The School of Greatness - The Top Foods You Should Avoid [MASTERCLASS] EP 1360
Episode Date: December 9, 2022Today’s Masterclass episode is all about the common foods that you should start avoiding today! Three experts walk us through the lies we’ve been told by the food industry and the best foods that ...support a healthy mind & body.In this episode,Dave Asprey, entrepreneur and author, shares ways to make your body better at making energy and the best foods to eat before you start a fast.Dr. Steven Gundry, physician and author, tells us the common vegetables you should start to avoid and better ways to prepare foods to optimize your health. Vani Hari, blogger, author and activist, explains why food is healthier in Europe and shines a light on the lies you’ve been told by the food industry.For more, go to lewishowes.com/1360Full Episodes:Dave Asprey: https://link.chtbl.com/1084-podDr. Steven Gundry https://link.chtbl.com/521-podVani Hari: https://link.chtbl.com/757-pod
Transcript
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The number one thing that is wrong with the American diet is seed oils. These are omega-6
oils. These are the oils that drive insulin resistance. And when you control insulin
and you control autophagy, something very interesting anti-aging wise happens. And it's that
Welcome to the School of Greatness. My name is Lewis Howes, a former pro athlete turned
lifestyle entrepreneur. And each week we bring you an
inspiring person or message to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness. Thanks for
spending some time with me today. Now let the class begin. Welcome to this special masterclass.
We brought some of the top experts in the world to help you
unlock the power of your life through this specific theme today. It's going to be powerful,
so let's go ahead and dive in. What do you think is the worst food to eat before you start fasting?
Like, what's the worst thing you could do
where it kind of doesn't matter that you fasted
because you just had this, this, and this 16 hours ago?
I would say a bunch of fried stuff,
especially like French fries from a restaurant,
especially because they use such bad oils.
And what you find from fasting
is that sometimes it's effortless
and sometimes you just have gnawing hunger the whole time. And the gnawing hunger, it's effortless and sometimes you're just have gnawing hunger.
And the gnawing hunger, it's your fault. It's what you ate before the fast.
Interesting.
So in Fast This Way, I teach about these six big categories of food that are likely to cause
cravings for you. And they don't all cause the same intensity of cravings, but these are foods
that aren't as good as we think they are because we have anything you're going to eat has three things in it and most nutritionists only look at two i'm
not picking on nutritionists specifically dietitians are even worse i'll pick on them
these are the guys who feed you jello with nutritious wheat in the hospital but there's
calories in food and some types of of popular, well, eat food with less calories.
Guys, calories are energy.
Energy is what you want.
And to say that you are somehow going to feel really good on a low calorie diet, it does not work.
As a 300 pound guy who's lost way more than 100 pounds, I'd say I'm a 200 pound guy now,
but you go low calorie, lose 20 pounds, gain 30, lose 30, gain 40.
It does not work.
It makes you miserable and it makes you just cranky. So what's the solution? What's the solution then? Well, the solution is
you actually eat enough calories and you eat the right kinds of calories. So let's assume your food
has some energy in it. The second thing food has, it has nutrients. So it has vitamins and minerals
and stuff like that. This is good. Now, most of the time we stop there and say, okay, you should
eat more of this because it has, for some some reason some people say less calories and other people say more nutrients
but the third bucket is what matters the third bucket is anti-nutrients or toxins and it's not
like any food is is perfect but some have more or less calories some have more or less nutrients and
some have more or less anti-nutrients and if you pretend like they don't exist which is how most
nutritional stuff is written,
is to eat this because it's packed with this,
ignoring the fact that you could literally
have a bowl of cyanide.
And if you put some vitamins in it,
they'd say, well, it's low calorie,
it's high in vitamins, you should eat that.
And so I teach people in Fast This Way,
look, here's the things to look for.
If you eat that, you're probably gonna have
a miserable fast with low energy cravings and be cold. But if you don't eat that you're going to have a much easier fast and then you start to
realize wait a minute maybe i'm going to choose foods that don't make me hungry as soon as i
finish eating them and if you master that even when you're not intermittent fasting you're going
to have lunch and instead of wanting a snack at two i'm actually full until dinner i just don't
want to eat so i don't think about eating i don't reach for the cookies yeah so instead of wanting a snack at two, I'm actually full until dinner. I just don't want to eat. So I don't think about eating.
I don't reach for the cookies.
Yeah.
So instead of willpower, it's just biology.
It's so much easier that way.
What would you say would be the top three foods if you could only have three that you
would eat before a fast, whether 16 hour or 24 hour?
It would be definitely grass fed steak.
There is nothing more satiating than animal fats or butter
this stuff it's full of nutrients as long as it's grass-fed if it's industrial it'll actually give
you cravings it's not good to eat industrially raised animals so the idea that meat is good or
bad you got to know what meat how's the animal treated and all that it matters i wish that it
didn't matter i wish you could just eat gravel but it doesn't work so this is something that is the most satiating something with a lot of soluble fiber in it you
can do broccoli if you want to you can do some some vegetables preferably cooked not all vegetables
are going to have the same effect on you so i talk about things like how the nightshade family
of vegetables which have been a core part of the bulletproof diet like guys watch out for that
if you eat bell peppers you're probably going to feel different than if you eat cabbage. In fact,
you'll feel very different. And when I say that most people, Oh wait, I guess that might be true,
but we've just never thought about it. Different in a not feeling as good with the nightshades.
Bell peppers are in the deadly nightshade family. They're clearly not deadly, but they cause
inflammation in many people, but in others, they handle it pretty well.
So I'm like, watch out for that.
But for me, I would say, give me some vegetables, give me some steak.
And then the other thing that's going to be really good is anything with fat.
Dark chocolate, guacamole, things like that.
A salad with a really heavy dressing with real olive oil, not the fake stuff,
and with some
extra MCT oil in it and some extra avocados on top.
So give me the good undamaged fats, not a lot of seed oils.
Give me some protein and give me some vegetables.
You do that and you can cruise all day long.
But if you say, oh, instead, I'm going to insert some kind of fancy raw kale salad.
Kale gives a lot of people cravings. In fact,
it's not very good for you at all. In fact, have you ever, you know, huge kale salad and then being,
I'm so full, I'm so satisfied. I'm just bursting with energy. I'm not going to be hungry for four
hours. No, even if you, even if you're covered in bacon, it still doesn't work. Kale has stuff
in it that pisses your body off. It really does. And it's just how it is. It doesn't taste that
good either. But even if you like the taste of it, it's not particularly a strong health food.
There you go. And how does from all the research that you've done, obviously you've tested this
for 10 years personally, but from the research and the science, how does fasting the right way
play a role in anti-aging in your life and other people's lives?
The number one thing fasting or intermittent fasting regularly will do, and remember,
it doesn't have to be a super long one. 14 hours can start. 16 hours is good. We're not talking
heavy duty, living in a cave kind of stuff. And that will stop you from having insulin resistance.
When you have insulin resistance, it means that insulin levels go up and your body can't hear them, so they go up higher. When your insulin is higher,
your all-cause mortality goes up. In other words, your chances of dying from every disease you can
think of happens. What insulin resistance means is that when there's energy in your body,
your cells are weak enough that they can't make good use of the energy. And fasting fixes that
problem. When sugar goes up in the body, it forms something called advanced glycation end products. It basically
cooks your tissues the way onions brown in a pan. And we know this from 30 years of anti-aging
research about the effect of excess insulin and sugar in the body. Fasting will fix that. But on
top of it, there's something called autophagy, which is a core part of the recommendations I make,
which is do whatever it takes to cause your body to turn its protein digestion mechanisms
back on you. Because if it's not busy eating steak and eggs or tofu, if that's what you're into,
it'll turn around and go, oh, there's some extra debris, some junk inside the cells,
outside the cells. I can clean that up. And if you go a little bit longer, it says, you know what?
I've got enough extra enzyme activity here.
I think I will take out the weak mitochondria, these little power plant generators.
I'll take out the weak ones and replace them with young, strong ones.
And you start upgrading yourself internally because the stuff that would have gone into
digesting the food you eat every two hours because that's what someone told you to do
in the 70s.
Instead of doing that, you're eating the stuff
in your body that makes you old.
And when you control insulin and you control autophagy,
something very interesting anti-aging-wise happens,
and it's that you actually have younger
and more abundant stem cells in your body.
So intermittent fasting has proven to increase stem cells,
increases testosterone, human growth hormone, and a huge swath of anti-aging substances in the body.
And it's free. It costs less than eating breakfast. And what's some of the new research
about stem cells or the new developments that have excited you that everyone should know about?
Well, I've been pretty public about doing
a lot of stem cells.
I've had my bone marrow taken out twice.
You've been trying to convince me to do this for a while.
I've been considering it.
It'll change your life then.
I still need to consider more.
It'll change your life.
Anyone with old injuries like that,
I have just no bodily pain.
And you get younger, and there's really intriguing research about stem
cells making brains work better especially if you've had a traumatic brain injury which i
have had and so you you just get younger and i can't tell you that it was stem cells alone that
did this i live you know a bulletproof life and all that but i recently measured my brain's response
time this is an automatic response time. How quickly does the
brain respond when a light or a sound comes on? So this isn't a conscious thing. And my response
time is the average response time for a 20 year old. The response time goes down with or goes up
with age. So you get slower and slower as you age. So I have a 20 year old's ability to respond to
the environment around me, which is pretty remarkable. And I truly think that the stem cells helped with that.
There's also things like arterial flexibility
where I have the average flexible arteries
of a 24 year old when you just compare.
And I'm twice as old as that, Louis.
So something is working.
I think stem cells are a core part of the anti-aging thing.
What's happening now though,
is we're able to pull things that are like stem cells
out of the blood instead of out of the marrow.
And that's a lot less painful.
I'm more open to that than the whole sucking out of my bones.
Yeah, it's spinning it up.
You're asleep when you're – actually, I was awake one time when they did it.
I was asleep the second time.
So wait, what's this new blood drawing stem cell that you're talking about?
It's still getting regulatory approval and all, but it's called very small stem-like cells.
But I'll show you the video sometime in that I'm laying on the table and the doctor has this thing and he hammers it with a hammer.
Oh, no, I can't.
And it goes.
Every time I see that video, it's like it's the worst thing ever.
Man.
Yeah.
You go through a lot of pain to have uh you know
it's really weird lewis it's almost like hunger like you can look at something as pain or just
weird and when i really dug into it like there's the strangest feeling in my skeleton but it wasn't
pain it was just so outside the universe of anything you would ever or should
ever feel that it, your body could say it's pain or it could just be like, that's different. That's
weird. Yeah. So I, I can say I've, I've been through much more painful things than that.
Uh, but the idea that, that we could have younger and more stem cells by skipping breakfast
is a little bit less money and time
than that. And that's why I think it's such an important practice. And what's this, uh, what's
this blood, uh, stem cell process then it's not, it's not available yet, but have you tested it?
What have you gained? There's a very few doctors who are, are offering it today. And I think it's
in a bit of a gray zone from a regulatory perspective so have you tried it very small stem-like cells of course i've tried it how do you how do you feel
about it um well i think it's hard to say to compare a versus b there's a lot more studies
on getting stem cells from your fat or your marrow there's also people getting stem cells
from like placental cords and umbilical cords or placentas and umbilical cords
right um they're um i have mixed feelings about that because if you're getting stem cells from
eight different people and like how how tested was that and that makes all of my friends who do stem
cells that way irritated that i would question it maybe it's perfectly good and a lot of people do
it and love it i just in my mind i'm, what do we test for every little virus and every little bacteria. And
I kind of liked the idea of growing my own stem cells, but that's not legal in the U S anymore.
It was for a while. And that was the most effective. So it's coming down. We're, we're
like year one of, of an evolution that's happening. Kind of like cell phones. The first cell phone
is some, some guy in LA and his Mercedes 300 D convertible. The. Kind of like cell phones. The first cell phone,
some guy in LA in his Mercedes 300D convertible,
the whole trunk is his cell phone.
Yeah, exactly.
And it was like $25 a minute.
But with stem cells, it's come down in price a lot.
The efficacy is way higher.
And it's getting better.
It works better and better every year. But it still takes a doctor a lot of time to
get the needles in all the right places and understand your joints and but man it's you know
a couple hours of relatively minor discomfort but then you're better for decades it's a really big
deal lewis and i'll tell you if you fast before you do that procedure you have less insulin resistance you have a working
metabolism everything you can do in a hospital whether it's a surgery whether you're getting a
car accident whatever everything goes better if you just have a strong metabolism and so like what
do we all need right now we want more resilience resilience comes from biology the people who are
best at taking fat or sugar plus air, combining them and getting abundant energy, those are the people who live the longest, have the best life.
They have more opportunity for greatness because they simply have more electrons bouncing around in their heads to do stuff with.
And it could power your immune system.
It could power whatever you're doing in the world.
But that's the core of everything I've ever done with Bulletproof, with all the content.
How do you make yourself better at making energy?
And it turns out sometimes not eating is part of the equation.
Yeah.
And I'm curious, you know, everyone swears by the lifestyle slash diet that they live by that works for them.
People who are vegan swear by it. And the ones
who are super healthy have lots of energy. The ones who are vegetarian. I feel like vegans just
swear. They don't even swear by their diet. Is that just me? Who does? Yeah. I mean, they swear
by lots of things. Sorry, vegans. I'm just teasing you guys. The vegetarian diet, people who live a
vegetarian lifestyle for a long time say that this is the best for them.
People who are carnivore diet say it's the best for them.
Keto.
Is there a worst type of diet, even though some of these things might work extremely well for particular body types?
The worst type of diet is the standard American diet.
And there's three things in it that are just horribly destructive.
Sugar.
The first one is. What? Sugar. Sugar. Sugar is there, but I don't think are just horribly destructive sugar first one is what
sugar sugar sugar is there but i don't think it's as destructive as the other two okay so i'll give
an order from the worst to the the best of the worst right so the number one thing that is wrong
with the american diet is seed oils these omega-6 oils and canola corn soybean safflower sunflower all the stuff
that's in everything at the restaurant and most packaged foods at the grocery store unless you
know buy from the right company it's full of these oils these are the oils that drive insulin
resistance your body takes these oils and they're all plant-based oils and it says hmm i'm going to
try to construct the outer layer of my mitochondria and my cells, these little batteries.
But I have the wrong ingredients.
So I'm going to make subpar batteries.
Like if you go to the knockoff store and you buy the cheap batteries and they last a third as long as the good ones, that's what happens when you eat a lot of seed oils.
Americans have about 40 times more of that oil in their systems than they should.
And it gets built into your tissues and that makes you weak it's just not good seed oils
get oils are bad second thing is industrially raised meat it's full of xenoestrogens these
are estrogens that make animals fat on one-third less calories than normal
it's also full of antibiotics and it's destroying the soil of the planet right now.
It also is depleting farmland when we take and we grow corn and soy and grain and we don't actually
put the animal poop back into the soil the way we do on my farm. What we're doing is we're sucking
all the nutrients out of the soil and we're creating a very, very big catastrophe.
60 years from now, we'll be out of topsoil because we stopped having animals walk around and poop on it the way it works when you're doing a regenerative agriculture kind of thing.
But worst of all, you eat industrial animals.
They're also full of cortisol.
And so you do this.
you do this they mess up your gut bacteria and they're full of glyphosate because it was on the feed and glyphosate disrupts your your gut bacteria your nervous system activity and is tied
to cancer so we're getting bad oils oh and those animals because they ate corn and soy they're full
of bad oils too so now you're like man the steak tasted good and i had that nice salad dressing
that came out of a bottle that was full of crap oils and you think you're being healthy but you're completely wrecking things and this is some of the stuff that i did when i was heavy
right and then the third thing would be sugar right you just if you have a ton of sugar it's
directly harmful if you do the stuff i'm talking about you can probably have a few grams of sugar
and you won't notice that your body can handle it just fine so sugar is not good for you and it is
addictive but it is way better to
eat sugar than it is to eat corn oil but don't eat either one don't eat one yeah have sugar every
once in a while yeah but don't eat oil and yeah like if if someone said here's a birthday cake
you know it's gluten-free i don't do gluten um and they said i made it with canola oil i'd just
be like no right but if they said i made it with sugar and butter, I'd be like, all right, I'm going to have some.
The sugar, okay, your body can process that and it's gone.
The other stuff, it sticks and it gets in there and you don't want to do it.
So the worst diet of all is that one with lots of fried stuff and bad oils.
But the second worst diet for people who think they're being healthy,
this isn't going to be popular, but it is the vegan diet.
Why is that?
There's two things.
Okay.
I was a devout raw vegan.
Okay.
I did this for more than a year.
I mean, I have bowls as big as my head full of kale and blended and mashed and sprouted.
And I mean, I'm good with rice and beans and everything.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All that stuff.
So what happens there is your body doesn't get the essential fats that it needs.
We are not made out of plant oils.
And I have in my books, I talk about the studies that show when you change the type of oil
you eat, it changes what your body is made of.
So when you go on a plant-based diet, you're getting two things.
You're getting plant-based oils, which are not very compatible with you.
Vegans will get mad at me and say, Dave, we can convert plant omega-3s to the good ones. Yes, it takes 45 grams of bad omega-3s to
make one gram of the good ones if your body can do that, which it won't be able to do because
you're on a plant-based diet. And then you get tons of these anti-nutrients from plants that
cause cravings. When I was a raw vegan, I was always hungry. And I think that
that's a very common occurrence. And I would say, well, that's right. I'm going to put more coconut
oil or eat more, you know, fresh, all these things, avocados. It didn't matter. It's because
plants don't want you to eat them and they cover themselves in defense systems that cause cravings.
So I talk about the five big categories
of things that are causing problems with us right now. And many plants that are common on a plant
based diet are not very compatible with humans. Like, oh, they have these vitamins. Yeah. They
also stick to the stuff that lines the cartilage in your joints and gives you joint pain or they
inhibit your ability to absorb zinc and magnesium and iron and things like that.
And so what happens is you tell yourself you're doing this to be nice to the animals.
But what you're doing is you're making sure that the animals will go extinct.
Because if everyone was vegan, we'd have no animals.
And then two generations later, we'd all be extinct because we'd have no animals to make soil.
Because you can't grow carrots without animal poop at the end of the day.
You can do it for 20 years.
You can do it for 30 years.
But eventually, you have to build that soil back up.
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So what's happening on a plant-based diet is the wrong fats and lots of anti-nutrients.
And that combination is kryptonite for people.
And I've had tens of thousands of former vegans go bulletproof.
And part of the reason I made the bulletproof diet was because I did harm to myself,
including additional food allergies and worse hypothyroidism as a result of being vegan.
worse hypothyroidism as a result of being vegan. And in terms of animal cruelty, I calculated deaths per calorie from eating a pound of grass fed steak every day, which is a lot. You don't
need to do that unless you're on the carnivore side of things, which there's an argument for that.
But if you do that and the cow is grass fed and local, unless the cow stepped on a frog,
you kill less than one
animal per year in all of your food but if you eat boxes of processed soy nuggets you disrupted
the lives of whatever was going to live on that land and whatever the tractors killed and so the
number of deaths per calorie is way higher for any grain product and any anything other than
basically fresh picked vegetables because
of habitat destruction and tractor kills. And like I asked a monk this in Tibet. I'm not dogmatic,
but I want to do what works. So I like to minimize suffering, buy from a local farmer, eat less meat,
but make it grass fed and eat very good fats. And if you do that, you'll never have a craving
during a fast. And if you don't believe anything I say, you can still be plant-based or vegan and you can still be standard American
diet. Dave, I like my industrial animals, you know, go screw yourself, just do intermittent
fasting and you'll still improve. It works for any diet out there. And I'm happy to share the
knowledge and I've moved a lot of, a lot of information. There's 3000 blog posts and stuff
like that. But what I want people to do is
figure out the foods that are compatible with your biology. And if you're one of the small
percentage of people who's like, you know what? A vegetarian works for me. I know people,
it really does. They eat some eggs, they eat some cheese, they eat a substantial amount of butter
and magically that really works for them. And that's okay. Right. But if it doesn't work for
you, don't tell yourself it's supposed to work so you'll do it even more.
That's the mistake that I made.
Are you friends with some vegans
that you've had these conversations with
or like Rich Roll or anyone like that?
I haven't had Rich on the show,
but I would totally do that.
And I've certainly had conversations with vegans a lot.
And there's kind of two mindsets there.
One of them says you're doing
it for your health, right? The evidence does not support that. And here's what's really going on.
And it's intimately tied to fasting. There's a compound in the body called mTOR. And you've
probably talked about it on the show before. mTOR is a signaling molecule that says grow.
It says, you know, know build muscle you know build tissue
and when you eat protein a lot of protein plant plant-based will raise it but animal-based raises
it much more so when mtor goes up you put on muscle but chronic elevation of mtor equals cancer
right so that's a bit of a problem so one solution say well i'm going to go plant-based and low protein
the problem with that is that mtor gets suppressed but it never goes up so you get frailty like these
are the people who break their hips these people have the the vegan size pants for men they're
like little stick legs right you don't you don't want to be there right so what's the solution? Well, don't eat for a while, then work out and then eat. And what's
neat is that mTOR is like a spring. You can push it down. And when it's down, it's good,
except if it never goes up, it's not good. So when you push it down, there's three things that we
know of that suppress mTOR. And this is how you build muscle and how you account for the difference
in outcomes from vegans versus carnivores, let's so to suppress mtor fasting does it exercise does it and coffee does it so
what you do is eat dinner and stop eating around six don't eat after dinner so you got four hours
of fasting before bedtime you sleep for eight hours you just fasted for 12 hours
wait another four hours you there you fast you fasted 16 hours you had a late breakfast but before you eat do some squats go lift i mean it can be a very quick workout just
something heavy and then you eat and because all three of those things push the mtor down as soon
as you eat some protein the body says wahoo and it spikes the mtor much higher and then the exercise
has a bigger impact on your tissue so you got more exercise benefits in less time your mtor was briefly elevated because you only ate once that day or
twice that day and then it goes back down it stays down people feel good on a vegan diet because they
suppress mtor which is driving chronic inflammation problems you do that forever you never get the
muscles and the growth and then you get the anti-nutrients and you get the bad fats so it's
okay to be vegan for a week it's probably good good for you. But then at the end of that week, maybe you should go carnivore. So cycles are good. And
I will tell you, being all keto all the time is terrible for you. Being all vegan all the time is
terrible for you. And I've done both. That's why intermittent fasting is so awesome because you can
eat both vegetables. You can even have white rice. You can have carbs. You don't have to be in keto
and ketosis and all that to do fasting.'s cycling in and out so be vegan for a
day but just don't be vegan for a year and you'll be fine what are the main plants that we should
never be eating then okay real quick uh up until 10 000 years ago we lived primarily on the leaves
of trees and we ate tubers that grew in the ground like a sweet potato a yam love those yeah
they're actually they're pretty darn good for you you know you were actually designed to eat them
and 12 000 years ago 10 000 years ago we switched over to things that we had never eaten before and
those were the grains of grasses and beans now the reason we'd never eaten them before is, number one, we didn't need to.
There's never been a documentation of an ape eating grass or grains.
Beans are so lethal that five raw kidney beans will kill a human being in five minutes by
coagulating their blood.
What? Five raw kidney beans raw kidney
beans in fact you know most people have heard of the poison ricin the white powder you send
to your elected official yeah lots on the way to washington yeah that's another subject um so ricin
is the lectin of the castor bean and we'll talk about lectins next a lectin is the plant defense system these are
proteins that are designed to basically kill us in one way or another and so ricin so powerful
that about four molecules of ricin will kill a human being instantaneously there's a great
study that was written up in one of the journals about a few years ago they
decided to have a healthy eating day in boston yeah and they serve the kids beans and because
it's so healthy right part of the blue zone yes and they had 30 or 40 admissions to the hospital with severe diarrhea, hypotension.
And it turns out that it was all the fact that the beans were undercooked.
And beans are a plant baby.
And we're not supposed to eat those.
And so.
No beans.
No beans.
Zero beans.
Unless you use a pressure.
Pinto black. None of that. We shouldn't be eating it. Shouldn't be eating it. Unless you use a pressure. Pinto black beans. Pinto black.
None of that.
We shouldn't be eating it.
Shouldn't be eating it.
You weren't designed to eat it.
You have no defense system against it.
No matter how it's cooked.
If you pressure cook it, it's fine.
Pressure cook it.
What does that even mean?
Put it in a pressure cooker.
Pressure cooker.
The modern pressure cooker is as easy as a rice cooker.
Got it.
It's one touch.
It's not your grandmother's pressure cooker that blew up
in the kitchen and then it's okay to eat yeah so you can pressure cook beans now the other thing
we weren't designed to eat grains now just a quick question before you start there how much of it can
we eat doesn't matter once it's pressure cooked obviously everything in moderation but i mean
yeah well like i was presenting 20 beans are gonna kill me or what no if you pressure cook
them they're fine.
It's all good.
And we talk about how to do this in the plant paradox.
But my personal feeling is the only purpose of eating a bean is to get olive oil into my mouth.
And we can talk about that as we go along.
Okay.
So grains, for instance, everybody heard about gluten.
Yes.
All right.
So gluten is a lectin and again a
lectin is a plant's defense system it's a protein that actually is designed to act like incoming
guided missile attacks wow on the inside wall of our gut and these things actually pry open
the lining of our gut and actually break through the border.
Really?
Yeah, they really do.
And that's what causes eczema and causes breakouts.
Yeah, exactly.
Acne, brain fog, irritable bowel.
This is actually all part of that process.
Wow.
And so it's fascinating to see people who either have come to see me or have even read the book and then write on Amazon,
oh my gosh, you know, I had this horrible eczema and now a month later it's all gone.
And all I did was, you know, take grains and beans and nightshades away from my diet and everything got better.
So that brings us to the second kind of group of things we shouldn't eat.
All of us are not from the United States.
America, we're actually from Europe, Asia, or Africa.
Every one of us.
So even our Native Americans are actually not Native Americans.
They're from Asia.
Get over it so none of us were exposed to an American plant until 500 years ago when
Columbus started trade so getting to know a new plant a new lectern in 500
years is speed dating in evolution.
I just don't think it'd be done.
For instance, the Italians refused to eat tomatoes for 200 years after their native son Columbus brought them back because they knew how dangerous they were.
They were part of the deadly nightshade family.
And when they started eating them, they always peeled and de-seeded their tomatoes because the peels and the seeds actually have the vast majority of the lectins.
And it's interesting.
Years ago, I did my fellowship in children's heart surgery in London, England, and I had a house officer from Italy, and he invited me up for pasta and tomato sauce.
So I brought, you know, it'd be nice
if I bought a couple cans of canned tomatoes,
you know, help out.
Sure.
And he looks at it, he says,
why did you bring me this?
We can't use this.
So I said, what do you mean?
It's canned tomatoes.
He says, it's got peels and seeds.
You can't make sauce with peels and seeds. He says, oh, mama mia. What am I going to do you mean? She said, you know, canned tomatoes. He says, it's got peels and seeds. You can't make sauce with peels and seeds.
He says, oh, mamma mia.
What am I going to do with you?
He says, you can't use peels and seeds.
I said, why?
He says, they're deadly.
And I said, really?
And he says, yeah, everybody knows that.
And then I thought back.
As a child, my mother, my grandmother was French.
And she taught my mother that you always
peel and de-seed tomatoes before you slice them and and serve them so until i went to yale i had
never had a slice of a tomato with a peel and a seed wow and it this was you know this has come
from cultures for instance peppers peppers are the same way they're part of the nightshade family you'll never open a glass jar of italian bell peppers and see peels and seeds because
they're gone and the most striking thing is the southwest american indians always peel and de-seed
their peppers before they eat them the hatch chili roast will be happening in another month and what do they do they roast their chilies peel the scarred off part deseed them and then they eat
them or they make them into chili powder right and you know you can prove this in your grocery
store buy a can of green chilies chopped green chilies open it up you won't see any peels and seeds because they're gone. So tomatoes and peppers, eggplant, potatoes, and potatoes.
If you peel them and seed these things.
You're safer, correct.
But you can pressure cook them and they're fine.
And they're okay.
Yeah.
Got it.
Now, there's two American beans that everyone should stay away from.
Peanuts are not a nut.
They're a bean.
God, they're so good, though.
94% of human beings carry a preformed antibody against the peanut lectin.
We can take rhesus monkeys, our cousins, give them peanut oil,
and they will develop atherosclerosis, heart disease.
Really?
If we take the lectin out of the peanut oil and
then give them the peanut oil they will not develop heart disease so if you get lectin free
peanut butter there is no such thing it okay so get almond butter instead it's much no peanut
butter no stay away from you should eliminate it 100 from your absolutely we can
take and this has been done men feed them peanuts take their bowel movements feed them to rats and
you will grow cancerous cells in the rat colon because they've been exposed to the peanut lectin
yeah i love peanut butter oh you know so i can have as much
all the time as i want and i went to medical school in georgia you know jimmy carter you know
man peanuts are everything sandwiches yeah no sorry eliminate it gone gone say goodbye this
will help me live longer have a happier healthier body and then i won't have to operate on you you
know when you have coronary disease and you'll go what i eat so healthy i'm having my peanut butter how many
surgeries have you done oh over 10 000 10 000 do you have the is that what it is the record no
someone said it was a record-setting heart surgery heart surgeries no yeah no how many
heart surgeries 10 000 10 000 yeah it's a heart surgery. What's the cause of these heart diseases?
And the reason why you have to do so many of these?
It's all in the plant paradox.
So 17 years ago, I met a guy by the name of Big Ed.
It was a 38-year-old guy who came to see me at Loma Linda because I'm one of these surgeons who will operate on anybody.
Wow, Big Ed.
Take the red, Big Ed.
500-pounder?
Big Ed.
Actually, when I met him, weighed 265 pounds.
But he had such extensive coronary artery disease that you couldn't put stents in him.
You couldn't do bypasses because there wasn't any place to land.
And he's from Miami.
And he'd be going around the country carrying his angiogram, the movie of his heart, his cardiac catheterization.
And everybody's turning him down.
And finally, after about six months of this, comes to see me. And I'm and everybody's turning him down. And he finally,
after about six months of this, comes to see me and I'm looking at his angiogram and I'm going,
you know, I don't like to turn people down, but everybody's right. You know, we're not going to do you any good. And he said, well, wait a minute. Here's the deal, doc. I've
been on a diet for the last six months and I've lost 45 pounds. Now, this is a 265-pounder sitting across from me.
It looks like a, you know, a biker, big gut.
And he says, and I've gone to this health food store and I've taken all these supplements.
And he actually brought in this shopping bag full of supplements.
He said, you know, maybe I did something in here.
And I'm going, yeah, all right. You know, I'm kind of scratching my professor beard and saying, well, I know what you –
good for you for losing weight, but it's not going to do anything in here.
And I know what you did with all those supplements.
You made expensive urine.
And I really believe that.
So he says, well, come on.
It's been six months.
I've come all this way.
What would it hurt to get another angiogram, another cardiac catheterization?
I said, okay. we we get a new
cath on him and in six months time this guy cleans out 50 of the blockages in his heart 50
percent good it's pretty darn good it's unbelievable wow for instance statistically on the best statin drug, you know, like Crestor, Lipitor, with the lowest levels of LDL, we scientists at the American Heart Association get crazy if after five years, your plaque burden has decreased a half of a percent.
Wow.
And we go crazy and we go, oh, my gosh, this is a miracle.
It's the greatest drug discovery of all time.
Right. And we go, really? So this guy my gosh, this is a miracle. It's the greatest drug discovery of all time. Right.
And we go, really?
So this guy, 50% are gone in six months.
So I actually was so excited.
I operated on him and did a five vessel bypass.
But what if I knew what I knew now, I'd say, hey, great.
You know, another year, this will all be clear.
Keep going.
You won't need this.
So I start talking about what he did on this diet.
And lo and behold, he gets started on this.
I go, time out.
I said, I had this crazy thesis at Yale University that I did for four years back in the dark ages of human evolutionary biology.
And my thesis was you could take a grade A, change its food supply, and change its environment,
and predict you would arrive at a human being.
And I actually successfully defended it and got honors, blah, blah, blah.
And so I had given it to my parents and went off to be a famous heart surgeon.
And so he's talking about this.
I go, wait a minute.
This is my crazy thesis.
And here I am, this big guy running.
I had pre-died. You were. Yeah. This yeah 15 years ago yeah yeah you know running and eating a healthy
low-fat diet and why did all the doctors seem like they're bigger yeah exactly and you know
we're giving all this advice and so I called my parents in San Diego I said hey you know you've
got this thesis oh yeah you know it's in the shrine. Yes. Internal flame.
The whole room of your accomplishments.
That's right.
So I said, send it up to me.
So I put myself on my thesis.
And I lost 50 pounds my first year.
And I lost another 20 pounds subsequently.
And I've taken it off.
And then I started putting my patients who, you know, at Loma Linda,
who I operated on on this program.
And their blood pressure went to normal
their diabetes went away their heart disease didn't come back and so after about a year of this
I was looking in the mirror on one Friday and I said you know I can't do what I do anymore because
I can teach people how to avoid me so I actually resigned my position my wife still calls it black friday when was this uh 15
years ago you resigned i resigned doing surgeries or doing being chairman of heart surgery at loma
linda wow just because you felt like this wasn't solving the it wasn't solving the problem it was
just putting a band-aid on it the surgeries the surgeries yeah i was just you know it's famous for
four time five time redo surgeries on somebody who kept clogging up their blood vessels. And it's like.
You could fix them up, but it's like.
Okay. They're going to be back in a couple of years.
Yeah.
So, yeah. So I set up an institute in Palm Springs where all I ask people to do is every three months, let me take about 10 tubes of blood out of you and we'll send it to some labs.
Insurance will pay for it.
Wow.
And see what asking you to eat certain foods does and asking you to take certain supplements that you could find at Costco or Trader Joe's does.
And that resulted in my first book in 2008 called Dr. Gundry's Diet Evolution. But then subsequently,
I've seen about 50% of my practice is autoimmune disease. And people come in and say, hey, what do
you know about autoimmune disease? And I go, I don't know anything about autoimmune disease, but
I'm a transplant immunologist. And that means how do I get the immune system of you
to accept the heart of a pig for instance and I'm actually hold the world record for the longest
pig to baboon heart transplant 28 days that's the world record so i started manipulating the immune system by food and sure enough
you've got an autoimmune disease we can teach you to get rid of it by changing primarily getting
lectins out of your diet that's it and changing your gut bugs to be basically friendly gut bugs. And the friendly gut bugs actually tell your
immune system that, hey guys, we're all great down here. We're down at the beach. We're singing
Kumbaya, the beautiful bonfire. And your immune system is basically the cops. And the cops go,
oh yeah, we know these kids, great kids. Let's go have a donut. And now, so that's how it's supposed to be.
But let's suppose a gang member moves into your neighborhood.
Now, all of a sudden, you're putting up bars on your windows and you got neighborhood watch
patrols and you're shooting guys with hoodies without asking questions.
So what's happened to most of us, true, some of the foods we eat, like all these wonderful snacks we're talking about, we've let these gang members loose.
And the good guys actually can't eat simple sugars and these saturated fats.
They want leaves and they want tubers.
They die off.
They die off.
Exactly.
So the gang members are running rampant.
And now your immune system is going, oh, my gosh, you know, the city's taken over by gang members.
And we're going to have armed patrols everywhere.
And anytime we see anything that looks a little odd, we're going to shoot and ask questions later.
And so what's happened to everybody with autoimmune disease is their immune system is just hyper on guard because it's no longer getting the messages from the good bugs chill out everything's
cool you know kumbaya love love love peace and love and that's what's happened and it's it's so
cool to get somebody who can just you know change the food they they may not want it initially but when they start feeling better
yeah they go for instance on monday young lady 36 years old lives out in la quinta was sent to me
with what's called chronic pain syndrome now a lot of doctors toss this off as oh you're crazy
or you're depressed or you're just anxious and you treat them with antidepressants. And she was in constant pain. And it was so bad that she actually had to
work from home, really couldn't move. And she had a kid and a husband. And so she had heard about me.
She said, you know, I've heard about you. You know, what do you think? And I said, you know what do you think i said you know come on let's let's do this i said what's
happening is that your pain is actually coming from nerve cells inside your gut that are being
stimulated by rogue cops if you will and they're trying to tell you that you shouldn't move
so let's start so i saw her a couple of months later in January,
February, and I said, how are we doing? She said, you know, the pain's less, but it's definitely
still there. So I said, well, you know, just stay at it. If you can feel a difference, don't give up.
Yeah. Yeah. So I walked in on Monday and I almost didn't recognize her. And I said, she's got a giant smile on your face.
I said, so, you know, how are you doing? She said, perfect. I said, what do you mean? And she says,
do you know what it's like to not have pain? And I said, well, yeah, I do. Now, she said,
Now, she said, I forgot what not having pain feels like. Wow.
And it's amazing.
She said, I just feel great.
You know, it's been so many years.
I'd forgotten what, you know, feeling normal felt like.
She said, but let me tell you a story.
You can't cheat.
And I said, yeah, I know that.
But how did you find out?
She said, well, you know, there was this office party a couple of weeks ago.
And all they had, they had some chicken and they had some nachos and they had some guacamole.
And she said, I noticed that the guacamole had tomatoes in it.
Believe it or not, guacamole is not supposed to have tomatoes.
Your listeners should realize that guacamole should not have tomatoes.
But she said, I figured, well, the safest thing to eat is to put some guacamole on my plate and have a piece of chicken because, you know, I want to be nice.
She said, I'll tell you, within an hour, my left elbow just started throbbing and then my hand started freezing up.
She said, I actually had to leave the party and go home.
And she had to lay down and I couldn't get up for about two hours.
And she said, I was trying to be good.
And she said, it's amazing that this could do this.
Wow.
This is crazy.
So you said you essentially were doing heart surgeries, 10,000 of them and said,
I don't want to be offensive here. I'll make sure I'm saying the right thing,
but you're now essentially a functional med doctor. Yeah. I don't know. In a sense.
Correct. Um, with all, with all due respects to Mark Hyman, Jeff Bland created the, uh,
created a functional medicine and Jeff's a friend of mine.
I don't know what functional medicine means. Right, right, right. What I do is restorative
medicine. Great. All of us have the power to heal ourselves. Now, the guy who said this was
Hippocrates, and Hippocrates, brilliant. He believed that any organism had the ability to have perfect health and that every organism had the ability to achieve perfect health as long as the obstacles to perfect health were removed.
And Hippocrates believed that the physician's job was to identify the obstacles to that organism having perfect health, the patient, and remove them from the patient.
And the patient would do the rest.
So what I try to do, I basically do detective work.
And I think I'm pretty good at finding the obstacles and many of those obstacles
believe it or not are lectins and the other obstacle is you got to get the gang members out
of your gut by basically starving them to death and giving the good guys what they want to eat
starving them of the lectins starving them of of simple sugars and lectins and saturated fats.
Remove those things.
Yeah.
They have nothing to eat and they leave.
For instance, I'll give you an example of something interesting.
We actually have bacteria in our gut that enjoy eating gluten.
Really?
Yeah.
They love it.
But if you go gluten-free they leave because they got
nothing to eat yes and then a lot of people who go gluten-free and don't notice a whole lot of
difference or they just get frustrated and then they and they have a couple pieces of bread or
pizza and then all of a sudden their gut goes oh oh, you know. Well, it's because there are bugs that could defend them against gluten.
Are gone.
Are gone.
And believe it or not, gluten is kind of a low-level lectin.
There's far worse.
The worst ones are in the hall of the grain.
So, for instance, this whole grain goodness, this only started about 50 years ago.
No such thing as whole grain goodness this only started about 50 years ago this thing is whole grain goodness no
we've gotten sicker and sicker and sicker because the outside of the hall has the lectins and we've
been throwing it away i mean really the french seriously would they have a whole grain croissant
or a whole grain baguette really and the italians you know whole grain pasta well now it's appearing on the menus because
the tourists want to see it yeah but the italians would kill themselves right right
yeah the first thing i opened up right here is the most popular nut is not a nut
the peanut the peanut and a cashew cashew is a nut too i can't eat cashews no the amazonian
indians always threw the cashew bean away.
What if I manipulate it in a certain way and make it into a sauce?
You could pressure cook it.
I can pressure cook cashews.
Then I can eat it. Yes.
And stay away from chia seeds.
No chia seeds?
No.
These are all the things people are telling you to eat right now.
Of course.
And that's why everybody's getting sicker.
Chia seeds.
There's two human studies that show chia seeds promote inflammation in human beings.
What else do we need to be aware of?
I used to be a big fan of chia seeds.
What do you eat?
You eat what you're supposed to eat.
You're supposed to eat leaves.
You're supposed to eat tubers like jicama, like sweet potatoes, like rutabagas.
You're supposed to eat tons of olive oil.
Tons.
I use a liter a week.
Of olive oil.
You drink it or you're cooking it?
No, I pour it on everything.
Oh, really?
Yeah, pour it on everything.
The only purpose of food is to get olive oil into your mouth.
This is what I told Dr. Oz a few weeks ago.
Just think the only purpose of food is to get olive oil in your mouth.
In Crete and Sardinia, they use a liter of olive oil per week.
A Spanish study of 65-year-old people for five years,
making them use a liter of olive oil per week against a low-fat Mediterranean diet.
At the end of five years, the olive oil users had improved memory compared to the low-fat diet the women had 65
less breast cancer than the low-fat mediterranean diet and they had less heart disease leader week
olive oil leader week that's the founder of youth huh yeah So, started Food Babe.
This was only a couple years ago.
Yeah, and I just started writing about things I was really passionate about,
and I started to realize I had a knack of asking questions nobody was asking before.
Like, what were some of the questions?
Well, no one had really asked Chipotle, I guess publicly, online, what's in your food?
You say your food's with integrity,
but what's actually in your food?
What are the ingredients?
No one had done that.
Just some of these companies not showing ingredients?
I thought they have to show ingredients, don't they?
Well, they don't.
Or they hide them, or it's like,
what are they going to find? They don't.
Actually, you know, they don't.
Not all of them do.
And so there's big, huge companies like Papa John's who don't release their ingredients online.
However, their competitors like Domino's and Pizza Hut do.
Okay.
And Chipotle back then, when I started asking the questions, didn't.
Right.
And thankfully, because of my investigations, they started labeling their ingredients GMO or not,
started removing some of the bad ingredients, they're getting rid of them the majority
of bad ingredients I wrote about the ones that were very controversial when I
realized someone as large as Chipotle or Chick-fil-a or Kraft or any of these big
companies were listening to someone like me I knew I could no longer stay at that
job and you started this at the other job that you were doing, right?
Or year and a half.
And then it started to pick up.
And I remember when I first heard about you, it was something about craft.
You basically changed the whole thing that craft does now.
And I want to talk about that in a second.
But I also saw, I remember you doing a video, like eating a yoga mat and talking about some word that
I can't pronounce.
And then later, seeing like three months later, seeing Subway come out with a commercial saying
they no longer have that ingredient because you were specifically talking about it.
And I thought to myself, wow, if one person can create enough of a conversation so that
a large company like a Subway or a Kraft or
Chipotle or Chick-fil-A listens and takes action to change something.
I said, that is really powerful.
And you've worked in kind of solving a lot of the issues with Kraft, Subway, Chipotle,
Chick-fil-A, and Starbucks and having them change their ingredients.
And what was the thing with Kraft?
What actually happened? Well, one of the things I realized, as soon as I quit my job,
which was the scariest thing ever, by the way,
because I wasn't, this was a pure passion project.
So I didn't know how to sustain myself when I quit my job.
And I was in the house, and I was sitting here,
and I'm living in a condo surrounded by the banks that I used to work with
in downtown Charlotte.
And going, oh my God, I have no boss.
I have no job.
And I'm a food activist now.
Wow.
This is crazy.
I cannot believe I'm doing this.
You know, when you're working on a passion project and you're also working in the corporate world, you're not putting your 100% effort into it.
and you're also working in the corporate world,
you're not putting your 100% effort into it.
Even though it's like kind of taking over your world and your thought and you're sitting at work and you're thinking about your next investigation
instead of what you're supposed to be doing.
That started to happen, but I was still like straddling these two jobs.
You had to take the leap.
Right.
And then when you put your 100% focus in something, wow, the doors just start opening.
Sure.
100% focus in something, wow, the doors just start opening.
And so the first thing I started to investigate was how food in Europe is healthier than the United States. What has happened is Europe has been regulated on a precautionary principle
that these chemicals are considered guilty before they're innocent.
Here in the United States, they're innocent until proven guilty.
And so in Europe, there are several chemicals
that are either banned or not used or have warning labels.
And one of those chemicals is artificial food dyes.
Yellow 5, yellow 6, red 40.
They don't use any of them there.
Or they're labeled specifically with a warning. Well, they label them with a warning.
Okay.
So they are banned in certain countries.
But in the U.K., they have a requirement that you have to put a warning label on it that says,
may cause adverse effects in activity and attention in children.
Kind of like cigarettes, basically.
Yeah.
A warning on a cigarette box.
Right.
But it's a warning on a box of candy or a box of mac and cheese.
If you were to import a box of mac and cheese from the United States to the U.K.
and sold it in a specialty store, it would have to have that warning.
But you know what Kraft did to try to get away without putting that warning?
They reformulated their product without yellow five and yellow six and use real ingredients paprika and
beta carotene for for european citizens but not for us why not so they found out that there was
this health issue right associated with especially children who who's the biggest population of mac
and cheese eaters in this country? Children. Children.
And to say, you know what, instead of putting that warning label on the box,
we're just going to reformulate for them,
and we're not going to do it for all of these millions of people in the United States is immoral and unethical.
So why do they do that?
Because it's a lot more expensive to put the natural ingredients in, I'm assuming.
It is a little bit more cost, but in the long run, it's not that much.
These corporations are making billions of dollars collectively.
So it's really unfortunate that these companies have gone unregulated like this, and it's
up for us consumers to hold them accountable.
Sure, because if we keep buying, they'll keep selling it to us.
That's right.
That's right.
And so I started a petition and... Against Kraft against Kraft yes to remove these artificial food dyes and
I tell you it was so you weren't saying don't don't make mac and cheese anymore
don't sell this you're saying take these specific ingredients out right that
other countries don't have in their food we should be able to eat junk food
without the risk of hyperactivity or cancer, because some of these artificial
food dyes are contaminated with carcinogens.
We should be able to have things without them harming us.
So I tell you, that period of time really changed me, because what I realized quickly,
the petition got over 200,000 signatures in a week.
Amazing.
So you post it on your site or online with the petition, and people can sign signatures in a week. Amazing. So you post it on your site or online
with the petition and people can sign online.
On change.org, I actually used change.org back then.
And they were an amazing partner.
They really helped carry the message
and they really helped guide me too.
I'm like, what do you do, how do you do a petition?
And how do you do all these things?
And now actually, I'm teaching some of those principles
in this book, like how do you start your own petition?
Interesting.
Okay.
That's really cool.
Yeah, there's an appendix in the back.
Very cool.
In the back of the book.
So what happened with these 200,000 names?
Did you say, here, Kraft, look at this?
Or what was the next step?
Well, they continued to be really basically sending us PR to us.
And actually the story of what happened when I went to go deliver
those petitions to their headquarters is the first introduction chapter in this book.
And it's gut-wrenching. I don't hold back on how I felt when that was happening.
I felt when that was happening.
And the really unfortunate thing with Kraft is that they weren't really willing to hear all of these consumers.
Now this petition has close to 400,000 signatures still to this day.
They're starting to slowly take out the artificial food dyes. They've taken it out for kids' products, and they've taken it out for their deluxe products,
and I think they're going to eventually get rid of the rest.
It's just going to take them some time.
But what's really the most critical point of that petition, what it taught me,
is that there are thousands of people really being affected by these issues.
Thousands of parents sent me letters.
Their kid's asthma went away.
Their kid's eczema went away. Their kid's activity
improved at school. Their kids got off their ADHD medication. Their autism lessened. The symptoms
of autism. I mean, personal letters from parents. I actually took those with me, printed them all
out. It was a stack this big. Took them with me to Dr. Oz, the show, and like
waved them in the air on camera at Kraft.
And what happened?
Well, that's when I had to go deliver those letters and that petition. And when
I was carrying those boxes of signatures, I mean, I really felt the weight of those
parents and those children that have been affected by artificial food dyes. And it still remains a problem today and a problem that I'm going to continue to fight
for. Wow. That's incredible. What do you feel like has been the biggest challenge with all
these companies that you've been addressing with the artificial ingredients or the ingredients that
are healthy? What do you feel like has been the biggest challenge so far? Which company has been the biggest challenge to work with?
Which, you know, and which one has been the most enjoyable,
I guess, if you could say that, to work with,
or has been actually willing to listen to you
and take your counsel and say,
okay, we do want to make changes.
What are some suggestions?
So let's start with the positive.
So a few years ago, there was something in my fridge that I had no idea what was in it.
And it was a bottle of Newcastle beer.
Everything else I knew what was in it, but the Newcastle beer had no ingredient list.
And I was like, why doesn't it have an ingredient list?
And knowing what I knew about the food industry and how GMOs have infiltrated everything.
What's GMO stand for, just so people know?
A genetically modified organism.
Okay.
And have just been-
Where scientists have created an ingredient to then go into the food.
That's right.
It's a new species of plant, basically.
It's not.
That we designed.
That's right.
It's not from nature.
This is in a laboratory. They inject either DNA or insecticide or some other type of concoction and put it into a seed and then grow that as new.
Amazing. Okay.
And the problem isn't so much that technology. It's not even about that. It's about the fact that they're paired with an increase in pesticides.
So the chemical companies who have developed those seeds are the same chemical companies
selling the pesticides.
So it's a pesticide issue.
It's really not about biotechnology.
It's really about the pesticides.
And the pesticides is what is really causing a huge environmental impact in the rise in
cancer rates.
If you look at the President's Cancer Panel, who independently looks at cancer rates,
has said that 41% of us are destined to have cancer.
Some of those reasons can be related back to these environmental toxins.
With pesticides is one of them.
So if it says GMO, does it mean it has pesticides attached to a GMO?
So is the GMO bad, it mean it has pesticides attached to a GMO? So is the GMO bad or does it just depend?
Well, I mean, it is creating new proteins that have never before existed.
So it's different for your body to digest and it may react in certain ways.
There are certain studies that show different things.
And what's really concerning to me is that there's no mandatory safety testing on GMO crops in
this country before they're introduced.
All the other countries around the world, they have this-
Have testings.
They require it or they label it, right?
They either say, no, you can't sell this here or you can't grow this here, or we have to
label it so consumers have to know.
Or warning, this may cause certain issues.
Right. But here in the United States, these companies are spending millions of dollars
to prevent their name from being on there. They don't want us to know that genetically modified
foods. I mean, think about it. The Super Bowl is happening, right? It's around this time of year.
And think about all of the companies that spend millions of dollars to put their name right there,
front and center. The biotech companies and the spend millions of dollars to put their name right there front and center the
Biotech comment companies and the chemical companies are trying to take their name away from this
They're trying to hide this from us. So you've got to wonder why are they trying to hide so much?
I'm interested though. Yeah, you know cigarettes. They have a big tax and I believe here in New York. They have a big tax on them
to buy cigarettes. And also they have a big warning label and a lot of them have people with cancer on them
that says, you will, you know, cigarettes cause death even maybe, I'm not even sure
exactly what they say, but there's big warnings on them, but people still do it.
Do you think if those warnings were on our food labels in the US that we would still
eat it?
Just like people are addicted to cigarettes?
Well, the GMO label is not even a
warning label. It's just a
Transparency label just to know what you're buying
I mean, it's like how you know that you're drinking orange juice from concentrate
Okay, we should know if our foods genetically engineered and so when
When these same food companies did this in Europe
They're still selling food there.
It's just labeled there.
So consumers know. So you're more educated.
Yeah, absolutely.
So it's not, you know, this is a smart business decision for companies, especially to give them this information.
But I tell you, there's something funny going on if they want to hide it so bad.
So that's your first kind of, when you start to investigate, you kind of wonder, well, what's going on here?
And when you look deeper into some of the studies that have been done, they're very
alarming and very concerning.
And now we're seeing the main ingredient Roundup, which has glyphosate in it, in human
breast milk, which is a huge toxin linked to autoimmune disorders, cancers, all sorts
of things.
So this is a huge issue.
But going back to that Newcastle beer.
Newcastle, tell me about it.
I had no idea what was in it.
Sure.
So I was like, why doesn't beer, alcohol, wine, liquor,
why doesn't any of it have ingredient labels?
Why can't I know what makes this raspberry-flavored vodka or this beer?
And so I started to investigate because it was the one
thing that was in my fridge that I wasn't personally drinking my husband was drinking
I care about his health and was looking into what was in there and I remember going it took me over
a year almost maybe maybe a little bit less or a little bit over a year to quiz the beer companies
enough to even write an article about what I found out
about the beer industry.
And what I found out was shocking.
Most of it had GMO corn added to it,
so it's not the basic ingredients of beer,
you know, malt, barley, you know, et cetera, yeast,
and water.
It had caramel coloring added to it so they could use a different kind of malt.
Just like Starbucks.
Yes, just like Starbucks.
And it had artificial dyes added to it.
It had different types of propylene glycol added to it, which is a derivative of antifreeze.
Wow.
There was things that vegan and vegetarian people would be concerned about.
Isinglass, which is produced from a fish swim bladder. Carrageenan, which is linked to intestinal
inflammation. So all of these things were in beer that I had no idea what was in it.
Because it wasn't on the label.
It wasn't on the label. So I felt like this needed to change. That blog post, when I wrote
it, went so crazy viral. Millions of people saw it.
And I realized that people are really fed up with this.
And so I reached out to Anheuser-Busch and Miller Coors.
And at first, they wouldn't respond back to me.
They gave me the basic mumbo jumbo,
sorry, we're not going to release our ingredients,
we're not going to tell you because it's proprietary information but as soon as i did a petition and got close to i think 40 000
signatures overnight oh my gosh they responded and the first to respond was anheuser-busch and
they were when you asked who was really nice to work with they were incredible to work with they
um they emailed me right away.
And I told this whole story on the blog. So if you look at old blog posts, you can read this
story. But they emailed me right away and they invited me to their headquarters. In St. Louis?
Yes. And to learn about their processes. Interesting. And look at their ingredients
and meet their head brewmasters. So I went and did that on my own diamond dollar.
You know, it wasn't consulting or anything like that.
I went there, and I met with them,
and I've been trying to convince them to develop an organic beer that isn't contaminated with any GMO ingredients.
That's interesting.
Very cool.
Okay.
Well, are they taking any ingredients out,
or are they doing anything different, or is it still the same thing?
Are they labeling it?
Well, they are posting all of their ingredients online now.
They've slowly started adding all the beers on there.
I think they're almost all the way up there.
So if you go to tapintoyourbeer.com, I think that's their website,
you can see what's in their beer.
And some of the things are really bizarre,
like high fructose corn syrup in my beer.
I had no idea.
I mean, think about all the people who read packages and avoid high fructose corn syrup in my beer. I had no idea. I mean,
think about all the people who read packages and avoid high fructose corn syrup, and they had no
idea that they were drinking it in beer. Now they do. I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it
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