life's easy
>if you assume what you want to prove..
Isn't it just.
Thanks for getting back so quick. Did he mean lower when compared to todays
typical diet (full of transfatty acids) or just low? I would assume that
compared to the domesticated animals we mostly eat today that paleo wild
animals would have less fat (you don't often see a fat wild animal). But then
the nuts and seeds would have a high fat content. Of course it would be
another matter if one was an Inuit. Do/did they eat the blubber or use it just
for lighting and things? And then of course all that lovely oily fish. Just
trying to get a good perspective on all this.
Fran
>===== Original Message From Paleolithic Eating Support List
<[log in to unmask]> =====
>>Can you enlighten me and give me a quick run down on his >central thesis
>and why it is so wrong.
>
>that paleo man ate a relatively low-fat diet. Cordain is one of the 'fake
>opposition' an establishment low fat man trying to derail the genuine low
>carb movement.
>
>I personally wrote to Cordain to ask him how he concluded Australian
>aborigines ate a low fat diet. he confirmed my suspicion that he had done no
>studies at all in the area and had relied on two papers, one of which was a
>short experiment conducted in 1965, and another of which was a paper put out
>by another establishment gnome [brand-miller] who merely assumes that
>aborigines ate a diet equally weighted between fats and carbs. life's easy
>if you assume what you want to prove..
>
>andrew
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