The Ultimate Human with Gary Brecka - 43. Why Paul Saladino, MD Quit A 100% Carnivore Diet, Impacts of Cholesterol, And the Value of Insulin
Episode Date: March 12, 2024Get weekly tips from Gary Brecka on how to optimize your health and lifestyle routines - go to https://www.theultimatehuman.com/ For more info on Gary, please click here: https://linktr.ee/theg...arybrecka ECHO GO PLUS HYDROGEN WATER BOTTLE http://echowater.com BODY HEALTH - USE CODE ULTIMATE10 for 10% OFF YOUR ORDER https://bodyhealth.com/ultimate One of the most popular diets over the last few years has been the carnivore diet! Gary Brecka is sitting down with one of the biggest influences in that push, Dr. Paul Saladino, MD, about what led him to be an advocate for that lifestyle and why he abandoned a strict carnivore diet. Paul Saladino is a Double Board Certified MD who believes in healing most of your chronic health problems with diet. He’s the author of, “The Carnivore Code” and the entrepreneur behind the companies “Lineage Provisions” and “Heart & Soil Supplements.” Both companies are based on providing high quality nutrients to people through animal-based nutrition. You’ll learn about his path from raw veganism to carnivore, and how his views on nutrition have evolved over time; along with other topics like solving auto-immune issues, cholesterol, and the role of diet in mental health! 01:00 - Who is Dr. Paul Saladino, MD? 03:00 - How did he become known as the Carnivore MD? 05:00 - What was the impact of a vegan diet on his health? 09:30 - Why did Paul abandon a pure carnivore diet? 16:00 - Why did he previously believe vegetables weren’t helpful? 18:15 - What is the impact we’re seeing on psychiatric issues with diet changes? 22:45 - What is the difference between processed and unprocessed sugars? 26:15 - Basic diet principles to live by. 28:00 - What is canola oil and why is it bad for you? 30:00 - How does cholesterol impact our health? 37:45 - What do medical studies show us about seed oils? 42:00 - How can people avoid bad oils? 43:45 - Is flax seed oil healthy? 44:30 - How to avoid linoleic acid in foods? 47:45 - Does fat make you fat? What’s causing obesity? 49:15 - Why doesn’t the medical community treat health with diet? 53:00 - What are the first changes to focus on for a healthier diet? 56:00 - Do we need to eat organ meat? 58:00 - Why did he start Lineage Provisions beef and organ sticks? 01:03:00 - Why the people who regulate our food guidelines have conflicts of interest. 01:07:00 - Where to find Paul Saladino, MD. Connect with Paul Saladino on Instagram: @paulsaladinomd https://www.instagram.com/paulsaladinomd/ Check out his companies: Lineage Provisions: https://lineageprovisions.com/ Heart & Soil: https://heartandsoil.co/ Gary Brecka: @garybrecka The Ultimate Human: @ultimatehumanpod Subscribe on YouTube: @ultimatehumanpodcast The Ultimate Human with Gary Brecka Podcast is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute the practice of medicine, nursing or other professional health care services, including the giving of medical advice, and no doctor/patient relationship is formed. The use of information on this podcast or materials linked from this podcast is at the user’s own risk. The content of this podcast is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Users should not disregard or delay in obtaining medical advice for any medical condition they may have and should seek the assistance of their health care professionals for any such conditions. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Discussion (0)
There's this collective consciousness happening around focusing on meat, a food that's been
demonized, vilified, and it looks to be incredibly healthy and nutritious for humans. I believe almost
all physicians are intelligent in my intention. We're just f***ing brainwashed. 10.2 times harder
to un-brainwash someone. High fructose corn syrup sneaking in as natural fruit flavor when there's
actually no fruit in some of these yogurts. Do you really want to be eating this oil? Do you
really want to be eating excess amounts of linoleic acid from any seed oil, but canola specifically? And you really got to read the label. It's like
partially hydrogenated. They don't have to put it if it's less than a certain percentage. A lot of
what you espouse, what I espouse, it's not fear mongering. It's actually clearing the air. Knowledge
is power. But a year and a half into it, run into problems with long-term ketosis that we can talk
about. Wow. So this is kind of how your diet philosophy has evolved from being pure, strict
carnivore to now incorporated.
Our next guest, Dr. Paul Saladino, is renowned for his advocacy of the carnivore diet and his critical perspective on conventional nutritional wisdom.
He is double board certified with credentials,
including an MD from the University of Arizona in Tucson
and a residency at the University of Washington in Seattle.
Saladino is a certified physician nutritional specialist.
His journey into medicine was driven by the realization
that Western medicine often fails to address
the root causes of chronic illness, focusing instead
on the symptomatic treatment through medication. This realization led him to explore the potential
of nutrition, particularly an animal-based diet in preventing and reversing chronic disease.
Saladino's exploration of dietary impacts on health is deeply personal, including a significant
period where he adhered to a raw vegan diet,
which he ultimately found detrimental to his health. This experience, coupled with further
research, led him to adopt and then become a prominent and proponent of the carnivore diet,
which he credits with curing his autoimmune conditions and improving his overall health.
However, it's noteworthy that his views have evolved over time. Initially, Saladino adhered strictly to a meat-only diet, but later adjusted this approach to include moderate intake
of carbohydrates from fruits, highlighting the impact of flexibility and individualized approaches
to diet. Hey guys, welcome back to the Ultimate Human Podcast. I'm your host, human biologist
Gary Brekker, where we go down the road, everything anti-aging, biohacking,
longevity, and everything in between. And today is going to be a phenomenal day because I have someone that I've wanted to have on the podcast now for almost a year. I've been following this
guy for a long time. I incorporate a lot of his ancestral tenets into my daily life. I'm a huge,
huge fan. He's a mentor of mine, doesn't even know it, but he is.
And we're in LA of all places, but getting to sit down and get a few minutes of his time so we can
hear his wisdom is going to be an episode you definitely do not want to miss. So welcome to
the podcast, Carnivore MD, Dr. Paul Saladino. Thanks for having me on, brother. Previously
Carnivore MD. I changed changed i actually wanted to start with
that yeah and one of the things that i do admire about you is i think well first of all i i know
that this started as a health journey for you because you were a raw food vegan for a while
15 years ago 15 years ago yeah people really know a long time ago i was like the carnivore md was a
raw food vegan true yeah that didn't work out. So talk a little bit about your journey to becoming the carnivore MD.
Because I think some of the most influential people in the world
and the great thought leaders of our time
really come from some kind of problem that they solved in their own life.
Yeah, I mean, I grew up in a family of doctors.
My dad's a doctor, my mom's a nurse,
and I had eczema, asthma, and allergies as a kid.
I was a little bit obese as a kid.
And so-
You got any of those pictures, man?
I want to see a chubby Paul Celgino.
I don't have any baby pics.
Can we throw that up on the podcast?
I've got some pictures from when I was a raw vegan.
Oh, you do?
Yeah, and I was 20 pounds of lean muscle mass lighter.
So I was such a gaunt human. Yeah, I'm 165 pounds, you do? Yeah. And I was 20 pounds of lean muscle mass lighter. So I was such a gaunt
human. Yeah. I'm 165 pounds, 5'9 now. And I have a moderate amount of muscle mass. I'm pretty lean,
but I was 145, even sometimes less than 145 pounds as a raw vegan. But so I grew up with,
you know, average kid problems, not super sickly, but not super healthy. And I got over-medicated.
I got theophylline, which is a medication that we used to give to people with asthma. I had pills of theophylline emptying
into my applesauce when I was a kid. I had inhalers. I remember one time my dad forced
me to take an inhaler at the dinner table and I puked in my pea soup. Just too much albuterol,
right? At one time. And so there were no real thoughts about food or where the roots of my
illness was coming from. We ate pretty standard
American diet growing up, probably slightly better than a standard American diet. And it was really
not until I started thinking about human health that I took matters into my own hands. I started
thinking about diet right when I was a PA, right? So before I went to medical school, I was a
physician assistant, worked in cardiology. And my first foray into diet was a misstep in the vegan
world. I was a raw vegan for seven months, lost a lot of weight, had horrible GI symptoms.
I really couldn't be in a closed room like this with people.
My gas was so bad.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
You were just letting them rip, huh?
It was so bad.
I used to work in a small office, maybe half the size of this, with two other women, a
nurse practitioner and a PA.
And after I left that practice, they told this, I mean, I heard stories about how they used to complain
to the CEO of the business about how bad it was.
They're just like, oh, it's so bad.
I was just, I thought I was doing the right thing.
And months and months and months.
I'm detoxing, I'm detoxing.
My gut flora just wasn't having it.
And eventually I kind of realized
humans have always eaten meat in our history.
We've never, there's never been a tribe discovered
of humans that doesn't eat meat.
It's part of our biology.
It's written into our DNA.
And I reincorporated meat and did something kind of like paleo for 10 or 12 years.
But it didn't fix my eczema and asthma.
That vegan diet didn't fix it.
So I haven't eaten a lot of processed foods.
You felt better.
You put some muscle back on.
Yeah.
Muscle back on.
I was running at the time faster.
Gained probably about 5 to 15 pounds of muscle over time and
Started to feel better, but didn't didn't quite fix the eczema and asthma
And then I was in medical school had really bad eczema different times
I was doing a lot of jiu-jitsu and I would get impetigo, which is a superficial
Bumble infection. Well, it's a bacterial infection skin
Yeah from the mats when because you get eczema on my knees and elbows, and they get infected, and it was a pain in the ass.
I was always tweaking my diet, trying to figure it out.
But I thought, you know, I'm eating this organic paleo diet.
Vegetables, salads, nuts, meat, eggs, fruit,
and my eczema is still problematic for me.
So what's going on here?
And it wasn't until my residency at the University of Washington,
I had a really, really bad eczema flare. I did a bunch of sort of mushroom extracts, cordyceps, reishi, chaga,
and it just flared my eczema like crazy. I had head to toe eczema. Wow. And I was just sick of
it. I was like, this is not right. My immune system is not happy with these foods. And I was
right about the same time that I was driving to the beach to surf. It was probably a cold, rainy weekend in Seattle.
It was miserable surfing there.
And I heard Jordan Peterson on Rogan's podcast talking about how a strictly meat-based diet
improved his autoimmune conditions.
Wow.
I know he talks about that.
I thought he got that from you.
You actually got that from him.
Yeah.
Because he only eats meat, salt, water.
Occasionally he eats liver.
Okay.
But it's rare. Okay. But that's what I mean, meat. Yeah, water. Occasionally he eats liver, but it's rare.
Okay.
But that's what I mean, meat.
Yeah, yeah.
And so it's pretty interesting.
And so I am fascinated by autoimmune conditions
because the further I went in medicine,
so I did two years master's as physician assistant,
worked in cardiology for four years,
four years of medical school, four years of residency.
And throughout all that,
I was really interested in what was causing human illness.
And I started to see this commonality along autoimmune conditions. The immune system is disordered in
almost every single chronic disease. Atherosclerosis is autoimmune in some ways. Dementia has autoimmune
components. Mental health issues, depression, anxiety have neuroinflammation and changes in
the phenotype of the macrophage in the brain. So the immune system is at the center. And I really think that there's a very compelling hypothesis around the gut as this ground zero. Oh, no
question. Where the immune system is being programmed, right? Because so much of our immune
system lies in the lamina propria, these lymphatic tissues right around the gut. And so the foods we
eat program us in interesting ways. And that can extend to the whole body because these immune
cells then move from the gut to the whole body and affect us in different ways. And that can extend to the whole body because these immune cells then move from the gut to the whole body
and affect us in different ways.
So some people get eczema.
Some people get autoimmune thyroid disease.
Some people get rheumatoid arthritis.
And often the cause is the same.
But Western medicine doesn't think that way.
Western medicine wants to divide illnesses
into 10,000 different pigeonholes.
36,000 to be exact.
Okay, there you go.
It's expanded.
There are 36,000 of them.
It's become even more. And I think that
it's probably four or five things, right? 36,000 from five. It's just different manifestations and
different people based on our genetics at a baseline. And so I thought, okay, if Jordan
Peterson is an N of one, but I think these stories of humans are so valuable. What little nuggets,
that's a gem. That's a diamond piece of information. He fixed his conditions that Western medicine had been telling him and his daughter, Michaela were incurable for decades
by eliminating all plants. That's crazy. What's going on there. Let me experiment with that.
So I cut out all plants, ate meat, organs, salt, and animal fat for a year and a half.
X mug gets better, right? Never get a recurrence, but a year and a half into it run into problems
with long-term ketosis that we can talk about right wow so this is kind of how your your
diet philosophy has evolved from being pure strict carnivore to now incorporating clean
carbohydrates berries honey fruit maple yeah okay things like that because what happened after a
year and a half was that i had electrolyte problems. I had muscle cramps.
I had sleep disturbances, heart palpitations, declining sex hormones.
Testosterone goes from a total of like 800 to 500.
Wow.
Sleep disturbance.
And I'm thinking, what's going on here?
And then I came across this paper that nobody had ever showed me in medical school talking
about how insulin affects the kidney and actually signals to the kidney to hold on to electrolytes.
And so if we don't get an insulin signal from our meals, we waste sodium. And along with the sodium,
everything else flows out. That's the way the kidneys work. There's all these transporters,
antiporters, and symporters. Part of the keto flu.
Well, part of the keto flu, it's like long-term keto flu, right? Because my body just wasn't
holding on to these nutrients, these minerals. And so I have this kind of crisis of faith.
I wrote a book about the carnivore diet because I'm so interested in this collection of people
healing things that Western medicine says are not healable, right?
There's this collective consciousness happening around focusing on meat, a food that's been
demonized, vilified, and it looks to be incredibly healthy and nutritious for humans, evolutionarily
consistent, people healing every autoimmune condition under the sun right by cutting plants out and everyone's
a little different but what's going on here this is a movement it's really just a it's something
that's happening even now today i wrote a book about it and then i'm thinking oh man i don't
know if i can be strict carnivore that's hard on your brain right yeah it really challenges my
mental flexibility to think okay maybe there's a piece of the truth here but maybe i don't have the whole truth and that's the
humility that i've had yeah the whole time and i love that medicine i i love seeing that you're
you're you're willing to get out of a dogmatic commitment to one you know linear line of thinking
and say i'm willing to actually change and evolve and amend, you know, my, my protocol and my, my,
my dietary recommendations. I always want to be evolving and thinking and learning. And I, I,
there's the, I think it's just, I forget who said this, but you know, it's like, don't say that you
have the truth, say that you have a piece of the truth. Who has the whole truth? No one, right?
But we all share pieces of the truth and hopes that it will help people that can benefit from
our experiences. So I added back fruit, looking at kind of the plant kingdom and thinking the leaves of plants
and the stems of plants like celery or the roots of plants or the seeds of plants which are actually
seeds nuts grains and beans they all have defense chemicals and this is botany 101 right and they
all have more defense chemicals than the fruit and if you look look at the fruit, it's colorful, it's sweet.
The plant wants you to eat the fruit.
There's a clear signal here.
Like here's a treat, don't eat me.
Yeah, well, yeah, like here's a treat,
don't eat the rest of me, right?
And maybe eat this mango and deposit the seeds somewhere else
or eat this raspberry and poop out some of my seeds somewhere
in a pile of poop fertilizer.
It's a clear design.
And if you look at the way fruit even ripens,
fruit contains defense chemicals
and they decline as the fruit ripens.
Wow.
So an unripe fruit has more defense chemicals
than a ripe fruit.
There's a clear collaboration between animals,
insects, humans, and plants that's been going on.
And we sort of, in some ways, for some people,
not everyone, we have these genetic susceptibilities
that make us more sensitive to defense chemicals
in the vegetables.
And what I've come to now, sort of over time in my evolution is this perspective that if you're thriving, why change anything?
But if you're not, it's really interesting and insightful to question our assumptions about nutrition.
First assumption, meat is horrible for us.
Every news outlet is going to tell you that.
Yep.
Saturated fats.
Yep.
Horrible for you.
That's the devil.
That's the cause of heart disease right second assumption vegetables are great for everyone
plants are the best thing on the earth eat more of these to thrive if you have an illness it's
because you're not eating enough fiber yes because you're oh my god so true it's because you're not
eating enough plants gary right yeah you should eat more plants and less meat and so i turn that
on its head and go okay what, what if I look back at,
in my mind, this is just my sort of summation of what I look at the medical literature and
anthropology. I went to visit the Hadza in Tanzania. You look at where other hunter-gatherer
tribes go in terms of their preference of foods. And at this point, we've completely excluded all
ultra-processed food. We can talk about that. But if you look at unprocessed animal and plant foods,
which I think can form an incredibly healthy diet for every human, there is, I believe,
a hierarchy of value in those foods. And we see this reflected in the way hunter gatherers behave,
the foods they prefer. And if you ask Western medicine or you ask people who consume general
scientific information or nutritional information know information plants are at
the top right and i'm going to say actually let's put plants at the bottom the vegetables and put
meat at the top right because meat and organs are the center of every human diet that we've ever
studied and doesn't mean that they eat only meat and organs or that they the majority of their diet
is meat and organs but if you ask the hadza what's your favorite food it's meat right without a
question i mean singapore has one of the longest average life expectancies and they have one of the highest
consumptions of meat in the world. I think it's like a pound and a half average of meat per day.
Yeah. And that never gets mentioned in conversations about blue zones.
Conveniently left out of blue zone conversations. I don't think Dan Wutner ever visited Singapore.
This is just recapitulation. This happens over and over in medical science we
go on you know some of the research that i i viewed in centenarians um but that's contrary
to to a lot of conventional thinking i mean we we and in 22 years of mortality research i did not
see a single centenarian not once i'm not saying it doesn't exist but we did not process a death
claim for centenarian that did not have clinically elevated levels of LDL cholesterol when they died.
Uh-huh.
Now clinically elevated.
We should talk about this.
Yeah,
exactly.
Yeah.
But in any case,
I mean,
I didn't mean to cut you off,
but I,
but I think there's a lot of conventional wisdom and we form an industry
around it.
And then,
you know,
it's like an aircraft carrier moving at full speed to,
to,
to actually turn it around. It takes, there's so much inertia to actually turn it around
because there's so many people on the deck of that ship that are relying on that conventional theory of thinking.
And it picks up so much momentum.
And, you know, the healthcare system evolves around it to then actually turn that is difficult.
It's super hard. It takes. But we should, I want to come back to that is is difficult super hard takes but we should i want
to come back to that idea that because there are multiple studies i want to talk about all the all
there are multiple studies that show that people who live a long time lie in 85 plus the lothian
birth cohort have elevated levels of cholesterol so it's quite interesting and challenges this
hypothesis that apob is directly injurious to the endothelium. But if we go back to this hierarchy, it's like you look at hunter-gatherers,
meat, organs, honey, fruit, these are the foods that they prefer. You ask the Hadza,
what are your favorite foods? Meat, berries, baobab, honey, tubers is the last thing. Vegetables
aren't even on the list other than tubers. They don't really eat salads, right? They don't eat
seeds unless they're starving. And so that's interesting to me. And again, I want to reiterate the fact that
it's not that everyone needs to think about this and limit those foods, but for people who have
issues that are unresolved, fatigue, anxiety, mental health issues, sleep disturbance, low
libido, weight loss issues, autoimmune conditions of a variety of forms, for a lot of those people,
limiting or cutting out the vegetable plant foods for some amount of time as an experiment
is incredibly helpful. And so that's why I didn't want to be carnivore MD anymore, right? Because
I eat plant foods and I have become less dogmatic over time, hopefully. And I didn't want to say to
people, hey, you can only eat this one way right i meet a lot
of people who eat vegetables and are super healthy right but i've also met a lot of people and i
think the value of anecdote and story and human experience is is something you can't ignore who
cut those things out and have these long-standing issues resolved so what's going on there right
it's not something to ignore and i think that our detractors who are similar and make similar
arguments for both of us would say there's no rct paul
what says vegetables are bad for randomized clinical trial yeah and i'm saying i can give you a thousand people who have had improvements in joint pain long-standing inflammatory bowel
disease irritable bowel syndrome insomnia mental health conditions eczema psoriasis i'm one of them
you're telling me that's not valid because there's no RCT. And I'm not saying everyone needs to do it. I'm just saying, consider this, consider this and understand that
meat is being vilified. Organs are not even eaten in the Western consciousness, you know,
unique nutrients that are left out of our diets and fruit and honey. I mean, a lot of those are
increasingly under attack. You know, people are saying, oh, it's going to spike your glucose.
We can talk about that too, but vegetables are elevated and meat is, it's just upside down world,
which is, which is similar because a lot of things, depending on your way you see the world,
the upside down world seems to be a pretty accurate characterization of a lot of things.
It's interesting. I had a, um, a Harvard MD on, on my podcast last week, Dr. Palmer,
and, uh, he's a, uh md he's a psychiatrist and he's treating
some of the most drug resistant mental illnesses and i'm talking about real crippling mental
illnesses um like severe forms of schizophrenia with paranoias and um you know where people are
literally trapped inside their own bodies you know um voices paranoias uh you know all kinds of really tragic
consequences that and they're drug resistant and he's treating them with ketogenic diets
and um when you're when you're to the level where you're treating drug resistant mental illness
with nutrition i think you're starting now to see the power that the human body has, not just to heal
itself, but that nutrition can have on a whole consequence, a whole cascade of issues. It's
incredible. Yeah, it's really interesting what's happening there. I've spent a lot of time working
with people who had severe mental illness also. I did my residency in psychiatry. I've since left
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but uh you know and that's not because i have anything against the doctors it's just it's
mostly every doctor i've met has been intelligent and well-intentioned it's just the medical system
is broken in our paradigm and i think the biggest break is we treat from the neck up and from the
neck down, right?
And we somehow think that this is not connected to this.
And that was really my realization that, you know, I was seeing people in psychiatry
and there was never any attention to diet in my residency at the University of Washington.
And yet you're seeing neuroinflammation.
That's the root cause of most psychiatric illness is neuroinflammation.
Like I said, we have these macrophages in our brain.
They're called microglial cells and they become inflamed. They have a switch and they become,
you know, a certain phenotype when they become inflamed and when they become reactive against
our bodies. And what's triggering that? Well, it's something coming from here. And so dietary
changes in psychiatry, that's such a radical thing to do. And I wish there was absolutely no
ability to do that in my residency at the University of Washington, one of the most
preeminent, you know, universities in the country in Seattle, there's no ability to do that in my residency at the university of washington one of the most preeminent you know universities in the country in seattle there's no ability to treat anything
with diet it's all medications don't worry about the side effects any of this stuff and so that
was really why i left medicine i've had this just complete loss of religion and i'm still a doctor
i'm still a board certified licensed physicians but i don't practice i do this sort of thing
educationally and i realized that there's so many parallels between the way that we divide the brain and the
body and with every other autoimmune condition that we see. I mean, I've talked to so many people
who go to see gastroenterologists for inflammatory bowel diseases, Crohn's and ulcerative colitis,
who are told there's no connection with diet. Yes. It's literally in your gut. We see discharge
papers from, from oncology treatment centers that say dietary recommendations none yeah and i'm like none somebody just finished you know several rounds of chemotherapy for for breast cancer or colon
cancer or metastatic cancer and they were blessed enough to be on the other side of this and now
there's no dietary recommendations that's incredible even during treatment dietary
recommendations during treatment none um that's astounding to me you know ben and jerry's i mean
you gotta gain weight yeah you gotta gain weight that's it you gotta gain. You know, Ben and Jerry's, I mean, it's... You gotta gain weight. Yeah, yeah, you gotta gain weight.
That's it.
You gotta gain weight.
Yeah.
I wanna talk about the keto thing for a minute
because there's a little bit of a discordance here
that's interesting to me
because I had a bad experience with keto
and Chris Palmer's using keto to treat,
you know, profound mental illness.
So I think there's clearly value to ketogenic diet.
It's not prolonged keto dieting either.
It's what I guess you would call a keto reset.
Right, I think there's something to that. And we know that when you're intentional about your food choices, things get better. And so what he's doing with patients is sort of
an incredibly brilliant idea where I'm going to use a keto diet to improve the quality of their
diet. I think some sort of a framework for diet helps people do that. And if it's cutting out
carbohydrates, great, because you're cutting out carbohydrates that are ultra processed. And we know that when you have an ultra processed
flour from ultra processed grains, you're stripping out the information that's been there for all of
our evolution as humans. And that's very confusing for humans. And I think that the same thing about
sugar, and this is a very interesting position that I don't think I've done a good enough job
communicating to people. But if you look at processed sugar, if you look at table sugar, that is a molecule of sucrose. It's a disaccharide of
glucose and fructose, right? And that is interesting because humans would never have had that
evolutionarily. We would have always had that molecule in concert with thousands, literally
thousands of other compounds in the fruit. So you look at honey,
there's over 600 components in honey. There's probably over a thousand components in honey,
but 300 haven't even been identified. So there's polyphenols and prebiotics. And you look at a piece of fruit, it's probably over 5,000 components in that piece of fruit. So there's all this
contributory information that comes with sugar in our diets whether it's honey maple syrup or a piece of fruit
That is not the same as a table sugar
Which has zero information and it goes in your body and it basically just can feed the bacteria in your gut and cause overgrowth
And lead to lead to increases in lipopolysaccharide endotoxins, which we are so clearly
Connecting in Western medicine if you have endotoxemia this increase in lipopolysaccharide in your gut and in your body, that's horrible for humans. But what's so cool is that if you
eat an orange, you're getting fructose in the sugar and fructose gets demonized, but you're
also getting all this information that's actually preventing your bacteria in your gut from
overgrowing. So this is a difference. I don't want people to fear fruit or fear unprocessed
forms of honey, but understand that we can't
conflate research on processed sugar or high fructose corn syrup yeah i was just going to say
i want to delineate the difference between fructose that's found in fruit and high fructose
corn syrup which by the way now is is sneaking into labels i did a podcast short on this as
natural flavors natural fruit flavors and and you really got to read the label it's like partially
hydrogenated you know they don't have to put it if it's less than a certain percentage right um in there and so these uh
partially hydrogenated oils which is a you know the slang term for the seed oils and and um high
fructose corn syrup sneaking in as natural fruit flavor when there's actually no fruit in some like
some of these uh yogurts you know with fruit fruit on the bottom. Right. It's blueberry flavoring and high fructose corn syrup
with a dye to look like a blueberry color,
but there's actually no fruit in it.
It's crazy.
But high fructose corn syrup is made from corn, obviously,
but corn is all glucose
and it's a different molecule than fructose.
So in order to make fructose from glucose,
you have to extract it, you have to isomerize it,
and then you have to highly process it.
So you remove it from corn.
It's not even a whole food anymore. It's not even a food anymore. It's just
an industrial chemical. And there's studies showing that high fructose corn syrup contains
trace amounts of mercury and other toxins. And the high fructose corn syrup industry has gone to
great lengths to cover these up. But it's just, I think this is the problem with humans. And it
goes back to these simple principles that i think humans can live by
and if these guide the way we're living we can be so much healthier which is why would you eat a
food that has been stripped of all the information that has always been presented with that in human
yes you know a processed wheat flour never encounter high fructose corn syrup in nature
you would never encounter pure fructose you would never encounter pure sucrose in nature.
And yet the studies that vilify sugar are done with those and then conflated.
And you see people, I mean, you know, this is just respectful, but I'll call it out.
You know, on Huberman's podcast, there was a physician recently, Dr. Robert Lustig, just talking horribly about fructose, but conflating research done with isolated fructose or done
with isolated sucrose in animal studies
or in human studies, again, with isolated molecules
and really not giving a different perspective.
I don't want people to make fruit or fruit juice
their whole diet,
but I don't think we need to fear it.
And there's an interesting story here,
which is, oh, the problem is not the fruit.
The problem is not the fruit juice.
It's taking away all the information
that's associated with it in nature.
And the same is probably true of seed oils yeah right because what is a seed oil
it's an industrial byproduct of a sunflower seed right or a rape seed or a soybean foods that
humans have probably eaten in small amounts historically but when you take all the information
out of it and you distill it and you make concentrations of things that humans would
have never experienced we end up with massive problems as humans.
Especially when you degum it with hexane, you deodorize it with sodium hydroxide.
Yeah, imagine that.
You heat it to 405 degrees and turn it rancid.
That's a problem too.
We talked about this on our last podcast, but I got censored by the Canola Oil Society of Canada.
And I now was like, look, I didn't think canola plants were bad i said
that industrial processed canola oil is bad right and you know anytime you're adding hexane and
sodium hydroxide and high amounts of heat to turn something rancid well canola plants are bad there's
no such thing as a canola plant it's a rapeseed yeah rapeseed and um apparently you can't even
say rapeseed on youtube i don don't know. Rapeseed.
It's one word, guys. Did I just lose my YouTube channel?
But what's interesting is that you can't-
By the way, why can't you say rapeseed on,
not to divert, but-
Because it has the word rape.
Oh, okay.
Okay.
Can you say consensual sex seed?
I don't know.
Okay, okay.
But you know, rapeseeds are not,
it's illegal to sell rapeseed oil in the United united states it's also an illegal to sell mustard seed oil because they have a monounsaturated fat called
erucic acid in them right and so this is the problem that in order to make canola oil which
is an acronym for canadian oil low acid there's no such thing as a canola plant canada said hey
we've got these rape seeds let's figure out a way to do this. They genetically modified a rapeseed plant to be low erucic acid, but it still has
significant amounts of erucic acid, a fat that has been associated with heart lesions in the
studies. And so this is concerning. You're eating two to 3% erucic acid, I believe is the number in
canola oil. Native rapeseed plants have 30 to 40%, but you're still getting some. We talked a lot in the last podcast that we just did about cumulative stress. And so do you really want to be eating this oil?
Do you really want to be eating excess amounts of linoleic acid from any seed oil, but canola
specifically? No, I don't think any human has ever really gone up to a rapeseed plant and said,
yum, let me eat this. Like it's never, it's never even been a food for humans. And now it's probably the single most consumed seed oil around. It's touted as healthy by the
American heart association because it lowers your cholesterol. Wow. Don't you know, they don't tell
you that it oxidizes the oxidized cholesterol. So, um, let's get, let's sort of take a little
wander down the road of cholesterol because um i certainly don't have
the body of knowledge on cholesterol that you do but anecdotally um as i mentioned you know we
didn't see a single centenarian that did not have what we would consider the elevated levels of ldl
cholesterol so ldl cholesterol over 99 nanograms per deciliter and i think a lot of people don't
understand that cholesterol is actually not a fuel source right it's a it a construction material, one of the main construction materials in our body.
We build hormones, we build cell walls, cell membranes, we make vitamin D3, we make cholecalciferol from cholesterol.
And so it's a very necessary compound.
And yet it is vilified because, in my opinion, it's at the scene of the crime, but not the one pulling the trigger. And so talk a little bit about cholesterol and maybe some of the challenges
and misconceptions in the medical community surrounding cholesterol.
Yeah, I think cholesterol is really the crux of so many conversations
because when humans eat more saturated fat from animals,
whether it's butter, tallow, ghee, a steak, and they eat less seed oils,
there is a physiologic thing that happens
that the ApoB, which is just part of,
it's just a metric that sort of reflects LDL cholesterol
in a little more sophisticated way.
LDL slash ApoB containing lipoproteins go up.
And this triggers all sorts of alarm bells
in medical offices across the country.
And the knee-jerk reaction is here's a statin. So let's just consider this position. Like when humans eat a diet that is evolutionarily
consistent, that essentially mirrors what humans have been doing for hundreds of thousands of
years and, and they get rid of seed oils and LDL cholesterol goes up a little bit, that's bad
because you know, the position of western medicine is called the response to
retention hypothesis and is essentially that there is a direct geometric relationship between the
amount of apob containing lipoproteins in your blood and the rate at which you accumulate
atherosclerosis in your veins the more apob containing lipoproteins in your blood the more
you get plaque in your arteries except when that's not true. Except when that's not true. Except for the many
instances when that relationship does not exist. And there are so many of these relationships out
there that Western medicine ignores wildly. But here's the problem, that if you look at our
population as a whole, as Westernized Americans in general, there are multiple studies suggesting
that 88 to 93% of us are metabolically
unwell, some form of insulin resistance, right? Pre-diabetes. And that's a big number. And that's
93 to 88% have at least one metric of metabolic syndrome. And I would say that means you have some
cascade beginning in your body of insulin resistance, AKA metabolic dysfunction.
Even the American Heart Association
admits that half of Americans are either pre-diabetic, undiagnosed diabetes, or diabetes.
Over 150 million people, according to the American Heart Association, have some form of insulin
resistance metabolic dysfunction. I would argue it's closer to 90%, but even the AHA claims it's
over 150 million of 330 million plus Americans.
And so when we have a position, when we have a context of metabolic dysfunction, yes, there
is a direct geometric relationship between ApoB and atherosclerosis progression.
But what if we don't have metabolic dysfunction?
The relationship completely changes.
It essentially goes to almost zero. There's still a very, very small relationship, but we also know that no study is
perfect. There are other things in our environment that can damage the endothelium. But I think that
if you argue, as Western medicine does, that ApoB is causal, right? Because if you have more ApoB
and it's not causal, what's the big deal? But it has to be causal. It has to directly injure the endothelium on the inside of blood vessels. If you argue that
ApoB is causal in atherosclerosis, then why in someone that's metabolically healthy, does it
really not have much of a relationship between atherosclerosis or even a very small relationship
between atherosclerosis? And why in someone that's diabetic is the relationship very clear
and extremely intense?
Like the geometric relationship is much more, a much higher slope. So there's a discordance here
in the actual philosophy around ApoB. If ApoB is truly damaging the endothelium, why is it
that you have centenarians in your mortality data that all have high levels of ApoB? And they're
not dying of atherosclerosis. What's going on? These examples are myriad of discordances,
places where ApoB levels don't seem to correlate
to the progression of atherosclerosis.
Right.
And it's generally in people, men and women,
who are insulin sensitive.
So how can you say that ApoB is injuring the endothelium
when there's clearly something else going on?
And there's all sorts of other arguments.
In native human biology,
we don't get atherosclerosis in veins. We only get it in arteries. So you have the same amount
of ApoB. It's a continuous system in your vein as you do in an artery. But an artery is a higher
pressure system with a much higher propensity to have damage to the endothelium, denuding to
the endothelium. So if you look at the literature in medicine,
and my God, I want to debate Peter Atiyah about this.
You do?
Yeah, for sure.
And everyone else that is claiming that ApoB is the boogeyman
and that ApoB is causal.
If you look at the literature,
there are so many discordances here.
And it's just so clear that if ApoB is causing the problem,
why are there so many instances where it doesn't look like it's just so clear that if ApoB is causing the problem, why are there so many instances
where it doesn't look like it's happening?
And then it's clear the endothelium must be damaged
for atherosclerosis to start.
So what damages the endothelium?
Oxidation.
Oxidation, poor repair from an insulin resistance,
heavy metals, toxins in our environment, right?
So if you have damage to the endothelium,
yes, ApoB is involved,
but this is necessary, but not sufficient. So if you have a component that's involved
and you have a system where there is constant damage to the endothelium, like diabetes or
metabolic dysfunction, is it possible that ApoB looks like more ApoB is bad, but it's not actually
beginning the process, right? And then interestingly, or connected with that, what about someone that doesn't have rampant endothelial dysfunction
happening? What about someone that doesn't have rampant endothelial damage? We all have a little
bit, but I think in those of us that are metabolically healthy, we can repair it.
We all have high pressure with bifurcations in our arteries. We're all going to get some
denuding of the endothelium of our arterial walls, but I believe that we can repair it.
And so this is the problem. It's just basically saying something else initiates. ApoB as a causal
factor, I completely disagree with that verbiage. I think it's wrong. And I think that is propagating
a false narrative in medicine. It's incorrect philosophically to say that. And the problem then,
like I said, is that people are scared of eating foods that are good for them. And they're scared
of eating foods. And connected with that, the American heart association, the American college
of cardio college of cardiology will recommend canola oil to you because it lowers your APOB
and they will tell you to limit saturated fat because it raises your APOB. When we also know
that there are so many populations of free living humans with huge amounts of saturated fat in their
diet and high cholesterol, quote unquote,
that don't have any incidence of atherosclerosis
in their diets.
It's just they're not eating processed foods.
And the piece that always gets left out,
I know I've been ranting and it's complicated.
No, I love this.
The piece that always gets left out,
and we hinted at this earlier,
is that as polyunsaturated fatty acids in seed oils
lower your LDL, lower your ApoB,
they're also increasing oxidized LDL
and LP little a, which are much stronger risk factors for cardiovascular disease.
But why has that never addressed that? There's this huge discordance here.
So now your, your ApoB goes down and these other ones rise. There's greater degrees of
endothelial damage and oxidation. And that initiates the process.
And then it initiates the process, even though you've controlled for your ApoB.
ApoB. And we have randomized controlled trials that show this. I mean, the data regarding seed And then it initiates the process, even though you've controlled for your apolipi.
And we have randomized controlled trials that show this. I mean, the data regarding seed oils,
and this is hopefully a debate with Lane that's going to happen on seed oils at some point.
The randomized controlled trials on seed oils are interesting. They're complicated. There's
about 10 randomized controlled trials that have been done in the last 60 to 70 years where
researchers have replaced saturated fat in the human diet with seed oils. The problem is that in seven of them,
the control arm that was high saturated fat was given a lot of trans fat because it wasn't until
the last 20 to 30 years that we realized that trans fat was bad for humans. So when people in
the health space who are saying that the research says seed oils are benign are quoting studies or meta-analyses, they're basing the meta-analyses, the meta-analyses
include trials or are, they're quoting studies that are fundamentally flawed where the control
group is eating trans fats. But there are three trials where that doesn't seem to have been a
major case. And these are Minnesota coronary study, perhaps the best study that's been done
on seed oils versus saturated fat, Sydney Diet Heart and Rose Corn Oil study that's been done on seed oils versus saturated fat,
Sydney Diet Heart, and Rose Corn Oil Study. And these were all seed oils versus saturated fat.
Essentially, yeah.
And they all found that seed oils were worse.
Minnesota Coronary was,
we talked about this in the last podcast,
we did suppressed, right?
It took years for that trial to be published.
Ansel Keys, the guy that initiated
the whole saturated fat fearing,
you know, sort of cascade with his seven country
study was one of the authors. He was one of the researchers on Minnesota coronary, but didn't
want to be associated because the results were not what he wanted to see. The results were buried
for decades. And what they show us pretty clearly is that when you saturate substitute saturated
fat from animals with seed oils, you have higher rates of cardiovascular disease and increased
rates of death. Wow. Big surprise. You're putting more fats into your membranes that are fragile.
They're breaking down more. And the problem with seed oils is that they contain this fat
linoleic acid, right? Which accumulates in our bodies. So we talked about cumulative toxicity
in our podcast about fluoride, about cyanocobalamin, even folic acid being unmetabolized.
But I think that this is the problem with linoleic acid,
that this is a compound
that we never would have been exposed to
in these amounts,
historically, evolutionarily as humans.
But it's in nuts.
In small amounts.
Yeah, very small amounts.
Have you seen how many,
so Americans eat an average
of five to six tablespoons
of seed oils per day.
You would have to get
over two and a half pounds
of sunflower seeds
to get that much linoleic acid
65 to 75 years of corn. Okay, right
Like the numbers are staggering. Yeah over two pounds of soybeans
You know, like I think it's two and a half to three pounds of soybeans to get the equivalent of that
It's just we would never have gotten this amount of linoleic acid in our diet
It's in nuts in small amounts and you eat a small amount of nuts, right?
How many nuts are in the human diet historically? Small amounts. Like you have
to crack every single nut. It's very hard. And you think about, we probably ate some nuts and
seeds. I would argue we did that when we were starving as like a fallback food. But then you
see it concentrated in the seed oil. You can eat massive amounts. And if you look at a bag of Lay's potato chips, there's probably, I think, what do we
calculate? Like 15 to 17 tablespoons of seed oils in that whole bag. And you would never have gotten
that historically. And whether it's fried in canola oil, we didn't even eat rapeseeds. Right?
So this is an evolutionarily inconsistent amount of a compound, linoleic acid, that then gets stuck
in our bodies. Cumulative toxicity. We know that. Cumulative toxicity. Cumulative toxicity. And the trick
here, if you look at the research carefully, is that the linoleic acid in your fat cells,
that is reflective of your consumption. It's not in the plasma because plasma gets turned over.
And this is the other confusing part when people are looking at seed oil consumption.
But if you look at linoleic acid in fat cells, the more linoleic acid in your fat
cells, the higher your rate of cardiovascular disease. And that is never discussed because
people always look at blood. And the problem with blood is that linoleic acid is metabolized by two
enzymes, delta-6 desaturase, delta-5 desaturase, into pro-inflammatory mediators. And the people
that have the lowest amount of linoleic acid in their blood do the best, or excuse me, the people
who have the lowest amount of linoleic acid in their blood do the best, or excuse me, people who have the lowest amount of linoleic acid in their blood do the worst
because they're pushing it all to inflammatory pathways.
And so they look at the literature and say,
hey look, people that have more linoleic acid
do better in their blood.
People that have less do worse.
Therefore, more linoleic acid is better.
But what they're really showing
is that you don't want linoleic acid
to go down that inflammatory pathway
and make arachidonic acid or the other downstream mediators, which are highly inflammatory for humans.
So for somebody that's listening to this podcast, you know, how do they go on a journey to avoid high amounts of linoleic acid?
Like, where do you find it?
How do I avoid it?
Obviously, meats and organ meats.
But, you know, because what if I'm eating vegetables, nuts, fish, chicken, avocados?
Small amounts and all that, right?
Tallow, 1% to 2% linoleic acid in tallow, 1% to 2% in butter.
Nuts can have 15% to 25%, but you're not eating six pounds of nuts.
Right, right.
Right?
If you tolerate nuts, right?
I talked earlier, I think a lot of people do better without nuts in terms of their digestion.
But if you tolerate nuts, small amounts, right?
You're not eating five pounds of nuts, right it's concentrated in seed oils and the seed oils
are corn canola sunflower safflower soybean grapeseed peanut this is why i'm not a fan of
peanut butter yeah right i'm not a fan of peanut butter so peanut butter is made from the worst
mycotoxin it's made from it's made from moldy moldy peanuts and you're basically making a seed
oil it's not an industrially processed seed oil but what do you think is on the top of peanut butter that's
natural peanut butter? Non-natural peanut butter, the jippy that I used to eat when I was a kid,
right? They put things in it to prevent the separation of the oil. If you get the natural
peanut butter, which I thought was better, you have the seed oil on top, and that's 30%
linoleic acid. This is the problem with almond butter too. You're making a seed oil, and that seed oil is becoming rancid. It's on top. It's highly oxidized, and you're concentrating linoleic acid. This is the problem with almond butter too. You're making a seed oil and that seed oil is becoming rancid. It's on top. It's highly oxidized and you're concentrating
linoleic acid. You're going to have a much harder time unless you're spooning that seed oil into
your mouth. You're going to mix it back up in the peanut oil, peanut, peanut butter, or the almond
butter. You're going to get less, but it's highly rancid and oxidized when you do that. So this is
the problem with nut butters. You're not meant to do this. You're not meant to grind up nuts and
leave them for months on a shelf. They just, they're fragile. This is the problem with nut butters. You're not meant to do this. You're not meant to grind up nuts and leave them for months on a shelf.
They just, they're fragile.
This is the problem with,
so another one we should talk about is flaxseed oil.
Yeah.
Highly oxidized.
Yeah.
Highly oxidized.
That's a seed oil.
And that's considered like the panacea of healthy oils.
It's healthy, bro.
Yeah.
I mean, I literally know people,
I happen to agree with you,
but I literally know people that actually start their day off
with half a tablespoon to a full tablespoon flaxseed. Oh yeah. And people will, this is another thing that important to consider.
People will also start their day off with a spoonful of fish oil. If you're going to do
fish oil, you better know that brand is really good and you don't want to do fish oil in a spoon
because that is so highly oxidized when it's exposed to the air. So you can't spoon fish oil,
horrible idea. And any of these oils, they just break down over time. So you just got to be really careful. So avoid the seed oils.
That's the first step. And then if you want to get really granular and decrease the amount of
linoleic acid in your diet, you want to do grass-fed beef versus grain-fed beef. Ruminants
convert polyunsaturated fats to monounsaturated fats. So ruminants can saturate. We can't do this
as humans, but it's really the monogastric animals where the polyunsaturated fats accumulate. Pigs,
the eggs of chickens, chicken, meat, this kind of stuff. So fatty chicken, eggs, or fatty pork
that's fed corn and soy is going to have more linoleic acid in the fat than it would if it
were a naturally wild chicken or wild hog. So again, don't let perfect be the enemy of good,
but understand that if you're really trying
to get this dialed in,
I think that an important metric for humans
would be how much linoleic acid is in your diet.
And one of the things I would love for you guys to do at 10X,
I don't know if you could ever do this,
is actually sample the amount of linoleic acid
in adipose tissue.
And you can track that.
What if we could do it in adipose tissue?
We could do it in the blood.
Blood isn't good because we talked about that.
Yeah.
You'd have to, you'd have to.
You'd have to just do an adipose little biopsy, just a little, just pull some adipose tissue.
You can do it in red blood cell membranes, but it's not great either.
The fat is really predictive.
Like I said, the more linoleic acid you eat, the more that ends up in your fat tissue,
the more that's in your fat tissue,
the higher rate of cardiovascular disease.
So what are we arguing about?
Well, we're arguing about poorly done studies
and confusion over blood levels of linoleic acid
because people don't understand
how linoleic acid is metabolized.
And again, let's just back up 15,000 years.
We would never have had this move you know back up 100 years
seed oils are machine lubricant yeah yeah that's other yeah it was like a submarine lubricant and
let me just mention this i know and then we'll we'll stop with seed oils but 120 years ago 130
years ago all americans ate were animal fats and the rates of cardiovascular disease were a fraction
of what they are today yeah so anyone who wants to argue that apob going up were animal fats. And the rates of cardiovascular disease were a fraction of what they are today.
So anyone who wants to argue that ApoB going up
or animal fats are the cause of cardiovascular disease,
you got a really hard argument to make
because there's a natural experiment
of many millions of Americans from 1900 or 1875
showing very low rates of cardiovascular disease.
All we ate was animal fat.
All we ate.
And then something happened in 1950
with Ancel Keys, the seven country study.
Eisenhower had his heart attack.
His cardiologist was Paul Dudley White.
And the American Heart Association
got a $1.7 million donation,
the equivalent to $20 million today
from Procter & Gamble who made Crisco.
Wow.
And then the American Heart Association
begins talking about how saturated fats are bad, polyunsaturated fats are good.
And there are literally advertisements from the 1960s talking about how you should polyunsaturate your family.
Is that really?
Yes, Mazzola corn oil.
And that's when we got margarine and we got all of these like industrial processed oil.
I forget the name of the housewife they had in the ad.
It's tonight, Maggie polyunsaturated her whole family
with Mazzola corn oil.
You can find them.
Oh, wow.
And, you know, we can look at.
And there's still a, you know,
some people that are of that conventional wisdom
that fat makes you fat.
I mean, I have female clients that won't even,
wouldn't touch a rib eye, wouldn't eat an avocado would never touch a raw nut um or coconut oil or olive oil or or
grass-fed butter or ghee or tallow because they believe that fat makes you fat um and they're
and they're very heavy um right we know sugar makes you fat but well sugar probably short circuits
our satiety mechanisms
sugar probably leads to overgrowth of bacteria in the gut which leads to the lipopolysaccharide
in the body resistance too is all you know core component to obesity it's a huge component of
obesity and i think if you look at it insulin resistance is probably coming from long-term
over consumption of linoleic acid at a cellular level. And it's chronic toxicity,
right? Because in the short term, if you look in the short term, seed oils don't create insulin
resistance. They sometimes even make you more insulin sensitive. But I think it's so hard to
do a long-term study on seed oils and insulin sensitivity. But if you look at the mitochondria
of people who have insulin resistance, they're not doing oxidative phosphorylation. They're not
doing oxidative glycolysis. Well, they're not moving nutrients
through the cellular energy pathways.
And this can all be connected
with changes to the mitochondrial membrane,
disruption of the electron transport chain,
leakiness of the proton gradients
across the inner and mitochondrial matrix spaces.
So there's a lot of really interesting hypotheses.
It's impossible to do randomized control trials about this,
or they've already been done, like Minnesota coronary trial. But the mechanistic ideas here are really interesting hypotheses. It's impossible to do randomized control trials about this, or they've already been done,
like Minnesota coronary trial.
But the mechanistic ideas here are really interesting,
that accumulation of linoleic acid
and probably other polyantetrated fats in your membranes
leads to breakdown of our energy systems.
And this is where insulin resistance begins.
It's one of the pathways.
What do you really see as some of the challenges
in the medical community?
And why would it not
be adopted as more mainstream? I mean, clearly, you make an amazing argument. I actually agree
with your argument. But I mean, how is it that physicians today, conventionally educated
physicians today are not ascribing to dietary changes, lifestyle changes as major impacts on chronic disease. I mean,
I think if your eyes are open, you're looking at this, and we also talked about this on the
podcast too, and you're like, look at the spending, look at the rise in chronic disease,
look at the mortality rates. Mortality, by the way, in the United States for the first time in
110 years is going backwards. And I was a mortality expert for decades. So I think between the 2018 variable
basic table and the 2022 variable basic table, the first time we're actually seeing life expectancy
go backwards, which doesn't make sense given the amount of technological advances and
science and things we have to do to keep people alive. But what is it about the adoption? You know,
one of my opinions is if we don't fix the food supply,
we will never fix chronic disease.
100%.
But what is your opinion on that?
What is keeping the medical community from really-
Yeah, there's a maxim that I heard.
Well, you look who this is,
because I want to get the name out there
so people can find this maxim.
It's that the amount of effort required to undo bullshit is 10 times required it's 10
times greater than the amount of effort required to create it right do you hear that the amount
of effort required to undo bullshit is 10 times greater than the amount of effort required to
create it wow what we learn first as humans stays in our brain right it's hard to undo
what your mom told you about broccoli, right?
Yeah.
Even if you get a lot of gut pain.
That's so true.
Even if you get a lot of gut pain, right?
And I'm not saying your mom is bullshit
and I use the bullshit term all the time.
And people say I'm bullshit.
So whatever, it's all fair game, right?
Yeah.
All is fair in love and war.
But the problem is that, what's the name of the guy?
Brandolini's Law?
Yeah, Brandolini's Law.
Brandolini's Law.
Good old.
Does it actually say bullshit?
No, I think it does.
Does it actually say bullshit in there?
Yes.
It does.
Yes.
Did he do a randomized clinical trial?
That's perfect.
Yeah.
This is a meta-analysis showing that it's 10.2 times harder.
Right?
But the idea is this.
You come into medical school as a bright-eyed, intelligent, enthusiastic medical student,
and you are taught things. And it is 10 times harder to undo all that teaching that medical
students have all now been indoctrinated, propagandized. We're told in medical school
on the first day, half of what you learn is wrong. Half of what you learn is wrong. And
when a doctor speaks out about it, you get pilloried, right? You're told half of what
you learn is wrong. And then when a doctor says, I'm questioning the medical system, the medical system will absolutely try
and destroy you, discredit you. You're a charlatan, you're a quack, whatever. It's the same thing. So
half of what we learned in medical school is wrong. The trick is just which half.
And it's really hard for us to change our mind as humans. And a lot of physicians,
humans are also tribal. We look at other physicians and
we say, this is what we believe. We believe that statins are good for cardiovascular disease. I
believe statins have a place. I don't think they're, I think they're over-prescribed and
under-appreciated in terms of their side effects. But we believe that statins are good. We believe
that saturated fat is causing heart disease. We believe that red meat is bad for you. We believe
that, you know, your lower your ape will be the better. This is what we believe. This is our tribe. And we sing and we sing and chant over a fire sponsored by Pfizer, you know,
about, about, about how good we are as physicians. And like I said earlier, I believe almost all
physicians are intelligent and well-intentioned. We're just fucking brainwashed and it's really
hard to unbrainwash people, man. It's really hard. No, it, it, it really is. 10.2 times harder
to unbrainwash someone. Yeah. So, so then what are the, what are the basics? I mean, yeah, yeah. No, it really is. 10.2 times harder to unbrainwash someone. Yeah.
So then what are the basics?
I mean, somebody, because, you know, again,
I really have tried to steer my audience to the masses, right?
I mean, we talked about this earlier where, you know,
instead of ultra-woke biohackers talking to ultra-woke biohackers,
and I know you don't like that term, but I'm going to use it.
And, you know, bringing a message down to the masses that here's what you've learned that's wrong.
It's wrong.
You know, I've actually started doing this thing I call lateral shifts where I take,
I go into anybody's cabinet and I take whatever it is that they like to eat.
And I say, okay, I'm not going to add a dime to your budget.
I'm going to not change the flavor profile.
I'm just going to massively shift the nutritional profile and show you how you can go from like this
Dan and yogurt with fruit on the bottom and high fructose corn syrup to, you know,
a whole fat Greek yogurt with a fistful of berries and some natural honey.
And still, you'll actually be more satiated, have a better nutritional profile,
and you actually won't miss the taste of that.
And so, you know, talk a little bit about the starting point for someone,
because it seems extreme for me to go, do I have to go just all meet all the time right out of the gate?
Or like, what are some of these steps I can take, you know, to get going?
I think I love the idea of lateral shifts.
I think it's just the idea of better than.
Yeah.
Wherever you are now, do better than tomorrow.
Yeah.
You said something earlier, progression versus perfection.
Don't let perfect be the enemy of good. Don't like perfect be the enemy of good don't let perfect be the enemy of good yeah yeah so in other words
don't not don't do nothing because you can't be perfect exactly right and and i and i take the
opposite coin and side of the coin that you know a lot of what you espouse what i espouse it's not
fear-mongering it's actually clearing the air knowledge is power
yeah it's not just power but it's also making things easier do you know how easy it is to eat
like that i mean you know it's how much easier it is to navigate a restaurant um how much easier it
is to navigate a grocery store how much easier it is to navigate you know food choices when you're
when you're not in your own home and cooking your own food if if you know that whole grass-fed
meats organ meats um you know berries honey and you know that there are really nutritious food
choices that you can make pretty much available anywhere um and you don't have to be like hyper
attentive to exhaustively reading every label. Yeah, it's understanding that
it's just do better than what you're doing now.
And like you said, there's a shift between,
I think first step,
the smallest amount of ultra processed foods you can eat, right?
Less things that have had all the information
that we would have always associated with them
historically, evolutionarily stripped away.
Less chips, less seed oils, less of that stuff.
And just eat whole plant foods and whole animal foods.
What, Tom? and hopefully some organs i'm still you know i i haven't gotten there on the org you know i get i
get my grass-fed meats from this place called parker pastures in in um colorado and and i love
them because they're their family farm and they don't vaccinate their cattle it's all grass-fed
grass finished but um she does these organ blends where she their cattle it's all grass-fed grass finished but um she does
these organ blends where she takes the grass-fed the the hamburger meat and and mixes it with
organ meats and it's delicious right straight to the organ meats is still like the liver still
still a little tough for me it's probably always going to be that way i mean when i first started
eating liver i was in medical school and i would literally gag yeah i just i would gag i remember it's such an acquired taste if you give it to a
child when they're eight months or a year old and they haven't had years and years of cocoa pebbles
and these other flavors they're gonna be fine with it yeah kids love this stuff yeah but my niece and
nephew are four and six you know my mom is 73 my dad is 73. And so I realized, I mean, I want people to eat fresh organs,
but this gap here was why I built my first company.
So Harden Soil makes the desiccated organ supplements.
I brought you some with testicle, by the way.
Let's fire it up.
Actually, I'm not going to eat a testicle on my podcast.
It's a capsule testicle.
Oh, capsule testicle.
Okay, good.
You can take it with you.
Yeah, because I've seen people on
instagram like i'm like i'm not quite there yet no i'll give it to you after the podcast i got
a bottle of like i don't want to vomit testicle capsules but what's so interesting is that you
know my some sticks too that i do have some sticks i'm gonna get you this too yeah yeah
um but the you know my my um here i'll give you this yeah my my sister so my niece and nephew
are four and six and
they won't eat liver, but you can take the capsule and empty it into their smoothie and
they never know.
Right.
Right.
How cool is that?
Perfect.
My mom takes the beef organ supplement from hardened soil all the time.
And this is another thing that I'm super proud of.
So you got to try one of these beef sticks.
So I just, this is the second company that I've built and it's really humbling to build
these companies because it's just really cool to think about doing things in the world that help make people's lives better. I really
only, I want people to eat whole foods and I want people to eat fresh foods. And so I want to make
the highest quality stuff. And this is what comes, this is sort of the agency that comes with
the work that I've done in the world is I can build this. I could never have built this,
you know, a few years ago, but how cool is this to be able to build this? So this is a
grass fed, grass finished meat stick. The first of its kind in the world.
Really? Yeah. With organs in it. So this contains liver and heart in the beef stick. Okay. I went
to Australia to see the farms that we source from. These are the most beautiful farms I've
ever seen in my whole life. Really? In Australia? Green pastures right on the ocean. It's like
literally million dollar real estate and it's cows grazing on grass.
Oh dude, that's fricking awesome. You guys want to try yeah give to these guys i'm not kidding like i'm not just saying
that because you're like i'm not gonna sit here with paul saldino be like that's awful
no it's freaking good it's grass-fed beef grass-fed liver grass-fed heart
vinegar i think i think this mix is so much better because the liver has, I call it a gamey taste or whatever.
Yeah.
Pretty intense.
What do you think?
Isn't that good?
And it's important because a lot of women fear this stuff too.
Most of us have a very difficult time meeting our protein needs
and certain protein sources like whey protein and others
can be as little as 20% absorbable. This is 99% absorbable
and it has all of the essential amino acids that the body needs to build lean muscle, to recover,
to improve our exercise performance, and most importantly, to repair after we have intense
exercise. So this is called Perfect Amino by Body Health. It's like I said, 99% absorbable. It only has
two calories. Eventually, the caloric intake has virtually no caloric intake. It will not break a
fast. It tastes amazing. You mix it in water. I take this literally every single morning. If
you're working out in a fasted state, you have to take a full spectrum amino acid prior to your
workout to preserve your lean
muscle and make sure that you're recovering properly.
And again, it will not break your fast.
So the caloric impact is virtually zero.
You get all of the full spectrum amino acids.
It tastes wonderful.
I use it every single day.
You can go to bodyhealth.com forward slash ultimate.
That's bodyhealth.com forward slash ultimate and look for the perfect
aminos they actually come in capsules if you're on the go or it becomes in several flavors that
they make in a powder which i love it's flavored with natural um uh means of flavoring so there's
no artificial sweeteners in here so this is one of my absolute favorite products give it a try if
you're working out at all you need a full spectrum amino acid.
Go to bodyhealth.com forward slash ultimate.
That's bodyhealth.com forward slash ultimate.
I love their lab tested products.
You can actually see the absorption rate for all of their products.
They've got great electrolyte protein combinations.
My favorite is the perfect aminos.
Bodyhealth.com forward slash ultimate.
And now back to the ultimate human podcast.
There's like a voice off camera right now.
This is different than chomps. So this is air dried. I don't, we'll talk about this just for
a second, but chomps, we don't have to name their brands. They're cooked, right? They're cooked.
And when they cook something,
they have to put lactic acid
and sodium nitrate
or sodium nitrate
or celery powder
which is just to stand in
for the same things in it.
These are five days air dried
at 78 degrees Fahrenheit.
They never get heated
above 78.
They're in a cooler
for five days
getting air dried.
How did you find these people?
I built this.
Oh.
I built this.
You found the farm and then you built the process
yes wow yes can i invest yeah maybe i think you probably can't oh no it's it's actually awful
no but it's so cool to to build things like this and we were talking off camera before the podcast
like doing what we do is a blessing and a curse because it means that I can't make
bullshit products because my fans will keep me honest, right? Like hardened soil will never make
something in a plastic bottle. You know, we'll never use garbage ingredients. We'll never use
garbage ingredients in this. I never wanted to put celery powder or lactic acid in these. And
the way that it comes out when it's air dried is so much better than when it's cooked. Now,
having said that, better than can also be a grass-fed beef stick
in a grocery store that's cooked.
That can be way better than a Slim Jim, right?
Right.
But what's exciting for me
is to give people opportunities
to have something that's like the quality
that I really want,
that I'm proud of giving to my sister
and my family and my niece and nephew.
And my niece and nephew go crazy for beef sticks.
They do?
Yeah, like young kids, all they do is snack.
I didn't know this.
I don't have kids,
but they eat all the time. So it's cool to create things in the world
that make people's lives easier i agree and also have this message behind them and it's been a it's
been an incredible journey because i've i've i've been on a journey to to build a chemical free
living brand and you know eventually it's got to be hard humans it's very hard for cleaning products
for toothpaste for dishwasher detergents and you and soaps and all kinds of things. Because again, back to just micro poisoning ourselves.
Yeah.
To death, the cumulative dose toxicity.
So where is Paul Saladino, the evolving carnivore MD,
where is all of this headed to products like these
that are to help feed the masses.
I actually happen to agree
that if we don't fix the food supply,
we'll never fix chronic disease.
Is that where your passion projects are now?
No.
Aside from surfing?
Yeah, surfing is a huge passion of mine.
These are just side projects.
I think that I feel most compelled to like,
I mean, this will sound cheesy,
just fight the good fight, you know?
And I don't know that it's necessarily a fight.
It's just, there's a lot of discordant voices in the health space and it's confusing
for people. And I think that a lot of these people are well-intentioned and smart. I just
think it's important to try and have respectful discussions on different views. Respectful is the
main thing. Yeah. Respectful discussions on differing views. And I want to try and create
ideas and content for people that helps them
navigate. Because I imagine people are listening to this going, this is different than what I've
heard, right? They've heard somebody else on a podcast say, don't worry about, or like you should
be concerned about- Be a raw food vegan.
Yeah, be a raw food vegan, or be worried about blood glucose spikes, or honey is horrible,
or fruit is horrible, or vegetables are great for you. And I don't think vegetables are horrible,
but like I said, there's a time and a place, and maybe some people are different than others.
And so I think that mostly what I'm
excited about now is just trying to create content in the, in the most, um, in the most, you know,
sovereign and the most consistent way that I feel good about, you know, in my heart,
that's like putting ideas in the world that help people navigate this confusing landscape,
you know, in the most truthful way to myself. Like, because I just think that I'm a doctor,
you know, I spent decades doing this. I have a doctoral degree and it's still confusing for me. It's
right. It takes time to read 10 different randomized controlled trials on seed oils and
realize, Hey, they're using trans fat. They're using, you know, a hydrogenated fat in the control
group. These are not valid studies. Right. How is anyone going to make sense of this stuff?
No, it's very, very hard. And then you've got to look at the disclaimers
and the conflicts of interest section.
Sometimes you see that actually the company
that's actually putting out a certain drug
is actually touting the drug's efficacy.
And you go, well, it's hard for me to really trust that.
And you don't see the whole data.
You only see the published data.
You know, the 20, I think it's 19 of the 20 people
on the USDA guidelines for nutrition
in the United States from 2020 to 2025 have conflicts of interest with pharmaceutical
companies, food industry, ultra processed food.
95% of people who are on the committee that makes our food guidelines in the United States
have conflicts of interest.
95%.
And it's going to be the same for the 2025 to 2030 guidelines. And the guy who's one of the chairs for the 2025 to 2030 guidelines for food
in the United States, which a lot of people listening to this podcast don't care about,
but it's what shapes food lunches. It's what shapes school lunches. Yeah. And it's what
shapes policy and it's what shapes all sorts of things. The guy who's one of the chairs for that
is the same guy who authored the food compass study that told us frosted mini wheats were healthier than beef and eggs.
It's the same guy who wrote a meta analysis on seed oils saying they're benign and included all
of the studies that are confounded by this trans fat in the control group. And it's the same guy
who also receives funding from Bungie, a seed oil company. And also I believe Ilse, which is one of
the major sort of conglomerates
of ultra processed foods. So this, this guy's name is Darius Mazzafarian. He's at Tufts. And
I can say that because I'm not afraid of getting sued because it's all true what I just said.
Right. It's kind of like, you know, it's not slander if it's true. Right. It's not a conspiracy
theory if you're just following the facts. Yeah. Yeah. It's all true. And I mean, I've talked to
people who have spoken with him. I've never spoken with him. I'd love for him on my podcast. Come on,
let's go, bro. What's his name? Darius Mazzafarian. Darius Mazzafarian. You're
invited to the Paul Saladino podcast. You're being paged. But it's just, yeah, it's crazy stuff. I've
spoken to people who have spoken to him. You know, Cali Means is a friend of mine. He used to work
in the sort of processed food industry. He was a sort of a policymaker or an advocate at Coca-Cola.
So he was in the boardrooms of coca-cola
when they were planning how do we get in front of this idea and make people think that high
fructose corn syrup is fine he was part of the enemy you know he was like on the uh the dark
side he came over the rebel lions right but he you know when he was talking about these ideas
with darius and suggesting publicly that there's perhaps a conflict of interest here callie told
me that this guy calls him on the phone and says, how can you do this?
You know, this is how we make, this is how we fund studies.
And he was literally like yelling at him on the phone.
Wow.
So it's crazy.
And I'm not looking to be disrespectful.
I'm just saying truth is truth.
Yep.
And it's not slander if it's true.
No, no, it's not slander if it's true.
This is so awesome, man.
I love helping, you know, people like yourself get the message out.
I'm going to throw links to some of your products into the show notes.
Where can people find you?
Most of my audience is probably familiar with you,
but for those that are not, where can they find you?
How do they find out more about you
and get more guidance from your books and teachings, what have you?
Paul Saladino, MD, on all the socials.
You can find me everywhere.
Yeah, I've got a podcast.
I'm on all the socials.
Great podcast, too.
That's where you find me.
So, Paul, I ask every guest the same question at the end of the podcast, and there's no
right or wrong answer to this. It's just a thought provoking question. What does it mean to you to be
an ultimate human? I think it's basically living the birthright that we all have to be vital,
right? So I think that our resting state,
the state of lowest entropy, which is thermodynamically whatever, but the state that we
should fall back to, the state that we have a birthright to is a happy, healthy, vital human
that can do what they want, that can play with their grandkids or their kids. Like we have this,
I love this word birthright, you know? We have a birthright to be way healthier and way more capable than we
are told by society. You go to a Western medical doctor with any ailment, they say it's bad family
history. You can't fix it. Most of the time they'll say, here's a pill. But I think that
being an ultimate human is just going back to what is ours as our birthright. This idea that
as humans, we can be incredibly vital and just radical humans at our, at our natural state, at our baseline state,
at our resting, you know, just at our resting state, we are incredibly, you know, vital humans.
And that is when, that's what happens when we align the way that we're living with the way
that we've lived for hundreds of thousands of years as humans. I love it. It's not feeling
amazing. It's just feeling normal. Yeah, and normal is amazing by today's standards.
Awesome, man.
Well, thanks for coming on today.
Thanks for having me on, brother.
This has been awesome, man.
This was one of the easiest conversations I've had in a very long time, man.
So much fun.
Thank you, brother.
A lot in common.
Appreciate you too, brother.
Man's handshake.
I know.
I was like reaching around the microphone.
That's just science.