were other other societies who
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would deliberately when when two people were going to conceive before they would try and conceive
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maybe six months beforehand they would they would elect somebody in the tribe maybe two people
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to travel off every day and to get the right kind of food for both the man and the woman
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so that the eggs and the sperm and everything would be at his fullest potential so they would be
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able to conceive easily and so all of the DNA and everything which is transferred during that phase
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is maintained and is in the highest quality so that the child would have the the best start
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and grow well and it's very beautiful and these things are ignored but nowadays
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in the main so they would also practice a larger intervals between each child
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three or four years before in between conceive in each child and in some societies it was
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really frowned upon you know that you're doing a disservice to your to your to the next child
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if you conceive him too early you know because there isn't enough time for the mother to really
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recover all of her strength and you know it's it's really underestimated the amount it takes
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from from a mother be it a human mother or a bovine cow or mother how much it takes to give birth
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you know you know maybe in animal husbandry or any kind of animal breeding for pets or dogs
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maybe you keep dogs that it is really important what you feed your dog so your cows or
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your sheep and of course the same applies to your children you know but often in our stressful
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lives we don't have time to even consider this and we are actually told by the mainstream and our
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doctors that these things aren't important and we are led to believe that they will fix it all you
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know but unfortunately just like in hacking and Linux and computers often is better to rely upon
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yourself more and do everything you can and not rely that someone else would do it for you you know
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so they would practice a large intervals between conceiving children and some of these practices
|
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to maximize the the health of the next generation because it's very important especially
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if you don't have all you know the industrial machines and everything to make life easy
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you need to make sure that everybody in the community in the societies is happy and healthy
|
|
and vibrant you know it's like the the weakest link in the chain is the one you know that the
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whole chain will break for any weakest link so it's in all of our best interest to make sure that
|
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that everybody has the best potential you know and and of course if you're isolated and you
|
|
all depend upon each other for survival for the long hard winters and you've got to harvest you
|
|
know all your food and and make and do everything yourselves then you need to make sure you're
|
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strong and capable everybody is you know there's no no dead wood so whatever characteristics that
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these people have so they were shorter broader they easily conceived they had good teeth
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they a lot I mean they didn't need prisons they they didn't have crime or
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or societal problems and that's probably a lot connected with with you know everybody being
|
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very happy and and satisfied because you know it does make a difference what you eat if you eat
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|
if your body is for you know you know the feeling if you're hungry you tend to be a bit irritable
|
|
well if you just extrapolate that a little bit more and say well if my body is hungry for the
|
|
nutrients that I had I didn't give it I what I ate just now my belly is full so I don't feel
|
|
irritated like I would be if I wasn't hungry but my body is sort of crying out for the good food
|
|
so maybe maybe my body is not able to to have patience in that situation or have perseverance you
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|
know so it really is a prerequisite to make sure that every function of our body is is you know
|
|
given what it really needs to to a function you know just like if there's any part of our body
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|
which is missing what it needs and that's that's a weak link in the chain and it's going to cause
|
|
problems another thing I should quickly mention is it was a little shocking after I finished reading
|
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this book and I think it's something that opened up my eyes very much is what what do the face what
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|
does the face of a healthy person look like and you know you can't change you know if you've you
|
|
and all of these all of these discussions when I'm when I'm talking about you know the shape of
|
|
somebody or whether they're tall or short and that's a sign of degeneration or that's not good
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it's it's a sensitive thing and I'm really I'm not judging the the sort of spirit or the
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|
the good or badness of that person it's like the first thing a husband and go look at him when
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he's buying a horse he should be you know the way he walks the the shape of his legs the horse his
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|
legs and have a look inside and have a look at his teeth well I'm just trying to apply the same
|
|
logic so at least we know what's going on I'm really you know don't want to cause any offense to
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|
this I'm I'm not in perfect condition myself I grew up in a in a town had bad food all my life
|
|
in except the last 10 years where I've changed at myself after I know about these things and
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|
I can definitely see the difference in my own children even compared to the shapes and the
|
|
the disposition of the friends and family with similarly age children or even my my brothers
|
|
families and other situations and and even when I make these these comparisons I don't mean
|
|
to be cruel or or pointing but just if if you're interested at all it's just as an example you know
|
|
so please don't be offended or upset if I say these things but so the shape of people's faces you know
|
|
as well as being shorter and broader the shape of the generation is shown in the shape of our face
|
|
maybe we're aware of the phenomenon of nose breathes this this is a class of people are a category
|
|
and maybe it the doctors seem to think it's genetic or it's it's something inherited because
|
|
you know your father or your mother was also a nose breathing nose breathing just means that
|
|
your the nasal passages aren't broad enough really and it's very difficult to breathe through
|
|
the nose so people tend to have their mouths open and breathe through the mouth and this doesn't
|
|
make a person bad but it's definitely inconvenient because we were designed to breathe through our
|
|
nose and it's a very important function but it has a very simple basis and if you're about to
|
|
conceive children or if you have young children which are growing rapidly you can have a big
|
|
impact upon how they're going to grow by changing what they eat so that's one aspect
|
|
another aspect is the the shape of the jaw there's there's something called over bite or
|
|
under bite and it's basically the the lower jaw kind of sticking out and the the teeth not
|
|
meshing together properly and it can be you know over or under one way or the other and it it
|
|
creates if you look at a side profile of a person it it either gives the idea that a person has a
|
|
chin which is in wood slightly or a chin which is sticking out and this is another aspect connected
|
|
with the development of the jaw which is affected by the nutrition you know bones need calcium you
|
|
know and I think the best source of calcium is in milk even though that's much maligned nowadays
|
|
for good reason because he's industrialized and homogenized and pasteurized but you know raw milk
|
|
but there needs to be the fat in the milk you know so we need a high fat raw milk and
|
|
even better if there's plenty of high quality butter you know you wouldn't believe the quantity of
|
|
butter we eat and if you were to look at me I hope I'm a kind of picture of a hell for I don't
|
|
have any kind of obesity problem even though I'm looking and eating as much cream and butter as I can
|
|
and plenty of fried foods and lard and meat and some vegetables fermented and some grains but
|
|
mostly those nutrient dense foods which I really enjoy but back to the shape of people's faces
|
|
you know there is this perception that you know models female models and what beauty looks like
|
|
the image which is sold to young people of tall and skinny and to be honest after I read this book
|
|
and I informed myself a little bit my perception of a beautiful girl a beautiful woman has
|
|
completely or a beautiful boy for that matter beautiful looking man has completely transformed
|
|
and I have a terrible time finding somebody that I find is beautiful you know because we all like
|
|
to look at beautiful objects or beautiful people you know it's it's very strangely but it definitely
|
|
true but my perception now of beauty is broad faces you know eyes which are wider part big fat noses
|
|
you know and a child or an adult with their mouths closed you know because the noses work properly
|
|
and the beautiful thing is all of this is attainable even if the parents or young
|
|
young adolescents haven't had the benefit of the best food once this knowledge is understood
|
|
and executed with some conscientiousness and it takes some effort to source these foods and
|
|
to learn how to cook them you know and to change our taste buds but the the impact on the next
|
|
generation and the transformation from having the tendency towards our children being taller than us
|
|
towards the tendency of our children being shorter you know which am broader is it can happen
|
|
over one generation you know and you can see it in your in your young children and it can really
|
|
demonstrate for you the truth in this kind of nutritional wisdom which I'm trying to share here with you
|
|
I think that I'm going to try and make this a multi part I was speaking to somebody just before
|
|
I started recording this over on the augcast IRC and he was interested very much in permaculture
|
|
and mentioned a few other things which I've been educating myself about the last 10 years since I've
|
|
been interested in all of this and I would like very much to to talk about all of this a bit more
|
|
and to start discussing some of these things because it really is in the line of in the line of
|
|
hacking and programming and it's so interesting and intriguing you know so I look forward to that as well
|
|
so I think there will be some future episodes and follow ups to this episode I hope
|
|
there there was one interest in chapter at the end of the book and perhaps a little controversial
|
|
but it was just a simple study of the the shapes of the faces of conflicts in in the US in those 1920s
|
|
and 30s I'm not sure how serious or how far it was done but it was quite easy to observe when you
|
|
start to get an idea of these facial characteristics which lead to which are signs of the generation
|
|
and basically you know if you have a body which hasn't grown to its full potential maybe
|
|
you're sort of stooped over a little bit your head is down your your sort of taller and thinner
|
|
than you should be maybe your your nose is is more narrow and you have problems breathing
|
|
maybe your eyes are closer together and because your face your whole skeletal structure
|
|
hasn't grown to the breadth it should grow your eyes don't work so well all of these kind of
|
|
physical characteristics or attributes of your body which have been formed throughout your life
|
|
and have been built from what you eat you know as well as of course the the lifestyle of that
|
|
person maybe he was kind of in a in a poor neighborhood maybe you know some inner city district
|
|
and had some unfortunate background you know but all of those those things you can see them more
|
|
prevalent in the disadvantage in the criminal you know and it's in this we're not to poke fingers
|
|
or anything but you know whereas the at least in those days the the middle class would have access
|
|
to better foods and wouldn't have those kind of degenerative attributes in their in their facial
|
|
structures and their skeletal and their and which would affect them you know so I hear sometimes
|
|
these kind of charitable organizations talking about you know bringing nutritional food out to
|
|
people you know to to help these underprivileged people and then I hear mention of what food they
|
|
bring out and I think oh my god you know if you want to help the poor people or even the middle class
|
|
people you know avoid all of the the the the the the dependencies on the modern you know interfere in
|
|
healthcare system then we need as a foundation nutritionally dense food you know and I'm kind
|
|
of I've got over my frustration and anger at it all over the last few years but it makes me cringe
|
|
a little bit you know so I'm hoping I've given a kind of summary to some of Western A prices
|
|
discoveries kind of describing as best as I can a little a little sneak peek into into what it
|
|
might mean what does a healthy person look like what are the the physical attributes the body
|
|
characteristics that that you there might be able to distinguish and give you an indication for
|
|
the kind of food you've had and you know even if you have a bad body shape it's it's still beneficial
|
|
to start eating nutritionally dense nutrient dense foods because you know not only during those
|
|
you know I think it's said every seven years our body all the cells in our body are completely
|
|
replaced so it's not like our bodies are grown during childhood and adolescence and early youth
|
|
and then you know we stop needing any nutritional nutritional food to to keep us strong and healthy
|
|
the those requirements continue you know and even in old age maybe they're actually higher or
|
|
through perhaps menstruation and and if you want to avoid osteoporosis osteo I think it's all
|
|
osteoporosis the the weakening of the bones especially in females in women then then we need
|
|
to eat the correct foods you know and perhaps if you I know it's it's it's more complicated in the
|
|
US because of the the private health system and the the cost of some of these procedures or
|
|
helps that they give you and maybe especially for you people it is actually more cost effective
|
|
to to reconsider what you're eating now as the instead of you know saving up to pay for some
|
|
medical health system and scheme for your for your later years you know I personally don't
|
|
subscribe to any kind of health system I had to go to the the doctors a few years ago because I
|
|
broken arm I got kicked by a horse very hard but until that point I hadn't been to the doctors
|
|
or anything and I had trouble even believing that I broke on my arm to be honest but maybe that's
|
|
a separate story and and all of these things that I'm not saying that I'm the the most healthy
|
|
I have other problems connected with with stress you know tension and more have you because
|
|
it can be stressful trying to manage all of these things and raising young children and what
|
|
have you you know it's a challenge but I hope this has been interesting and I would very much like
|
|
to do a follow-up episode and it would help me a great deal if if you've got any comments or if
|
|
you'd like me to try and clarify and I think but once again the book is called Trishon
|
|
and Physical Degeneration a comparison of primitive and modern diets and their effects and of
|
|
course you can find that at amazon or maybe it might be mentioned on my podcast blog which is
|
|
Doodman or V.C. Z and another great book which I should just mention as well is Sally Fallon's book
|
|
Navishin Traditions and the subtitle is the cookbook that challenges politically correct nutrition
|
|
and the diet diet dictocrats and my wife is actually in the middle she's almost halfway through
|
|
translating this book it's over 700 pages it has fascinating kind of sidebars the edges of each
|
|
page during the end of the book and the middle parts are lots and lots of traditional healthy
|
|
recipes and so it's an amazing cookbook with sort of related historical anecdotes supporting
|
|
the recipes and sort of little tippits you would never imagine were possible and the first
|
|
quarter of the book describes all of the function of this nutrition it sort of justifies and explains
|
|
all of these food types and why we should eat them it's a fascinating book and I would highly
|
|
recommend getting it and if you speak the Czech language just wait until the spring and my wife
|
|
will have it all ready and we're going to try and self publish that so I'm sure nobody here is
|
|
Czech so that has no effect at all anyway I would like to thank you for listening it's been almost
|
|
an hour now and I and I really should finish so once again thank you very much for listening
|
|
have a great week and this has been Doodman from DoodmanoV.cz for Hacker Public Radio which I really enjoy
|
|
you have been listening to Hacker Public Radio it's Hacker Public Radio does our
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