The Rich Roll Podcast - Michael Klaper, MD Is Educating The Next Generation of Doctors

Episode Date: March 23, 2020

Today we honor this long-standing tradition with one of my favorite medical minds. Meet Michael Klaper, MD. For the past 40 years, Dr. Klaper has distinguished himself as a gifted general practitione...r, internationally recognized teacher, and sought-after speaker on diet, health, applied plant-based nutrition and integrative medicine. I became acquainted with Dr. Klaper during his eight-year term at the TrueNorth Health Center in Santa Rosa, California. A nutrition-based medical clinic specializing in therapeutic fasting and health improvement through a whole-food, plant-based diet, TrueNorth is renowned for successfully navigating people to better well-being through non-intervention lifestyle protocols. In addition, Dr. Klaper served as an advisor to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) project on nutrition for long-term space colonists on the moon and Mars. He was also a member of the Nutrition Task Force of the American Medical Student Association and served as the Director of the non-profit Institute of Nutrition Education and Research. Diet is key to reversing many of the most feared degenerative diseases known to medicine. And yet, applied nutrition is not typically integral to medical school curriculums. To solve this problem, Dr. Klaper partnered with PlantPure Communities to form Moving Medicine Forward, a medical school nutrition education initiative designed to change the way future doctors treat their patients through improved nutrition and lifestyle education. The most important work of his career, Dr. Klaper lectures at medical schools nationwide, educating students on using plant-predominant nutrition and positive lifestyle changes to truly heal their patients -- and ultimately improve the health of future generations. Early in his career, Dr. Klaper realized that many of the diseases his patients brought to his office were made worse, or actually caused by the high-fat, high sugar, overly processed Standard American Diet. When he began treating his patients not with pharmaceuticals and surgical interventions but instead with diet and lifestyle protocols -- specifically a whole-food, plant-based diet and active lifestyle -- he started getting unprecedented results. Over time, he observed his patients miraculously reverse a litany of chronic ailments, including atherosclerosis, high blood pressure, hypertension, obesity, adult onset diabetes, and even some forms of arthritis, asthma, and autoimmune disease. Today Dr. Klaper shares his wisdom and experience, picking up where we left off in our first podcast conversation, published six years ago to the day (RRP #77). We discuss his mission to help empower the next generation of doctors to better heal their patients. And we explore his dream of eradicating the chronic lifestyle epidemics that unnecessarily afflict millions of people every single year. The visually inclined can watch it all go down on YouTube. And as always, the audio version streams wild and free on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. The most energetic and youthful 72-year old I've ever met, I aspire to this beautiful and gentle man's enthusiasm for life and commitment to service. I sincerely hope you enjoy the exchange. In the meantime, stay safe everyone. We're in this together. Peace + Plants, Rich

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 It's inevitable that the current edifice of just paying doctors to do things to patients after the disease has already started, to do these very expensive band-aid procedures, a quarter million dollar operation, and the patient limps out of the hospital to go eat more cheeseburgers and pizzas and clog up their grafts so they can come back in and have another one done. That's bankrupt medicine. And the phrase, do no harm, applies to dietary advice as well. And you can
Starting point is 00:00:25 really hurt somebody with the wrong diet. And I think a lot of wrong advice is being given. We're not homo carnivorous. We're not flesh-eating apes. And our simian ancestors have been on this planet for 20 million years eating leaves and fruits. Our bonobo and gorilla cousins are up in the trees today eating leaves and fruits. Basically, we were plant-eating creatures. As long as we eat a plant-predominant diet, whole plant foods, leaves and greens and fruits and vegetables, your body's going to thrive on that. And we talk about disease reversal. I was a physician 45 years before anybody even put those two words in the same sentence for me,
Starting point is 00:01:03 that these are reversible diseases. The diabetes and the high blood pressure and the inflammatory arthritis. These diseases go away with a healthy diet. That's Dr. Michael Clapper, this week on The Rich Roll Podcast. The Rich Roll Podcast. How's everybody holding up?
Starting point is 00:01:34 Strange times indeed. All I can say is that I hope this finds you well in this surreal and solemn moment of sequestration and social distancing. And I think it's important to acknowledge the reality of what we're currently facing and that emotions like fear and anxiety and uncertainty are normal human responses. But I also think it's equally important
Starting point is 00:02:02 to not allow these feelings to overwhelm us or to commandeer our emotional state because there's very little that we can control about what's happening. But what we do have is agency, agency over how we decide to use this time, what we decide to consume, the thoughts that we entertain,
Starting point is 00:02:25 the behaviors we indulge in, and the choices that we make about how to respond, not react, but respond to that which we can't control. So do all the things, stay home if you can. I hope you're staying home if you're capable of doing so. Get lots of sleep, eat healthy, move your bodies, endeavor to create a routine and a sense of normalcy in your day. I think that's very important. And of course, pay close attention to your information diet. I think it's critical that
Starting point is 00:02:59 you ask yourself if and what you're consuming informationally is serving you, and when it acts as a distraction or worse, a means of keeping you afraid and paralyzed. I also think it's important to echo my conversation with Julie from the other day, to embrace this moment of isolation as an opportunity. Because we're required to quite literally stop, it really is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to invest in self-inquiry, to put mindfulness to the test, a rare moment to put distance between you and the choices that you have historically made about how you live your life so that we can objectively reassess what is working
Starting point is 00:03:47 and what is not, what is serving you and what must go. And I think through this lens, and without, of course, minimizing the seriousness and the severity, the extreme severity of what is occurring, I do think it's possible to process this event as a gift and to navigate it with a little bit more grace and gratitude. And for all of you out there who are still in the world, shipping our packages, treating the unwell, maintaining our food supply and our healthcare system, making sure we all maintain access to essential goods, your selflessness is truly, truly laudable. And I think I speak for everybody in saying thank you and that we are very much in your debt.
Starting point is 00:04:37 And to everybody out there who's experiencing extreme hardship right now, those of you who perhaps have contracted the illness or are close to somebody who has, and to those of you who have been laid off or find yourselves on sudden unpaid leave without a savings buffer, and to everybody who finds themselves lonely
Starting point is 00:05:00 and disconnected amidst this isolating moment, my heart goes out to you. It really does. And I don't have answers for you. I wish I had solutions. I don't. But what I can do is create a space for you with this show, whether it be informational or just a welcome distraction. And towards that end, I've been putting a considerable amount of thought into how to best leverage this platform to be of maximum service. Pre-pandemic, I was able to compile a library of 14, I think 14, relatively evergreen conversations,
Starting point is 00:05:41 which I'm now extremely grateful for. And my current thinking is that I will continue to publish those episodes every Sunday night as usual. So even in the event of an extended sequestration and inability to host in-person podcasts going forward, I will be able to maintain the normal integrity of the show in both audio and video formats for at least the next couple months. However, it strikes me as utterly tone deaf and I think on some level even irresponsible to not also use this platform to address what we are experiencing in real time. And towards that end, my current thinking is that I'll be putting up a show every
Starting point is 00:06:25 Thursday directed at contemporaneously speaking to our collective crisis with the idea of providing not just information, but perspective and comfort in this precarious moment. My last episode with Julie was the first instance of this. It seems to have been well-received. And so despite my severe allergy to remote podcasting, it's just not what I do. I'm not a huge fan of it, but times are strange and we all have to adapt. So I'm actively scheduling some interesting people to engage remotely while also endeavoring how to best maintain some semblance of adequate audio quality. My first attempt will be a conversation with Dr. Zach Bush, who is currently en route from Fiji to Oahu. That conversation is scheduled for Monday, and assuming that I can figure out the technology
Starting point is 00:07:22 piece and all goes well, my intention is to publish that conversation on Thursday, March 26th. Meanwhile, today's episode exemplifies a momentary return to my normal programming, a conversation that was recorded in late January, pre-coronavirus, with an OG legend of all things plant-based, my good friend, Dr. Michael Clapper. He's a beautiful man. It's a great conversation. And you're gonna hear it all go down
Starting point is 00:07:51 in a couple minutes, but first. We're brought to you today by recovery.com. I've been in recovery for a long time. It's not hyperbolic to say that I owe everything good in my life to sobriety. And it all began with treatment and experience that I had that quite literally saved my life. And in the many years since, I've in turn helped many suffering addicts and their loved ones find treatment. And with that, I know all too well just how confusing and how overwhelming and how challenging it can be to find the right place and the right level of care, especially because unfortunately, not all treatment resources
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Starting point is 00:09:47 When you or a loved one need help, go to recovery.com and take the first step towards recovery. To find the best treatment option for you or a loved one, again, go to recovery.com. Fair to say, evidence-based conversations with leading clinicians at the intersection of nutrition and functional health are at the very core of this show and have been since the inception of this podcast. And today, we honor this longstanding tradition with one of my very favorite medical minds, Dr. Michael Clapper.
Starting point is 00:10:23 For the past 40 years, Dr. Clapper has distinguished himself as a gifted general practitioner, an internationally recognized teacher, and sought-after speaker on diet, health, applied plant-based nutrition, and integrative medicine. Now in sort of a career third act, Dr. K is now doing what he considers the most important work of his life, lecturing at medical schools nationwide, educating students on using plant-predominant nutrition and positive lifestyle changes to literally change the way future doctors treat their patients and ultimately improve the health of future generations to come. Today, Dr. Clapper and I pick things up where we left off in our first podcast conversation published six years ago, almost to the very day,
Starting point is 00:11:12 just one day off, that was RRP 77, if you missed it back in the day. And today we discuss his decades of experience reversing patients' chronic ailments through whole food, plant-based nutrition and active lifestyle protocols. We talk about his mission to help empower the next generation of doctors
Starting point is 00:11:31 to better heal their patients. And we explore his dream of eradicating the chronic lifestyle epidemics that unnecessarily afflict millions of people every single year. The most energetic and youthful 72-year-old I have ever met. I aspire to this beautiful and gentle man's enthusiasm for life and commitment to service, and I'm delighted to share his message with all of you guys today. Final thought, the world today
Starting point is 00:12:00 is very different than it was a month or two ago, and things are indeed evolving rapidly. And it's disorienting, it's confusing. So to everyone who finds themselves scared or anxious or lonely or disconnected amidst the isolation, I just wanna reiterate that we truly are all in this together. And although we are admittedly geographically separated, we need not be socially disconnected. And so I encourage all of you to take advantage of the powerful digital tools that we have to maintain and even strengthen your connection to your respective communities and loved ones. Because the more united we can be, the more connected, the better off we will find ourselves, no matter how this crisis unfolds.
Starting point is 00:12:59 I hope this podcast helps serve that end for you. And with that, I give you Dr. Michael Clapper. It's great to see you, my friend. I don't often enough and it's uh it's a gift and an honor to be able to reprise a conversation that we started i think it was six years ago yes sitting in the cabin of a cruise ship in the bermuda triangle seems appropriate doesn't it yeah it does um in the early days of the show uh we've come a long way since then, but your message has remained consistent. You've done so many amazing things over the course of your career. You really are a gift to health and humanity. So first of all, I just want to say that publicly.
Starting point is 00:13:39 Thank you. Thank you. And I'm really interested in hearing more about this next chapter that you've been on, going around to medical schools and lecturing to medical students about nutrition, which seems to be a much needed thing and quite overdue. So how did this whole thing come about? Oh, my. Well, Ann Rich, thank you so much for the invitation. It's great to see your smiling face across the table here. And I commend you for all your wonderful work.
Starting point is 00:14:08 You've been an inspiration steadily for me. And every time I hear one of your good interviews, I think I'm going to get back on that show again. Yeah, well, here we are. Here we are. Great. So, such an important question that you asked. Modern medicine, and I've been a physician now 47 years, and I entered medicine in the late 60s, early 70s, and seen lots of wonderful changes. And it's become powerful on a level that none of us have been able to conceive of.
Starting point is 00:14:50 conceive of. But there's been this glaring, grotesque absence, this black hole when it comes to true causes of disease, the true powerful healing techniques. And of course, we're talking about what our patients are eating. And Western medicine has evolved or devolved to the point where we practice medicine, we take histories, we order all these tests, do physical exams, and never once ask the patient, what do you eat? Take me through yesterday's eating day. And it's such a huge oversight because that's, by and large, the reason why the patient is sitting in front of us,
Starting point is 00:15:21 overweight and hypertensive and diabetic and clogged up and inflamed because of what they're running through their bloodstream every few hours. And yet we just blow right past as far from the medical point of view. It doesn't even enter the equation of what's happening. to such not only inefficiency, but everything from wrong diagnosis to wrong treatment, to real patients dying on real operating tables from operations they don't need. So at this point in my medical career, I had to say seeing another elderly person with constipation is not the best use of my energy. You've got to do something about this. So the campaign, our Moving Medicine Forward initiative came from there. It's not the best use of my energy. You've got to do something about this.
Starting point is 00:16:09 So the campaign, our Moving Medicine Forward initiative came from there. And you're doing this with the Plant Pure Foundation, right? It's like a 501c3? Yes. I'm very appreciative to the folks at Plant Pure Communities. We entered into an agreement where if people want to support our work, getting me in front of medical school audiences, if they give a donation to Plant Pure Communities, it finds its way to our nonprofit account here. So they've kind of extended their umbrella over us a bit. And it certainly has made a big difference as far as getting some support.
Starting point is 00:16:45 So how many medical schools have you lectured? So far, we've been to just about 20. And we've got another foray lined up here. We're going to be going to University of Texas in Houston, Dallas, San Antonio, then the University of Arkansas. Then we've got a swing through the Northeast, going to be going to Rutgers, University of Arkansas then we've got a swing through the Northeast going to be going to Rutgers, University of Massachusetts we were just up at University of Washington in Seattle
Starting point is 00:17:11 University of Florida in Gainesville all medical audiences are my friends at this point I want to reach as many first year students as I can before pharmacosclerosis sets into their brain I like that, I'd never heard that before I like that your students as I can before pharmacosclerosis sets into their brain.
Starting point is 00:17:25 I like that. I'd never heard that before. I like that. Indeed. The only treatment's drugs. No, doctors. There's a better, more elegant way to approach the condition here. So give me a synopsis or like a truncated version of what it is that you speak about when you get in front of these students.
Starting point is 00:17:43 Well, as I step up to the microphone, I tell them, listen, I'm going to give you the lecture. I wish somebody had given me 50 years ago, 50 freaking years, since I was a first year medical student, 1968. But if somebody had told me what I tell a student, listen, you're going to be learning about these weird and wonderful diseases from smallpox to leprosy. But the reality is when you open the door of your waiting room of your clinic or the emergency department or surgical outpatient, you're not going to be seeing patients with leprosy and smallpox. Thank God. It's going to be obesity and diabetes and clogged arteries and inflammatory diseases from what your patients are eating. And unless you get real with
Starting point is 00:18:25 that, then you're going to miss the diagnosis about what's really staring you in the face. And your treatment is going to be inappropriate. It's going to be band-aid medicine. If the patient's making themselves sick with what they're eating every few hours, then you're just there to raise their statin dosage or raise their metformin dosage. It's bankrupt medicine. You're not helping that patient. You're perpetuating their problems. Right, so in terms of unpacking the nutrition side of this, I mean, you're coming from a whole food plant-based perspective.
Starting point is 00:18:55 I'm interested in how that's received from the medical school community. I mean, obviously, even in the period since we first did this podcast, the movement has grown tremendously. It's incredible what's happening now, even in the period since we first did this podcast, the movement has grown tremendously. It's incredible what's happening now, even versus then. But as somebody who's been in this, you graduated med school in like 72, right? And then went vegan, I think, about 10 years later.
Starting point is 00:19:15 So you've been doing this for a long time. You've been treating patients forever. I'm sure there were decades in there where you were this crazy maverick fighting the system. And perhaps on some level, you're still doing that, although I would imagine the reception is a little bit more welcoming. Correct. I'm very perceptive on your part. The first part of my lecture, and I want to talk science to these young students. And so I've got a two-pronged attack here. One is to convince them that food has anything to do with these diseases. Again, it's usually etiology unknown. The autoimmune disease, we don't know why the body attacks itself. But the smart guys at NIH
Starting point is 00:19:58 are working 24-7. And when they come up with the answer, they'll design a mesosilin and give it to us to restore patients to perfect health. Well, that's not going to happen. And so I showed them slides of what happens to their blood after they eat rice and beans and greens, and what happens to their blood after they eat a cheeseburger and a milkshake. And I show them all the fat and the blood and all the inflammatory proteins, all the things that percolate through the system hour after hour. Not only that, but month after month, year after year. And I tell them, then we're shocked when inflammation appears in the body. We're puzzled when the arteries start placking up with atherosclerosis.
Starting point is 00:20:40 We can't figure out why the guy's joints erupted with autoimmune arthritis. We can't figure out why the guy's joints erupted with autoimmune arthritis. And certainly that colon cancer that popped out of the colon, gee, that was just bad luck, bad genes. Well, nonsense. It's the food. It's the food. It's what they're eating.
Starting point is 00:20:58 These diseases are not supposed to happen spontaneously. It's the fuel we're putting through the system. We've been putting diesel fuel through a gasoline-burning engine, and we get all this dysfunction. So my first task is just to make the connection between food and disease and health if you do it right. And then we move delicately into the issue of animal-based foods versus plant-based foods and how fundamentally the diet changes. You put a piece of animal flesh into the intestinal tract two, three times a day.
Starting point is 00:21:30 You're going to change everything from the flora, from the bacteria that live in the gut, to the chemistry of the blood, to what you're smearing on the colon wall, to the leakiness of the intestinal wall that you create that leads to autoimmune disease. It changes everything. And it's politically dicey. A lot of folks, a lot of the students and their professors are into paleo diets, et cetera.
Starting point is 00:21:57 But I said, listen, we're basically plant-eating creatures. Our simian ancestors have been on this planet for 20 million years eating leaves and fruits. Our bonobo and gorilla cousins are up in the trees today eating leaves and fruits. Basically, we're plant-eating creatures. And as long as we eat a plant-predominant diet, you don't have to be 100% vegan, but if the majority of what goes down your gullet is whole plant foods, leaves and greens and fruits and vegetables. Your body's going to thrive on that. And we talk about disease reversal. And I put that concept up on the slide, disease reversal. I was a physician 45 years before
Starting point is 00:22:37 anybody even put those two words in the same sentence for me, that these are reversible diseases. These are the diabetes and the high blood pressure and the inflammatory arthritis. These diseases go away with a healthy diet. And so towards the end, I put up a fairly controversial set of slides where I showed them the list of the classic diseases, diabetes, hypertension, et cetera. And with another click of a slide, the words reversible comes out. These are all reversible diseases. And then the most controversial slide I put up, I click it and it says,
Starting point is 00:23:13 you want to heal these patients or don't you? I mean, really, why did you go into medicine? You want to heal these people? Then get real about what they're eating because that's why they're sitting in front of you. We've been treating the patient's diet like in the Harry Potter movies, Voldemort, you know, the name that must not be spoken. Don't ask what the patient's eating. We're Americans. We can eat whatever we want.
Starting point is 00:23:38 Yeah, but your artery's got something to say about that. Your prostate gland's got something to say about that. Your intestinal tract's got something to say about that. Your prostate gland's got something to say about that. Your intestinal tract's got something to say about it. Your doctor's got something to say about it because he's going or she's going to be dealing with the consequences of that. And so let's get real about what the patient's eating because it's such a powerful factor. So I've got these powerful concepts to wheel in during the course of my slide presentation. But it's a bit easier, as you implied, because now we're in 2020. And in every first, second, third-year medical school class now,
Starting point is 00:24:14 there's 20 or 30 students. They've seen movies like Forks Over Knives. They've seen What the Health. They've seen Cowspirits. The light's on. They get that there's something to this nutrition thing they caught you in in probably the most memeable quotable scene in all of uh it was it what the health or cowspiracy where you said what dairy is cows milk is baby calf growth fluid that's what
Starting point is 00:24:41 this stuff is that has traveled far and wide across the internet. Indeed, I'm going to have a t-shirt made up with that. Here's the guy who said it. Indeed. Right in front of us. And so in that way, it's a little easier. There's often allies in the audience among the students. But there's always a bunch of professors in the back of the room with their arms folded and their tongues going cluck, cluck.
Starting point is 00:25:05 of the room with their arms folded and their tongues going cluck cluck but um they'll either get on board or they'll be pushed aside this wave is breaking and there's no stopping it food is is really uh where it's at as far as healing goes and and modern medicine has to right so for that essentially the the student body these younger people are much more receptive to it than the institution absolutely the institution. Absolutely. But the institution, you know, is the one that greenlights you to come and speak in the first place. So there has to be some amenability to what you have to share. Yes.
Starting point is 00:25:35 Although you brought up an interesting point that the administration of these medicals, they don't want to hear from Dr. Clapper. The message is disruptive. A lot of eye-rolling. It breaks their model. And so we go right to the students. They're the ones that get you on. They're the ones. They invite me in. They arrange. They reserve the lecture hall. They arrange for the Indian restaurant to bring over the samosas for lunchtime rounds. And so we're
Starting point is 00:26:01 dealing right with the students. And we ask them to form a nutrition interest group. So after I leave, it's not a one-time drive-by lecture. They start a nutrition interest group. And once a month, I'll Skype in. We'll talk about nutrition-based cases. We'll keep the light on as far as their awareness how important nutrition is in their patients. Yeah, that's crucial. I mean, that was my next question.
Starting point is 00:26:26 It's great for you to pop in for a couple hours, but what is the legacy of that? Unless they create a curriculum around it or there's some kind of follow-up to create some momentum around this, then how impactful can it possibly be? I mean, how far away are we from really kind of canonizing nutrition
Starting point is 00:26:46 studies in medical school so that we can create a new generation of people who are well-versed in what is so important in terms of treating patients? Oh, Rich, you put your finger right on it, of course. And I gave a lecture up in Seattle and a professor of surgery came down afterwards and said, nice lecture, doc, very important, good stuff, but I'll tell you, until the National Board of Medical Examiners starts asking questions on the National Board about nutrition, we're not going to be teaching this stuff. It's enough for us to get in surgery and biochemistry and physiology. Nutrition is just not on the radar screen. And when he said that, I was thinking, oh, he's right. And so from that has come a real initiative, largely spearheaded by the American
Starting point is 00:27:36 College of Lifestyle Medicine, to get questions about nutrition on the national board exams. And so we went to the National Board of Medical Examiners, and we told them that, and they say, okay, very begrudgingly, but we don't know anything about nutrition and lifestyle medicine. You guys make up the questions, and we'll put a few of them on the exam. So they put the ball back in the court of American College of Lifestyle Medicine, where I am a member. back in the court of American College of Lifestyle Medicine, where I am a member.
Starting point is 00:28:12 And so we are now engaged in a process of creating a pool of 1,000 questions to give to the National Board of Medical Examiners and have them take a sample of them to put on the exam. So then we can start going to the medical schools and say, this is going to be on the National Board of – You're going to get tested on this. They're going to get tested on it. They're going to get tested on this. So now, it's real. Now you got their attention.
Starting point is 00:28:28 Oh, no. It's sad, really, because they don't realize the jewel that's in front of them. This is the key to healing, again. And they're going to begrudgingly give it a little bit of energy on the test. And I'm afraid, knowing the reality of it, there's going to be a question about olive oil and another one about getting enough sleep. And they'll give a token recognition. But as far as really getting into plant-based nutrition,
Starting point is 00:28:55 I'm going to have to keep working at the coal phase for a while to get that reality. Over the course of your many-decade career, I'm sure you've seen diet trends and fads come and go. And, you know, it's interesting to see what sticks and what doesn't and what passes. I'm sure you've seen it all. And right now we're in a moment where we are seeing, you know, the explosion of interest in plant based diets and the science that backs it up. In lockstep with that, though, there's also a very, you know, strident growing movement around low carb eating and the keto diet. And so I'm sure these questions come up all the time, especially with these students and just
Starting point is 00:29:37 in general. So how do you kind of think about that and how do you communicate around those other protocols and what is your perspective on them? Oh my, there's another show in itself. We got time. All right, sure. We got plenty of time. Great, okay, well, we'll go into it. I mean, this is like, you know, listen,
Starting point is 00:29:54 there's a lot of plant-based people that listen to the show, but there's people that are on different kinds of diets. Yeah, absolutely. And I think the reason I'm asking you this question is, you know, for even a very well-educated, motivated listener or just consumer in general, they go online or they, you know, read whatever's happening and they see the stuff about plant-based, but they also see the stuff about keto and low carb. And it's confusing. Even if you're, you know, going to PubMed and reading abstracts, which almost no
Starting point is 00:30:24 one does, it's still confusing, right? There's science to support different perspectives, and it's all very disorienting. And so I'm always trying to drive people towards what is common sense here? What do the facts really say? What does the science really say? And what are some principles that we can hang our hat on that can guide us in a trajectory that's doable in the context of our busy lives. Very important, of course. So we'll put on our miner's cap here and drill that out. I'll start off. And it starts with a recognition on everyone's part, how toxic the standard Western diet has become. And if you're especially even dabbling in fast foods at all, every piece of meat you eat is going to come with white bread
Starting point is 00:31:16 and sugary ketchup and hydrogenated oils and the toxic load that comes with whether it's the pizzas or the burgers or the buffalo wings, et cetera. And all the diets who are serious about getting people healthier, whether it's paleo or keto or plant-based, whatever. All of us, we strip away that outer hull of toxic foods. We can all agree that the standard American diet, the fast food diet, is bad. Indeed. And once you do that, that step alone is a quantum leap, is a huge improvement. And you reduce a huge load of refined sugars and fats and foods that are grossly obesogenic. And as a result, especially the paleo folks strip out the dairy products as well,
Starting point is 00:32:10 as well as the oils. And when you take out the dairy, the oils, and junk flour products, people are going to lose weight. And the very act of losing weight does good things in most people's bodies. And their lipid profiles get better. Their diabetes gets better. They feel better. Their energy level goes up.
Starting point is 00:32:32 And so you see this initial improvement in health in most all of these dietary styles. And it's enough to provide very powerful reinforcement. I went paleo, boy, I lost weight, felt good, man, that's the diet for me. And I hear that with the keto folks as well. But as a physician and as a person who respects the biology of this body that we have, I mean, no gorilla packs its intestines full of meat two, three times a day like we do. And having been in the medical game for so long, I have to say, wait a minute. Granted, you see this initial improvement, but I urge you to not be seduced by this improvement that you're seeing.
Starting point is 00:33:25 The reality is you pack that colon full of meat two, three times a day, and you send this surge of cholesterol and saturated fat and oxidized meat proteins through the tissues day after day after day as the months go by, as the years go by. This is a recipe for colon cancer. This is a recipe for artery disease. This is a recipe for strokes, recipe for dementia, recipe for autoimmune disease from leaky gut.
Starting point is 00:33:48 And the problem, and I put this in my slideshow, so medicines become very segmented, medical care has become very fractionated, very segmented. And the odds of you seeing the same doctor when you go back to the clinic are small, doctors move away, Doctors move away. Patients move away. And the point is people, especially these young docs, make these recommendations. Oh, you ought to eat paleo. You ought to eat keto.
Starting point is 00:34:14 And then you never see them again. And I ask those young docs, you make these recommendations. You're going to be around in 10 years when this guy passes his first bloody stool from that colon cancer that your diet spawned, you won't even be around to see it. You're going to be around in 12 years, this lady's joints light up from the autoimmune arthritis that your diet's leaky gut gave her. You won't be around to see it. You think you've done something good for her. But you're going to be around in 15 years when this guy has a stroke from that carotid
Starting point is 00:34:41 plaque that your diet stirred up in his arteries. You won't be around to see that. And that's my concern. As a seasoned physician who's been in this game a while, what are you really brewing up in these patients' colons? What are you really brewing up in their arteries? What are you really brewing up in their joints? What are you brewing up in their immune systems, in their prostate glands,
Starting point is 00:35:00 in their colon, in their breast tissue? And the folks who are making these initial recommendations don't, I say, do you really know what you're doing, doctor? You know, the phrase do no harm applies to dietary advice as well. And you can really hurt somebody with the wrong diet. And I think a lot of wrong advice is being given. Yeah. We're plant eating creatures.
Starting point is 00:35:23 We need to be true to that. Can you have a little piece of flesh once or twice a week? Yeah, I'd probably get away with it. But we're not homo carnivorous. We're not flesh-eating apes. And we're meant to run on whole plant foods. And when we do that, the body gets lean and healthy, and arteries open up, and inflammation subsides. And the body has the final word on that.
Starting point is 00:35:44 So you are 71 right now 72 72 i can only aspire to be as vibrant and as healthy and as handsome as you at 72 so for me it's like the proof is in the pudding i mean you obviously you know i've been living this lifestyle for a very long time and you're an incredible living example of the benefits of it i mean you're not no medications right no medication i mean you know it's to me it's like there you go right um so i look at you i hear what you're saying and then i log on to twitter and i see the debates and the kind of tribalism and the silos and the you know unhealth talk about disease you know there's a disease of communication happening right now um and it's become really kind of i mean acrimonious is too gentle a word uh of of people infighting and you see this even within the vegan
Starting point is 00:36:41 community there was a flare-up you know this week that we don't need to get into. But, you know, I think often, and I don't really participate in that, but I observe it, you know, sort of take a forensic, you know, look at what's happening. And it's deeply concerning to me because the people that are consuming that are just, like I said earlier, the average consumer. And I think it foments more confusion than clarity. And I'm interested in your thoughts on how we can create a healthier dialogue and flow of information about these important ideas. Because truly, as you mentioned earlier, people's lives really are hanging in the balance here. Absolutely. And you touched on the major points that often get lost here, especially the folks in the plant-based community here. We're a small community and we've got a big idea that we're trying to widely promulgate. And all this petty infighting certainly doesn't help.
Starting point is 00:37:41 The public looks at it and, oh, these guys don't have their act together. It certainly doesn't help. The public looks at it and, oh, these guys don't have their act together. It certainly doesn't help the larger mission. So one thing to do is for everybody to take a step back and say, what are we trying to accomplish here? We're trying to get plant-based eating widely accepted. And the least we can do is talk civilly to each other and realize that we all are in the same boat rowing in the same direction here. And we're all learning. We're all on the same journey together here. And to have respect for each other's journeys. And if something goes by that you have scientific disagreement with it,
Starting point is 00:38:16 then express it civilly, professionally, and back up your reasoning why. And it doesn't have to be done in public. You can write someone a private email saying, you know, I saw something you published. And you might want to consider point A, B, and C about that. And you want to talk about this. There's a way to communicate civilly and professionally. And that has been one of the casualties here. And we need to everybody take a step back.
Starting point is 00:38:40 And because we're all friends, we all like each other, it's time to treat each other as such as well as fellow professionals and get our communications on a level that are not injurious. It's super important. What's your take on this sort of explosion of the carnivore diet that suddenly came out of nowhere and is capturing people's fascination? Yeah, like my friend John McDougall says, people love to hear good news about bad habits. They like that taste of steak in their mouth. So if a little is good, let's do more and better. Not even just more, like 100%.
Starting point is 00:39:16 Yeah, well, we're not carnivoresapes. This is a recipe for colon cancer and strokes and autoimmune disease. And they're going to learn the hard way. I've already seen the studies showing up in the journals that the folks who eat all the meat have lots of this TMAO molecule in their bloodstream from the carnitine metabolism that these microbes spawn. This is not a karma-free diet, to say the least. And that pendulum is going to swing back hard.
Starting point is 00:39:44 karma-free diet, to say the least. And that pendulum is going to swing back hard. And then you're going to see the studies start showing a carnivore diet associated with colon cancer, carnivore diet associated with Alzheimer's, carnivore diet associated with... And my left eyebrow won't go up this much when I read that. Yeah, I know. Yep. I kind of expected those headlines. And that's what they're going to see. In the pantheon of harm, how do you differentiate or distinguish between meat or chicken and beef and pork versus oils versus dairy? Like, how do you kind of— Oh, my. Well, there's a choice. And again, as the toxicologists say, the dose makes the poison.
Starting point is 00:40:27 And a teaspoon of oil is probably not going to hurt anybody. And a small little bite of cheese is probably not going to hurt anybody. And a little piece of meat is not going to hurt anyone. It's building your diet around these as staples is where the problem comes in. And they each have their adverse effects unique to them. And the very act of cooking meat oxidizes cholesterol, which is atherogenic. It creates carcinogens. It does all these things that the oils don't and the dairy doesn't.
Starting point is 00:41:00 But the oils injure the artery walls and they increase the risk of atherosclerosis formation. The dairy products are loaded with everything from estrogens to leukemia viruses. Would you rather be shot or hung? So they're all pretty evil. If in a survival situation, you know, probably the meat would, you know, small amounts would be less injurious. But again, we're talking about tiny medicinal amounts, not mixing your diet around it. Right. So you grew up on a dairy farm. I did. There is, I think maybe we talked about this last time, but there seems to be a high percentage of plant-based doctors that grew up on dairy farms or just farms in general. I don't know what that's about, but maybe it's just seeing up close.
Starting point is 00:42:05 I mean, I'm sure that the dairy farm you grew up bears no resemblance to the dairy farms of today, but nonetheless, how did that kind of, how did that impact how you think about dairy products? Oh my. Their impact on health. Right. It's very profound.
Starting point is 00:42:23 And so much of what we're learning about dairy now brings back echoes of the things that I saw. Again, this is my uncle's dairy farm in the 50s. And I was a little kid. But a couple of things still are burned into my memory. I remember the air of sadness in the dairy barn. The cows, they were unhappy standing there, and they often had tears. These female cows had tears go from their beautiful eyes. And I realize now today these are all mothers who've had their babies taken away from them, every one of them. No wonder they are sad. And they're just standing there getting the baby's milk stripped from them as their infant's been taken away.
Starting point is 00:43:10 Well, I'm anthropomorphizing. Well, the other memory that I have is the sound of a mother cow locked up in the stanchion in the barn with her calf that my uncle just took away in the veal pen 10 yards away. And this mother cow is bellowing hour after hour, day after day, the most heart-rending, soul-tearing bellows and cries you can imagine because their infant's been taken away. And this goes on for days, three, four, five days and nights. These haunting cries are coming. And that's the truth of dairy. You cannot get that milk flowing without taking that calf away from the mother. It's a cruel, cruel industry from forcibly impregnating the female cows to taking their babies away
Starting point is 00:44:05 to killing the male calves for veal to killing the mothers. After a few years, they all wind up as hamburger. The dairy barn is a slaughter industry. So the dairy barn is a short stopping off place on the way to the slaughterhouse for a few years of calves and milk. And I didn't understand that when I was eight, but I sure understand it now. And the memories of those, the tears running down the mom's cheek and their cries against their babies taken away still haunt me to this day. It's a cruel, cruel industry.
Starting point is 00:44:37 So you go vegan in like 1981, right? And from what I understand, I mean, it seems like that was motivated mostly from kind of an ethical moral compunction initially. Actually, it was the conjunction of two very powerful forces. In 1981, I was a resident in anesthesiology in Vancouver, and I'm on the cardiovascular service. And day after day, I'm putting people to sleep, and I'm watching surgeons open service. And day after day, I'm putting people to sleep and I'm watching surgeons open up their chest and open up the arteries in their heart. And from their coronary arteries, they're pulling this yellow, greasy gut called atherosclerosis out of their arteries. And I knew what that stuff was. There was already studies in the journals
Starting point is 00:45:20 talking about what this stuff is. And I realized that I should pay attention. My dad was already showing signs of clogged arteries. It would eventually kill him. And as I'm watching the surgeon one day pull a particularly rubbery, slithery piece of material out of an artery, I thought to myself, man, that stuff looks like chicken fat. And a little voice on my shoulder said, it's a good reason why it looks like chicken fat, doctor. It is chicken fat and cow fat and pig fat and the fat of the animals this man was eating.
Starting point is 00:45:57 So from the operating room, I'm getting this message that if I don't change my diet, that's going to be me on that table, that striker saw going up my sternum. And I I don't change my diet, that's going to be me on that table that striker saw going up my sternum. And I really don't want that to happen. I saw those folks when they wake up, they're very uncomfortable. So from the medical side, I was getting the very strong message. But then, as you mentioned, when I was a fourth year med student at University of Illinois in Chicago, I'd spend my Saturday nights in the trauma unit at Big Bed Old Cook County Hospital. And all night I would see the worst that humans inflicted on each other, the physical violence, the sexual violence, the psychological violence. I would be shaking by Sunday morning when I walked out of there.
Starting point is 00:46:43 I would be shaking by Sunday morning when I walked out of there. And I vowed, if I couldn't rid the world of violence, to at least get out of my own life to become a man of nonviolence. And I made a serious study of it. And I got the books from the Indian saints and Mahatma Gandhi about leading a life of ahimsa, of nonviolence. And so I really started trying to institute these in my life. And so I'm up in Vancouver on the cardiovascular service, and one night I'm out for dinner with a friend of mine, and I'm pontificating about living a life of nonviolence while I'm polishing off a porterhouse steak at the local Kagan Cleaver.
Starting point is 00:47:21 And John looks at me with great compassion. He says, that's all very nice, Michael. But if you want to get the violence out of your life, you might want to start with that piece of meat on your plate because in satisfying your desire for the taste of flesh in your mouth, you are paying for the death of the animal and for the next one in line at the slaughterhouse. Well, as soon as he said that, in my head, all the rationales, oh, well, that's what they raised them for
Starting point is 00:47:49 and the animal's dead already, you know. But before the words could come out of my lips, that little voice said, you know, he's right. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:47:58 He's right. And when I went out to pay for the meal, I felt complicit in a crime because I remembered the cows on the farm. And no wonder she was crying, you know, because they're all going to wind up. I remember the bulls being shot in the head.
Starting point is 00:48:13 And when dairy cows stopped giving milk, my uncle would call the farm, the slaughterhouse guy, and he would come with his truck and load her up. I knew the reality of it. And here I was paying for that system to work. loader up. I knew the reality of it. And here I was paying for that system to work. And so between what I was seeing in the operating room and what I knew in my heart from that night in the steakhouse, that was the end of the week. That was it. That was it. The line in the sand was drawn. The line in the sand. And so I adopted a plant-based diet, lots of lentil stews and bean chilies. And my body loved it. Boy, within 12 weeks, the 20-pound spare tire of fat melted off my waist. My high blood pressure went to normal. My cholesterol went to normal. I felt
Starting point is 00:48:52 great waking up in a nice lean body every day. And I said, something to this. And at that point, I realized I didn't want to be an anesthesiologist and spend my time putting people to sleep. I'd rather go back to general practice and help them wake up. So I did. When that happened and you had that kind of epiphany with respect to how it impacted your health positively, did you then turn to the medical literature to find support for that? I mean, what was the kind of state of the canon of literature at that time? There was not much of it, to say the least. Dr. Frey Ellis, a physician in England, had published studies of a fellow with bad angina that was destined for the operating table,
Starting point is 00:49:42 went on a vegan diet. And within six months, he's hiking up the mountains in the Lake District in England. And Frank Sachs and others had published studies showing the vegetarians have lower blood pressure. They have lower cholesterol. They were already little flickers. And within a year or two, Dr. Dean Ornish published his initial studies. And as soon as I saw his studies, I said, yep, that's right. That's exactly what should happen. And so I was getting in just on the early breadcrumb stage of…
Starting point is 00:50:12 Maverick. Indeed, yeah. And what did your fellow general practitioners in your community think of all this? Oh, my. Didn't have a lot of communication with that. Didn't have a lot of communication with it. I didn't have a lot of support. And I knew that. Michael's lost the thread. Indeed. Yes. But my patients were getting healthy. That's the point. I found someone in the area to give plant-based cooking lessons. I would send them to my friends. They would give them the cooking lessons. And the same thing started happening with them.
Starting point is 00:50:55 And it really pushed my medical management to the wall in that I had a patient with high blood pressure. I had him on two medications. And I get a call from him. I said, every time I stand up, I'm getting so lightheaded. I'm almost going to pass out. And my heart's really thumping away there. And he says, my wife took my blood pressure, and it was 70 over 40. And so I said those faithful words that I was urged never to say.
Starting point is 00:51:22 Stop your blood pressure medication, man. That's low blood pressure. You've got to stop your freaking pills. Well, as soon as I said those words, I thought there'd be a puff of smoke, and the ghost of my internal medicine professor would show up. What did you say? Stop his medication? These are lifetime medications.
Starting point is 00:51:38 Nobody gets off these pills. Man, not only can you get them off your medication, you've got to get them off. They'll stand up and pass out on you. And so, wow, high blood pressure is reversible, and you can. This is not lifetime medication. You can get these patients off their medications. Well, once that happened, that broke the old model, and now the door was open. And, well, it wasn't long before one of my diabetic patients called me. And they were on 20 units of insulin and on metformin. Type 2? Type 2. And I woke up with a blood pressure, with a blood sugar of 30 today. I have a pounding headache. They asked, well, cut your insulin in half. He calls me two mornings later. He's still
Starting point is 00:52:21 running low blood sugars. So I said those faithful words, stop your insulin. You don't need insulin anymore. So I expected the puff of smoke. Right. The malpractice lawsuit dropping on your head. Exactly. But got him off his medication. He's now a lean, healthy guy. He doesn't have diabetes. And so these two patients, once I had this experience, there's no turning back. There's no denying what I just saw. These people are getting healthier right in front of my eyes. And they're so grateful. They are so happy to be off their pills. People don't want to be sick.
Starting point is 00:52:56 My other doc friends will say, people won't change their diet. They will change. They're tired of being fat and sick. Yeah, that was the thing I was going to ask. I think on this subject of patient care, there is this sense, A, that people are not going to change their lifestyle habits. So just give them the pill. That's kind of the conventional approach here. you know, different type of culture and social climate where it's not exactly encouraged to confront people with the fact that they're overweight or obese or, you know, it's like fat shaming or whatever, like, you know, don't, you can't tell them the truth about that. Or like,
Starting point is 00:53:37 you know, you're beautiful and perfect exactly the way that you are. And the combination of those two things, I think, you know, makes it more difficult to do exactly what you just explained. Yes. And I run into that, but I don't let it stop me. In fact, in my slide presentation, I've got a picture, a plastic model of an obese abdomen. And I, along with some obese people saying, well, that's the way I am and accept me how I am. And fair enough. And psychological, I've got nothing but compassion for these people. And there's all sorts of reasons why they're carrying this extra weight for the way they were raised and abused and their view of food, et cetera.
Starting point is 00:54:17 There's no aspersions on the person. But I say from a completely physical point of view. We're talking physiology here. Here's what's going on inside that abdomen. We slice that obese abdomen in half. There are two kinds of fat in the abdomen. One is right under the skin. The subcutaneous fat is metabolically active.
Starting point is 00:54:41 It produces estrogen. It's the largest estrogen-secreting tissue in the body. And you do not want to be obese with 30 pounds of estrogen-secreting tissue pumping out these powerful hormones plastered on your abdomen. If you're a woman, that's a great way to get breast lumps and fibroids and bleeding and possibly increase risk of breast cancer. Estrogens make the prostate gland unstable. If you're a guy, it's a great way to wind up with man boobs and prostate cancer. You don't want the subcutaneous fat pumping out all these estrogens. And inside the abdomen, the intra-abdominal fat that wraps around the intestines,
Starting point is 00:55:21 that's a different metabolic cat, and that puts out these molecules called inflammatory cytokines that fan inflammatory reactions throughout the body. And they not only make inflammation worse in joints and arteries, but they also interfere with the action of insulin, and they make type 2 diabetes worse. And people can get all defensive if they want, but again, your body doesn't care. Obesity is not a state of health. It's a state of inflammation and estrogen excess, and this leads to shortened lives. So I delicately try and put that across, but to the doctors, you guys got to know this.
Starting point is 00:55:57 This is really the reality of this. So the subcutaneous fat is producing all of this estrogen, but people are afraid to eat soy. It's so sad. And it's a real casualty of this modern internet age. Oh, soy, got phytoestrogens, gonna give you man boobs and turn your son gay. Don't eat tofu. Oh, I've heard all that stuff. And it's sad, not only because it's not true, but as you're probably aware, the phytoestrogens in soy are actually protective. They actually block the receptor sites that the cancer-causing estrogens are trying to occupy. In the countries where they eat the most soy,
Starting point is 00:56:38 they have the lowest rate of breast cancer. And the women with breast cancer who eat soy do better. Their cancers grow more slowly. So it's one of these unfortunate media inversions of the truth. Well, it's so strange how certain foods get conflated with gender identity and perhaps diet protocols as well. Like, oh, if you're vegan, you're a soy boy, you're going to be a whatever, whatever gets associated with that culturally. And it's, it's so strange. Oh, it is. If you're eating meat and you're barbecuing, even if you're just buying it in cellophane wrappers in the, at the supermarket, that somehow makes you more of a man in a traditional sense. And that's why I was so glad to see the film, The Game Changers come out. Hopefully we'll blow that stereotype out of the water.
Starting point is 00:57:29 It certainly made an impact. Oh, it certainly has. I'm curious to see what kind of feedback you've gotten about that. I was with Luis Ahoyes the other day, the director of the film, working on some PSAs with, you know, Dotsie Bausch. Yeah, I know Dotsie. Working on some commercials with him. Great cyclist.
Starting point is 00:57:45 And I'm not part of the Game Changers and I'd never met Louis before, but it was a pleasure to meet him and to talk to him and just to congratulate him on the impact of that movie. I mean, it's really, it's made a gigantic impact. It's undeniable. Yeah, absolutely. And hopefully it'll start dismantling that stereotype
Starting point is 00:58:04 that vegetarians are feminine wimps. But it goes back to the siloing and the confirmation bias and all that kind of stuff. It was amazing to kind of watch, again, from a forensic point of view, all the rebuttals and the deconstruction pieces that came out in the wake of that, you know, trying to hold their ground and, you know, combat the science and the perspective of that movie,
Starting point is 00:58:32 you know, because people want to believe what they want to believe. And we are in a very strange time in which it doesn't matter how much science and fact you put in front of somebody, they're going to dig in on whatever their perspective is. And listen, you know, the vegan plant-based community isn't immune from that as well. I see it going on on both sides. Sure. And, you know, it's concerning about the health of our culture in general, whether it's happening in the health conversation or in the political conversation and all the social problems that we're, you know, facing right now. I think it's a real problem and I'm not sure how we're gonna solve that with the way that technology is headed.
Starting point is 00:59:07 Really, I agree. You know, you have to have faith in the truth. And they say you can't keep a hat pin in a cloth bag for very long. Now the point comes out. And the truth is we're plant-eating creatures. And when you look at the environmental cost of creating a flesh-based diet, it's
Starting point is 00:59:26 destroying this planet. Yeah. I mean, that's the other big thing that's kind of occurred in the decades since you began this. Now there's a whole environmental conversation around the impact of diet on the health of our planet that didn't exist when you began this. And I think it just is another, you know, everybody, you know, has different things that motivate them or that concern them. And now it's just another on-ramp into why this is a good idea. Oh, absolutely. And to the folks who are advocating, you know, paleo diets or keto diets, you know, if they're, I said, wait a minute, if you, everybody already beaten paleo, really? Are you truly advocating a flesh-based meal three times a day for 8 billion people?
Starting point is 01:00:11 What are you talking about? That is, that's just, you take. We just don't have the land or the resources to do it. Like I'm, I'm in support of, you know, regenerating our soil and the impact that regenerative methods of agriculture can have. And, you know, I had the, did you see that movie, The Biggest Little Farm? That documentary is some local farmers here, husband and wife couple, who took a barren plot of land and turned it into a thriving ecosystem through these kind of principles of regeneration.
Starting point is 01:00:40 And I think that's great. There's something kind of beautiful, but also bucolic about that. And I think that that is, you know, that's a move in the right direction, certainly away from, you know, industrial animal agriculture, which is, you know, basically the motivating force behind our Western diet. But I don't think that that model can scale to feed 8 billion people. That's the problem. And most people, they'll look at a regenerative farm and say, well, I'm eating this way. But most people, you know, it's like that's producing very little of the food that people are eating. It's really a pipe dream to think that that's going to be the solution here.
Starting point is 01:01:19 That's the point. And with 350 million Americans clamoring for meat, the steak or the burger that would come off that farm, people would be paying $120 for a steak. And that's just what it really should cost. Yeah, that's what it should be. That's what it should be. If we got rid of all these industrial farms and we just had these regenerative farms, meat would be incredibly expensive. Absolutely. And if we could dispense with the subsidies and the like, it would create greater balance. And I think it would make people more mindful.
Starting point is 01:01:51 But also, the economic incentives are out of whack right now. If they would be in line with what it actually is and the impact that these industries are creating, I think we could right this ship. Oh, absolutely. People could only afford to eat that stuff once a month. And that'd be fine. People got through me eating down to a burger once a month. I'd be a happy doc.
Starting point is 01:02:10 That would change everything. Isn't that the way that it traditionally always was? Really? That meat was a delicacy. These things were hard to come by. Exactly. So it was a garnish or something special. It didn't predominate our plate three times a day.
Starting point is 01:02:24 Exactly. $2 burgers are, you know, an obscenity on every level, economically, as well as ecologically. And, you know, sort of likewise, I celebrate the innovation that we're seeing with the plant-based meats, with the Impossible Burgers and the Beyond Burgers. But I think, you know, it's becoming more incumbent upon the consumer to be more educated about these foods. Yes, they're vegan, but, you know, they're still coming with the bun and the ketchup and all the other. I mean, you know, there's it's like this is not whole food plant based. This is a move away from industrialized animal agriculture.
Starting point is 01:03:00 And that's great. agriculture and that's great. And I think there are arguments to be made about the positive health impacts of these products versus their animal, you know, counterparts, but let's not be confused here. So, you know, how do you think about that? Because listen, in 1981, you go to the health food market, it was slim pickings, right? Now you can powdered soy milk. You can get a vegan alternative to every delicacy that you can imagine. And they figured out how to make these things taste good to sate you in a certain way. And it's very easy. And I found myself doing this. I will plead guilty to this, like deluding myself into thinking like this is an okay choice.
Starting point is 01:03:40 Maybe it is once in a while, but I can't make this front and center. Exactly. I'm 100% in agreement with you. I'm so grateful to see these meat-like burgers. They're wonderful. And if it gets Joe's six-pack meat potato guy off his beef burger onto that, I'm all for it. But again, these are novelty foods. You eat them once a month or twice, so they're a treat. And they're transition food for these folks who need to tiptoe into the plant-based world. And I'm very grateful for them, but no one's advocating them as a staple of the diet by a long shot. We agree. One of the things that's amazing about the work that you've done, it's one thing to talk about prevention.
Starting point is 01:04:20 Like, let's prevent people from getting heart disease or diabetes or high blood pressure and the like. It's another thing to talk about reversal. That's where people start to get real prickly here. But you've seen amazing results. And we were talking earlier, I had Robbie Barbaro and Cyrus Kambada in here talking about all these case studies of people that they've worked with
Starting point is 01:04:43 where they have reversed their type 2 diabetes and type 1. They've been able to ameliorate, you know, the symptomology of that. And it's really, you know, really quite something. But this is nothing new for you. You've been doing this for a long time. Indeed. I was on the medical staff at True North Health Center in Santa Rosa, California for eight years. And we saw plant-based nutrition done right in its most effective, pure setting. And what I saw there just was stunning. Every medical student, every physician should see these diseases go away, to see lupus go away, rheumatoid arthritis go into remission,
Starting point is 01:05:22 and high blood pressure disappear, type 2 diabetes. These are reversible diseases. Somebody had told me that when I was a medical student, and that's part of the lecture that I'm giving to the students, that these are eminently reversible diseases. If you have a gasoline-burning engine and you've been putting diesel fuel in it and it's running rough and black smoke is coming out of it. And then you switch to high-tech gasoline. Boy, the car runs great. Oh, it's a miracle. No, it's not. You just put the right fuel in the car and the problems go
Starting point is 01:05:56 away. And it's the same thing with our food. So many of these conditions are just a result of what we're eating. Well, one of the big interesting protocols at True North is the fasting, that kind of protocol that you put patients under. And this is another area that I think for a long time was considered very fringe. Absolutely. I know that the staff, yourself included, have taken hits for, you know, kind of putting people under this, you know, regimen.
Starting point is 01:06:33 But, you know, interestingly, now suddenly fasting is all the vogue, right? Really? It's weird how these trends happen. Like nobody said boo about the microbiome and then suddenly it's all about the micro, you know, like, I don't know how these things percolate up. But right now we're in a moment where people are not only paying attention to the benefits of fasting and intermittent fasting, you know, there's science that's starting to show up to back it up.
Starting point is 01:07:01 And, you know, the average person now is, oh, I, you know, I fast 18 hours a day, three times a month or whatever it is. Like this is something that nobody was talking about even five years ago. Remarkable. Whatever is new is, whatever is old is new again, you know, right? And the wheel keeps going around and around. But I'm in amazement as you are to see these things are now becoming far more widely accepted. The human body and fasting, we could spend a whole program on that. And when we take a step back, we realize that a million years ago on the African savannah, it was probably pretty common that four or five days would go by before you found the next berry bush with fruit on it or the next carcass rotted in the sun.
Starting point is 01:07:46 And these enforced four or five-day fasts were probably the rule. And our body learned how to deal with that. And in fact, after 48 hours without carbohydrates coming in, which is our preferred fuel, the body switches into burning stored body fat and goes into the state of ketosis. And wonderful things happen in the early stages of ketosis. And the body starts cleaning itself out. It suppresses inflammation. It protects the stem cells. So when they revive after the fast, it's a healthier immune system.
Starting point is 01:08:19 These wonderful things happen. And we would use that at True North. We would put people on water fast. But again, this is medically supervised fasting. This is medical fasting. These are people with runaway high blood pressure, runaway rheumatoid arthritis, lupus. These are official medical problems in these people. And a fast is a wonderful initial step to suppress the symptoms and start the person on the road to recovery. But as I tell the patients and the med students who would rotate through True North, you know, the fasting is wonderful. It's powerful. It's great. But on the screen of their life,
Starting point is 01:08:56 it's a little blip on the screen. What matters is what you eat after the fast. It's the food stream day after day, month after month that makes for a healthy body. Because if they go on a water fast for three weeks and they get those great improvement, but if they go back to cheeseburger and pizza land, the Cinderella turns back into a pumpkin within days. The joints are sore, the blood pressure's back up. The water fasting is a step to a whole food plant-based diet. And while they're water fasting, we would give them cooking lessons and show them videos and food demonstrations. So when they left, they would know what to eat so the symptoms don't come back. So
Starting point is 01:09:36 the fasting is a powerful tool, but it's just a tool in the chest. The issue is the food. So patient comes to True North, meets with you, how do you decide whether or not to put them on a fast, and if so, how long to do it, and what is it that you're kind of monitoring while they're doing it? Because a three-week water fast, this is not intermittent fasting.
Starting point is 01:09:58 No, this is not. This is a whole different thing. Like how did this begin as a procedure or a protocol? And, you know, what is actually happening with this person while they're undergoing that? I mean, three weeks. Yes, right. Such an important question. It sounds crazy. It does. But first of all, it's easier than you think. By day three, hunger is gone. One of the blessings of ketosis, it pretty much turns off hunger. And by day three,
Starting point is 01:10:29 four, you're not thinking about food. It's God's gift to fasters. You don't spend three weeks hungry. And in fact, all the energy that would usually be devoted to digesting your food on a water fast is freed up. No food to digest. And people feel that energy. And they stop me in the courtyard, Doc, I haven't felt this good in years. I got energy. I haven't eaten in three weeks, but I feel wonderful. It's counterintuitive. You think you're going to- Just keep going.
Starting point is 01:10:52 Like there's me, my alcoholic mind would be like, this is no more food forever. Really, yeah. But just don't eat again. Feel high. Right, exactly. And there's a good reason for this. And the body's using this energy to heal and to readjust itself.
Starting point is 01:11:08 It's a blessed state. But you don't do a lot of physical activity here. You don't want to drop your blood sugar. It's a special state. It's a good time to get some meditation done and some contemplation, work on your novel. It's a time to be physically quiet during that time. But as far as, it's not three weeks of hunger. People aren't even hungry after a few days, the vast majority of them. Every once in a while, I'll get somebody, I was hungry all the way through, but it is rare.
Starting point is 01:11:36 Most people, they're not hungry. And during this time, wonderful things are happening as far as the underlying disease process that brought them there in the first place. Their diabetes is usually getting better. Their high blood pressure is coming down. Their arteries are opening up. The angina is going away. But there are absolute contraindications.
Starting point is 01:11:56 You don't fast people with type 1 diabetes. People who are way underweight, they're not good candidates for water fasting for whatever reason. People with a lot of emotional problems, probably not a good idea. Children, you don't fast. There are some contraindications as far as determining who does the fast. And then as far as monitoring the fast, that's a good word. We watch these people like a hawk. The intern knocks on the door twice a day.
Starting point is 01:12:28 How are you doing? Check your vital sign. Check your blood pressure, pulse. Any nausea, any headache. You're getting lightheaded when you stand up. And if we get positive answers to any of those questions, I think I'm going to throw up. I'm getting lightheaded.
Starting point is 01:12:40 That's the end of the fast. It's time for some juice and to get them onto some light foods. So most every healthy person, you can do a three-day fast at home, five at the most. After that, you better be in a place where people know what they're looking at if you get lightheaded or nauseated or whatever. So monitoring by an experienced person is really key to doing these long fasts safely. But at home, if people just on a weekend, I've got patients who just do water from Friday to Monday, absolutely reasonable thing to do. I think good things happen in their body. I've got people who don't eat till noon. I think that that extra six hours in the morning of no food does good things for them. That's intermittent fasting.
Starting point is 01:13:27 So people can put their toe in the water and get the benefits without doing these long medically supervised fasts. Yeah, it seems like science is still very much emerging in this area. I mean, you have Walter Longo, who's kind of at the forefront of this, who's studying this, and he's come up with his fasting mimicking diet, which allows you to eat, but still kind of produces that same physiological effect. You have Sachin Panda. They all have a little bit of different opinions on this. I had David Sinclair in here the other day.
Starting point is 01:13:58 Oh, really? Who was talking at length about what's happening and when you fast, how that's impacting longevity and anti-aging. Like, I think it's a very cool, interesting field and perhaps much more, you know, needs to be studied here. And I'm wondering whether there's any wisdom in like, why do the three week fast when you could do perhaps the fasting mimicking diet? And, you know, is there a reason why you've, you reason why this institute where you used to work kind of settled on this as being the best way of dealing with this? And as an important caveat, you're dealing with people who are very ill that are coming to you.
Starting point is 01:14:36 Right. Exactly. And as you already mentioned, the folks who are kind of self-selective, they've come there. And they're willing. They're willing. They're ready to go. It is. And it's also the big league heavy artillery of nutritional therapy.
Starting point is 01:14:54 A full-on water fast is very effective. And if I've got a guy, we've had a fellow with a blood pressure of 220 over 130, and he was on four four medications and just nothing was bringing him down and it took him 27 days on a water fast, but finally that pressure came down. And so those are the kind of folks that that kind of fasting works the best for. I would imagine also psychologically, it's gotta be incredibly empowering.
Starting point is 01:15:19 Oh. Because you're bringing somebody in who's kind of feeble bodied at the moment and you're putting in front of them something that is seemingly impossible to do. And then they do it. It's got to make them, you know, in addition to whatever, you know, spikes in vitality and, you know, reduction in their, you know, disease markers are just knowing like, hey, I did something incredibly hard. I would imagine makes them more motivated and excited about making the changes that follow
Starting point is 01:15:45 and kind of taking an insurance policy out and making sure that they stick. Oh, it's huge. That's so perceptive of you, Rich. I tell them it's like, you know, on the outward bound courses where they bring up their kid and they throw a rope over the kid. You're going over the kid. No, I can't do that. Yes, you can. And they strap you up, and you're on the rope there, and you're going across, and you look down, and you see your own death down there. You keep on going, and you make it across. You're now someone who did that. You can't say, I can't do that. You just saw yourself do that and push yourself past your limits.
Starting point is 01:16:21 Well, a prolonged water fast doesn't say, oh, I can't do that. Well, you just did it, and you, oh, I can't do that. Well, you just did it. And you'll never be upset about missing lunch again. It just went three weeks without food. And you're right. It's tremendously empowering. And it's a real investment that people want to stick with. What are some of the craziest turnarounds that you've seen in your career? Oh my. We had two patients with lymphomas come in. Rebecca was an older woman, had a mass the size of a grapefruit in her abdomen. She did a prolonged water and juice cleanse and that just melted right away. Her lymphoma disappeared. This was validated at University of California,
Starting point is 01:17:09 San Francisco, they biopsied it. Completely disappeared. Completely disappeared. Wow, without traditional chemo and all of that. Absolutely. And then Yvonne was another one. She came in and she also had lymphoma. She had lymph nodes the size of hen's eggs in her groin
Starting point is 01:17:25 and her armpit she did a 26 day fast tumors just melted right away and she's she's been cancer free now lymphomas are special kind of cancers they're watery and they respond well to to fasting to the biochemical changes so not all cancers are created equal. I can't say it's the definitive cure for cancers. But to see that happen was just stunning to me. Another one of these things that we're told, no, that never happens. Well, I just saw it happen twice. So those are two of the most dramatic. And Dr. McDougall's got a big wastebasket of pills that people throw in there. And that's so gratifying. People come in with these bags full of pills and they leave normal, healthy people. And as they're walking out the door, you go, yes,
Starting point is 01:18:18 that's what medicine should be. Amazing. We've seen the growth of, of lifestyle medicine practitioners. This is another, you know, trend in the right direction. Um, it would be great if there were more people doing this. We're in a healthcare system that makes it, I think, kind of too difficult for a lot of practitioners, physicians to make that choice. And back to that issue of, of, you know, empowering people to make these lifestyle changes. So much of it is the follow up, like how connected are these people to the practitioners? You were talking about the doctors, you know, I think is critical in terms of,
Starting point is 01:19:06 of, of, you know, making sure that these things stick long-term. And, you know, if you're, you know, had some of these doctors, Robert Osfeld or Michelle McMack, like there are Michelle McMack and, you know, there are doctors that are doing this very effectively. So I'm interested in your, and obviously True North being an incredible example of this, but, So I'm interested in your, and obviously True North being an incredible example of this, but, you know, how can we, you know, create better incentives for physicians to craft practices like this and create those, you know, communities to promote this in light of a system that is giving these doctors 15 minutes, prescribe, get them out the door, churn and burn, you know, the way that it's all set up right now just seems wrong-headed. Oh, it's absolutely wrong-headed and its days are numbered. I think it's inevitable that the current edifice of just paying doctors to do things to patients, to do bypass grafts, to do colonoscopies, etc., after the
Starting point is 01:20:05 disease has already started, to do these Band-Aid procedures, very expensive Band-Aid procedures. And you do a quarter million dollar operation and the patient limps out of the hospital to go eat more cheeseburgers and pizzas and clog up their grafts so they can come back in and have another one done. That's bankrupt medicine and it's totally not sustainable. I ran into, at American College of Lifestyle Medicine meeting, a nice-looking lean fellow, Ken Beckman. I thought he was a doctor. He said, no, I'm not a physician. I'm a plant-based insurance actuary. Wow. I said, oh. He said, oh, yeah. I said, well, a bunch of us realize that the vegans require a lot less medical care. And he said, the insurance companies need to take
Starting point is 01:20:52 advantage of this. The entire model has to collapse down in this way. He says, there is value for every CEO that doesn't go down with a heart attack. There's value to the community for every young breadwinner who doesn't develop a colon cancer. There's value to the community. And we can quantitate that. We know that someone, a diabetic person with a hemoglobin A1C of 9, which is out-of-control diabetes, we are going to pay $15,000 a year for his medical care. If you can get his hemoglobin A1C down to 8, that lowers our cost down to $12,500.
Starting point is 01:21:39 We can quantitate every one-point improvement. We can tell you how much money we're going to save off that. You can quantitate a lot of these diseases. And that gives us a way to do value assessment for the patient. He says the numbers go like this. Every time we pay for a coronary artery bypass, By the time we pay the surgeon, anesthesia, recovery room, the rehab, et cetera, it costs us a quarter million dollars, $250,000. In a 10-year period, we expect to pay for 10 of those with 100 executives here,
Starting point is 01:22:19 and none of them have their MI, and none of them wind up needing the procedure. We're sitting on that money. We'll be happy to pay the doctor $20,000. We'll pay the patient $20,000. We'll pay the clinic $20,000. We're still sitting on almost $200,000 profit here. There's money in the system. We've just got to rejigger the way the beans are flowing.
Starting point is 01:22:40 The bean counters have to start paying the doctors for keeping people healthy and the patients as well. It can be done. And it would free up so much money. All these scans not done, procedures not done. We could send kids to college. We could put internet in everybody's houses. We could fix the roads.
Starting point is 01:22:58 There's such wealth there. We just need to restructure how we're seeing the way medicine is practiced. I think that has to go hand in hand with education as well. And perhaps an overhaul of our litigious society. I mean, so many of these tests and scans are driven by fear of getting sued, right? Like, well, I got this disease and they could have given me this and they didn't. Yes, but I predict that we're going to see a 180 on that. I think it's just a matter of time before an angry widow
Starting point is 01:23:25 walks into the office of a cardiologist or a cardiothoracic surgeon, says, my husband died on that operating table last month during a four-vessel coronary artery bypass, and nobody told us he could have melted those plaques away from the inside with a plant-based diet. Why didn't somebody tell us this? Why was this information withheld from us? When did you people know this? How long has this been in the medical literature? 25 years. And she will lodge a wrongful death suit. And I think she should win that suit because this was a wrongful death. When the patient signed the uncertain form consent form, when the patient signed the in certain form consent form. And I've been instructed that these plaques could be melted away with a whole food plant-based diet.
Starting point is 01:24:10 Someone should have told him that. And there's going to be a couple of lawsuits, and that hopefully will move us in the direction we need to go to. Yeah, that would be a very interesting test case. Oh, it sure would. It sure would. They'll say, well, it's not standard of care. Well, darn well it's not standard of care. Well,
Starting point is 01:24:25 darn well it should be. And we've got to get that dietary counseling as part of standard of care. If you could craft the perfect healthcare system, what would that look like compared to what we have right now? Well, I think the ancient Chinese had it right 2,500 years ago. You pay the doctor as long as you're healthy, for keeping you healthy. As soon as you get sick, the doctor stops getting paid. And it motivates the doctor to keep you healthy. What are you eating? And he's very interested in how you're living your life because his income stops if you get sick.
Starting point is 01:25:00 And some variation on that. There's so many ways we could do this. And the federal government could help when it comes to tax time. And before you fill out your taxes, you go down to the local pharmacy where the nurse in the urgent care booth is sitting there. And she takes your blood pressure, puts you on the scale, and takes a urine specimen and sticks your finger for cholesterol. And if you're no more than five pounds over your ideal body weight, take 5% off your taxes. If your blood pressure is 130 over 80 or below, take another 5% off your taxes. If there's no cotinine in your urine from cigarette smoking, take another 5% off your taxes.
Starting point is 01:25:42 If your cholesterol is below 150, take another 5% off your taxes. If your cholesterol is below 150, take another 5% off. And she'll write it up and give you a little ticket that you submit with your tax return. Whoa, the government's paying me for staying healthy. There's so many ways we could do this and we would all be better off for it. Yeah. Where was it? I saw, I might have this wrong, but I saw a little video. think it was in might have been in russia or china where you could get a free like subway token if you're you run on a treadmill something like that something like that there's something similar to that i know or the idea of like setting up a gym like reversing the gym membership thing like the
Starting point is 01:26:22 gym's free as long as you're going the minute you stop going like you sign up for a year if you don't you pay when you don't go yes absolutely the tools are all around us we just click our thinking a little bit get creative yeah sure i mean we certainly need to make changes we sure do it's not working so well it is not it's a disease care system and the disease is winning at this point so somebody if somebody's listening to this and they're like, I'm on board conceptually, I understand this, but what does this mean? I wake up in the morning, okay, so what do I eat and how does this work? Walk me through an ideal day in the life of food and activity and lifestyle in the world of Michael Klaper. Absolutely. Okay, well, as long as you're eating food
Starting point is 01:27:08 that grew out of the ground and has been minimally processed, you're gonna be okay, basically. In fact, I'm gonna have another T-shirt made up. Eat plants and get on with it at this point because that's what it comes down to. The human brain loves to overcomplicate this. Oh, we do.
Starting point is 01:27:24 There must be some velvet rope and I need this secret VIP thing. Really. But again, this body's been around for 30 million years. We are plant-eating creatures. So in the morning, if you're not hungry, don't eat. Just drink water until you get hungry. That's a perfectly legitimate thing to do. And there's reasons why that makes sense. You've been fasting all night. It's okay to extend that into the morning hours. So if you're not hungry, don't eat. Just drink water. If you are hungry, either have some fruit, have a cantaloupe, have a grapefruit, et cetera, or something more substantial, some oatmeal and some fruit with it, a little hemp milk or rice milk on top of that. So there's breakfast. Lunches and dinners, I put them on the 4S clothesline here.
Starting point is 01:28:06 Salad, soup, steamed veggies, and starches. And so have a big salad at least once a day. You got to have that fresh life, fresh green stuff. So have a big salad once a day, twice a day is even better. I'm a big fan of these hearty vegetable soups. You can make up a big pot of soup in a crock pot or a slow cooker and eat off of it for three days. Pour a bunch into Tupperware freezer containers, let them cool, put lids on, put in the freezer. So you got a bunch of frozen soup portions, bring them out, heat them, eat them, make life simple for yourself. So I'm a big fan of these hearty vegetable soups. I could live on soup and salad and steamed greens. In fact, that's largely what we eat. You need to, favorite colors should be green and yellow, green and yellow.
Starting point is 01:28:47 Have something dark and green every day, whether it's kale, chard, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, et cetera. And something yellow, carrots, squash, sweet potatoes, yams. You need something for the carotenes. So salad, soup, steamed veggies. And you need some calories in the form of healthy starches. I'm a big fan of sweet potatoes and potatoes of all sorts. But quinoa and millet and all these lovely whole grains.
Starting point is 01:29:13 And we make a little bow to the legumes as far as proteins go. Have something leguminous at least every other day. A scoop of lentil stew, a bean burrito, bean chili, a hummus sandwich, something that has some legumes in it. If you do that and have some food for dessert, man, your body will know what to do with that. You're going to have a fine food stream there. But Dr. K. Yes. What about protein? Oh, protein. Right. And there's protein in everything. If you are eating 2,000 calories, enough to keep your weight up, of whole plant foods that grew out of the garden, out of the ground,
Starting point is 01:29:50 you're going to be getting 50, 60, 70 grams of high-grade protein. It's in the rice and the beans and the greens and the fruits. Everything's got protein. In 45 years of medicine, I've never written the diagnosis protein deficiency on the chart. It just does not happen. But again, whole foods are really important. You gotta be able to identify, oh, that's a cucumber, that's a carrot, that's a green pepper over there.
Starting point is 01:30:15 It's when the hand of man processes it into all sorts of flakes and processed food, that's when you get in trouble. Whole grains are very much a part of this as well. What have you learned or what's your perspective on gluten and gluten sensitivity? Right, it's an issue, but it's this much of an issue. It's not that much of an issue.
Starting point is 01:30:36 There's probably more of it than we, it's a fairly rare phenomenon from a strictly medical point of view in the classic sense where we docs learn that someone who's gluten sensitive, they eat some bread and they spend the next six hours on the toilet with bloody diarrhea. That's fairly rare. But there's probably a little low. It's a continuum. There's probably a lot of folks with a low-grade gluten sensitivity.
Starting point is 01:30:59 They may not even be aware of it and they get this bloating and the gas and the loose stools. If there's any question, just stop all gluten for a month. And if your symptoms clear up, then have three slices of whole wheat bread one day and see how you feel the next day. It's the cheapest, best lab test going. And see if you're gluten sensitive or not. You can test yourself. I wouldn't rely on the blood test at this point. I know that when I eat, like if I eat a refined bread or pizza crust or things like that, if I overdo it with that, like the next day, my eyes are all puffy. So I was like, well, clearly there's some inflammation happening here. I don't know what's happening in my joints or the rest of my body, but this can't be a good thing. Something is happening that's somewhat awry in my body.
Starting point is 01:31:44 That's all you need to know. I wish happening that's somewhat awry in my body. That's all you need to know. I wish I could tell you I was perfect about that. I'm definitely not. But at least you're tuned in. There must be something to that, though. Oh, there is. Absolutely. And you did the right thing.
Starting point is 01:31:55 And you're tuned in enough to know that when I eat this next morning, my body is not happy. That's all you need to know. You're probably someone who should eat gluten very sparingly. And you've already gotten that message. And so the lightning doesn't come out of the sky and strike you dead, but your body lets you know in one way or the other. What about organic versus non-organic? In this day and age, it's becoming more and more significant for a number of reasons. for a number of reasons. The less pesticides and herbicides we eat, the better.
Starting point is 01:32:32 I feel much better about paying those organic farmers to take care of the soils and to take care of the earth. So I've got nothing better to do with my pennies than buy organic produce. And as we've heard from our friend, Dr. Zach Bush, hopefully the organic produce will have much less in the way of glyphosate and Roundup, et cetera, and less by definition of the genetically modified organisms. So all the way around, I'm a big fan of organic produce
Starting point is 01:32:58 and I don't mind paying the extra nickel for the broccoli. What about that person who's listening to this who's thinking, this all sounds great, but like I got, I work two jobs and I'm barely making ends meet and you're talking about making all these food. It just sounds like a lot of work and the learning curve is really high,
Starting point is 01:33:17 time-consuming, perhaps expensive. Like how do you work with somebody who is sort of cost and time restricted? So important, great. Please, I would urge them go to websites like Forks Over Knives and click on their transition program. Click on their recipes. They will walk you through how to make this happen in your life. There's books, Virgin Vegan, and there's lots of books to help you get started. The Engine 2 website has some excellent programs to transition. So go to the websites and take advantage of their transition programs. And also this idea,
Starting point is 01:33:58 well, it's an expensive way to eat and takes a lot of time and work. Actually not. Rice and beans are cheap. You can buy a 20-pound bag of rice for $6. You can buy 15 pounds of lentils for $8. The staples are cheap. And if you're not spending your money on meat and ice cream and cheeses, you've got pennies to spend on the organic produce. And you can certainly save yourself a lot of time, as I mentioned, by using your freezer.
Starting point is 01:34:31 Make up these big batch soups. On a Saturday morning, make up 30 veggie burgers and put them in your freezer. Now you've got a freezer full of burgers. Bring them out, heat them, and eat them. So these batch cooking helps. And at the store, you can buy bags of frozen organic vegetables already cut up. So, in your soup pot, just open up a bag of frozen vegetables, throw it in the pot, and done. You don't have to spend any time cooking or chopping.
Starting point is 01:34:56 So, there's ways around it these days. People die of their excuses. They die of their excuses. And I don't want to see that happen any longer. So, at this point, choose the bean chili over the beef chili. Well, the money's going one of two places. It's either going towards the food that's going to make you healthy or it's going to the health care provider later. Pay the grocer now or the doctor later.
Starting point is 01:35:19 I know. Unfortunately, it's not great at motivating people. We're not so good at at you know forecasting into the future and making better decisions now for some reason but that is the truth and there is something interesting about like like um it's counterintuitive to me to buy frozen fruits and vegetables like i want to go to the farmer's market and i want it really fresh but there is something to be said for those products that are frozen immediately after picking. So basically they're locking in those nutrients. There's no sort of degrading process that happens in the however many days it
Starting point is 01:35:54 takes between picking and ending up in your grocery store. Absolutely. The flash frozen vegetables are the busy person's friend. Absolutely. You're absolutely right. And in the morning, so we'll thaw out some, the night before we go to bed, if we're having oatmeal the next morning, we take out the frozen mangoes and cherries from the freezer, let them thaw overnight, and we put them in the cereal the next morning.
Starting point is 01:36:14 Yeah. What's your exercise routine look like these days? You're a runner. Yes, I used to be a runner. I had back surgery too many hours at the operating table, and so now I'm a cyclist. That's cool. So I love going out for these 50-mile bike rides.
Starting point is 01:36:32 But I've got an exercise bike, a recumbent bike out on our patio where I can watch. I've got a couple of bird feeders. So I'm a birder. So I'm watching the birds as I'm pedaling. I can see that. You've got the big lens and the whole binoculars and stuff? There's a strap on the side there. But very importantly, I'll get on the bike, crank up the resistance, and start pedaling.
Starting point is 01:36:55 But then I grab two 12-pound hand weights. And as I'm pedaling, I'm doing an upper body workout. And so I do 40 minutes of upper body while I'm pedaling and work up a good sweat doing that. And I do that every other morning. And so that's my cardio strength program. And my wife's a yoga teacher. So the mornings I'm not sweating, she's got me on the mat doing salutations to the sun. My grandparents retired to West Palm Beach. They've since passed away, but my youth was marked by going to West Palm Beach once a year to visit them in the wintertime. I mean, that is a community. It's much more cosmopolitan now than it was then,
Starting point is 01:37:36 but it's certainly a very large retirement community. So it must be interesting for you to be so vital at your age and to be surrounded by a lot of elderly people who are much less so, to put it bluntly. It is. And you ought to run up and shake them sometimes. Of course, you don't. You can't. But, yeah, it's sad, but it motivates me to help people not wind up in that position. You're seeing more and more plant-based restaurants in the Miami area
Starting point is 01:38:05 as well. Really remarkable. I've got a folder on my computer, things I never thought I would see. And every week, two or three goes in there of McDonald's serving plant-based burgers and the California schools and the hospitals now serving plant-based meals and all these amazing restaurants that are showing up. It's really exciting. There's some really hopeful signs. Have you been to Love Life Cafe in Miami? No, not even that one yet.
Starting point is 01:38:34 I got to hook you up. Really? Yeah. Our good friends, Diego and Veronica, run this amazing plant-based restaurant. It's in the Wynwood district in Miami, which isn't too far from where you are and they serve amazing food. They're just, they're beautiful people too. And cyclists, avid cyclists. So I'm going to, I'm going to connect you. Okay. Please do. One of the questions that I always ask the doctors that I have on the show is what would be
Starting point is 01:39:03 like your number one agenda? Like imagine a parallel universe where suddenly you found yourself as surgeon general. What are the changes? If you had that kind of power that with broad strokes, you could really, you know, change policy on a grand level. Like, you know, how would you get to work? If you rolled up your sleeves, like what's priority number one? Well, I would end agricultural subsidies to the meat and dairy industry and let the market really dictate what these things sold for, for what they cost to produce. And if any subsidies are done, I would give it to the broccoli farmers. I would make healthy produce really cheap where it's just, you couldn't pass it up.
Starting point is 01:39:51 And then I would institute a number of incentives that I mentioned as far as giving people tax breaks for being healthy, helping with their daily health practices to reward them in various ways. So it becomes fun. I would start in the schools. I would get physical education back into the schools. I would make exercise and healthy eating healthy for kids and bring the kids out to the gardens and the farms and show how their food is grown and reconnect them. They are suffering from nature deficit disorder. And I would connect, especially the young people, with the reality of food production. So it's basically an educational process as well as financial rejiggering of the system.
Starting point is 01:40:35 So it rewards people for staying healthy and eating healthy. Yeah, it seems elementary to me that we should build into elementary education uh the principles of nutrition so that young people at a very early age you know can grok these principles that's just fundamental so how they make decisions about how to live absolutely where does food come from it comes in the supermarket no one does it it grows out trees you need to know that instead we get we get these subsidy subsidized subsidized milk advertisements in high school gymnasiums. Oh my, really?
Starting point is 01:41:09 And we've gotta stop lying to our students and lying to each other. Yeah. Final thing, if somebody's listening to this and perhaps their health has gone somewhat awry, but they go to their doctor and their doctor is basically telling them what you already recounted, like the typical, like you got to be on these drugs and anybody who tells you otherwise is insane. And there isn't, they don't feel like
Starting point is 01:41:33 they, you know, have a community of like-minded people who are saying things similar to what you're saying and they don't know where to turn. Is there, you know, short of going to True North, what are some resources, you know, is there a directory of plant-based doctors where people could find somebody who's kind of speaking your language in their area? Like, where do you point these people? Absolutely. The websites people should know about are two of them. One is called plantbaseddoctors.org, plantbaseddoctors.org, and plantbaseddocs.com.
Starting point is 01:42:08 Between those two, the odds are you'll find somebody near you. Educate yourself. Get books by Dr. McDougall, Dr. Fuhrman, Dr. Effelstein, and all of them are laying out the basic truths here. Basically, it's eating plants. So if you do those two things, educate yourself and find a nearby plant-based physician, you'll get all the good advice you need.
Starting point is 01:42:32 And I would urge people to go to our website. I've got a YouTube channel, Dr. Clapper, all spelled out D-O-C-T-O-R-K-L-A-P-E-R. It's not D-R. And I've got all sorts of instructional videos there. We're adding more and more to that. So check out my YouTube channel, Dr. Clapper. I love that you're on YouTube.
Starting point is 01:42:51 That's great. And if people want to help our efforts to get me in front of medical school audiences, because we've got to change Western medicine, go to my website, drclapper.com, all spelled out, D-O-C-T-O-R-K-L-A-P-E-R.com, and click on Moving Medicine Forward, and you'll see what we're doing, not only how you can help us. We could sure use the support. Plane tickets are expensive.
Starting point is 01:43:17 But also, there's a little box to check. If you know a medical student at a medical school or someone on the faculty, you'd like us to connect with them, please give us their name. And we will follow up and connect with that. So that's on my website, drklapper.com. People go to Moving Medicine Forward. They'll see the work we're doing.
Starting point is 01:43:36 Yeah, and they can follow you on Instagram too. They can follow me on Instagram too. Yeah, I'll tell you where to do it. That's fantastic. I mean, I think there is no more worthy cause than trying to take all of this experience that you have to try to create the next generation of doctors because this is where the rubber meets the road, right?
Starting point is 01:43:55 If we can create a situation in which this next crop of medical practitioners has the tools that are required to treat these things and nip them in the bud, we don't even need to get into reversing because we're all about prevention at that point. Absolutely. And we're in a much better place.
Starting point is 01:44:13 Absolutely. I tell these students, before you order another $1,000 scan, another $500 set of blood tests, ask your patients what they ate yesterday. And if it's full of burgers and buffalo wings, that's why they're sitting in front of you. Send them to the plant-based dietician,
Starting point is 01:44:27 let her do the counseling, let her show in the movies, let her take them shopping, you see them back in a month and see if they're healthier and they will be. So it's time for the era of nutritional medicine to dawn. Boom, all right. I love it. You are a gift to humanity, my friend. You're a beautiful guy and your message is super powerful.
Starting point is 01:44:46 So it's an honor to help amplify your wisdom. Well, you do that beautifully. Thank you so much for helping get the message out. Well, come back and talk to me again sometime. I'd be honored to. Hopefully we'll meet on the trail out there. Absolutely. And just to echo what you said previously,
Starting point is 01:45:03 if you are in medical school or you know medical school faculty, please reach out to Dr. K. Yes, go to my website. Let's try to get him full-time on the road. Yes, sir. Go to these medical schools, right? That's better to do. All right, cool. Absolutely. Thanks. Thank you. Peace. Peace. Thanks.
Starting point is 01:45:22 What a lovely and amazing human and public servant that Dr clapper is i love that man i'm so grateful for the work that he is doing if his message hits home with you i encourage you to visit the show notes on the episode page at richroll.com for plenty of links and resources to go down the rabbit hole of dr k you can also find him on Instagram at Dr. Clapper and at Michael Clapper MD on Twitter. Meanwhile, hang in there, everybody. I wish you well, and I am sending you all the love vibes. Let's just take this day by day. If you'd like to support our work here on the show, subscribe, rate, and comment on it on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube. Share the show or your favorite episodes with friends or on social media. And you can support us, as always,
Starting point is 01:46:10 on Patreon at richroll.com forward slash donate. I want to thank my team for working hard to put on today's show. Jason Camiolo for audio engineering, production, show notes, and interstitial music. Blake Curtis and Margo Lubin for videoing the show. Jessica Miranda for graphics. Allie Rogers for portraits. Georgia Whaley for help with copywriting. DK for advertiser relationships and theme music, as always, by Tyler Pyatt, Trapper Pyatt, and Hari Mathis.
Starting point is 01:46:38 Thanks for the love, you guys. I will see you back here shortly. Until then, be safe, stay safe, practice physical distancing, but social connection, go inward and leverage this moment to grow because we need all of you to be healthy and more importantly, to be more of who you really are now more than ever. Much love, peace, plants, namaste. Bye.

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