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Kerry Trueman

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Want to Save the Economy? Change What You Eat

Posted: 05/17/11 08:23 AM ET

Forks Over Knives is, in its own eat-your-spinach kinda way, a feel-good movie. Roger Ebert's declared it "a film that could save your life." So, once you get past the inevitable indictments of our disease-inducing diet, and the stock footage of headless obese people waddling down the street, you'll find yourself ultimately uplifted by the vitality the film's formerly sick and unfit subjects exude as they embrace a plant-based diet.

Unless, of course, your heart's been hardened by all those artery-clogging animal fats that the film implores you to rethink. The premise of Forks Over Knives--that we could save millions of lives and billions of dollars simply by switching to a diet of fruits, whole grains and vegetables--offers a compelling solution to both our financial and physical woes.

Mark Bittman made essentially the same case in his recent column How to Save a Trillion Dollars, in which he noted that "a sane diet alone would save us hundreds of billions of dollars and maybe more."

The film's vegan agenda may inflame the meat and dairy industries, but when it comes to inflammation, Forks Over Knives has got nothing on meat and dairy. The film makes effective use of graphics, animations and case studies to illustrate how animal proteins adversely effect our health in multiple ways, from inducing inflammation that appears to spur tumor growth, to blocking our blood flow. And not just the blood flow to our hearts, but to the rest of our bodies as well--which doesn't bode well for you, whether you think with your brain or other appendages located further south.

In fact, the film notes that erectile dysfunction is "the canary in the coal mine" for heart disease. Can't you just hear those hipster "hegans" having the last laugh--and maybe, the better bonk?

It's hard not to be impressed by the vigor of the two veggie-touting seventy-something nutrition pioneers whose research forms the basis of the film: Dr. T. Colin Campbell, author of the eternally best-selling China Study, and Dr. Caldwell B. Esselstyn Jr., a highly regarded surgeon and author of Prevent and Reverse Heart Disease: The Revolutionary, Scientifically Proven, Nutrition-Based Cure. It's Dr. Esselstyn Jr., along with his colleague Dr. Dean Ornish, who inspired Bill Clinton to adopt the mostly vegan diet that helped him lose weight and keep his heart healthy.

The film also features Esselstyn Jr.'s son, Rip Esselstyn, the Austin firefighter who's got his own best-selling vegan cookbook, The Engine 2 Diet. Rip Esselstyn studiously avoids the 'vegan' label, preferring the term "plant-strong." And that's probably just as well, because asking Americans to forego all the animal-based foods that form the cornerstone of our diet--including cheese and dairy--is a pretty tough sell as it is.

But Forks Over Knives doesn't just dwell on the harmful consequences of eating anything that "has a mother or a face." The movie devotes equal emphasis to the many life-enhancing, disease-fighting nutrients and other compounds contained in the fresh, whole foods that most of us don't eat enough of. As comedian Bill Maher notes in the film's opening segment:

There's no money in healthy people. And there's no money in dead people. The money is in the middle: people who are alive, sort of, but with one or more chronic conditions...Someone has to stand up and say that the answer isn't another pill. The answer is spinach.

The film's writer and director, Lee Fulkerson, serves as one of the case studies in the movie, working with a pair of physicians who successfully treat his high cholesterol and elevated CRP level (a risk factor for heart disease) by putting him on a whole foods, plant-based diet. Fulkerson's numbers improved dramatically in a matter of weeks, further proof that such health issues can be addressed through diet instead of drugs.

Other folks featured in the film overcame diabetes, heart disease, and even cancer. The film does not imply that conventional medicine can't be effective at treating these illnesses, but rather faults it for too often treating the symptoms while ignoring the underlying causes.

I wanted to confirm the powers of a plant-based diet to prevent and even reverse illness from a credible source who wasn't affiliated with the movie. So I spoke with Dr. Kelly A. Turner, co-founder of Shuniya Health & Healing, where she treats cancer patients with a holistic approach that combines the best of eastern and western medicine.

Dr. Turner told me, "I have seen many, many cancer patients help turn their health around by changing to a whole foods, plant-based diet. And although the woman in the film chose not to have western treatment, I've seen this diet change work wonders for many cancer patients who are in the midst of their western treatment. The two are not mutually exclusive, not at all."

She added that for those of us who aren't facing a life-threatening illness, it may seem like too much of a sacrifice to give up all animal products cold turkey." Yes, doing that will have a profound effect on your health," she said, "but most people who feel fairly healthy won't feel the need to do that. I would encourage them to see the film and hopefully be inspired (and informed) to make small, gradual changes to their diet...even gradual changes will have very healthful effects on your cell membranes, your blood glucose level, and your colon health."

But fresh, unprocessed, wholesome foods haven't got K Street lobbyists and Madison Avenue marketers to promote them, while Viagra and Lipitor are making a fortune for Big Pharma, helped along by Big Food's low-cost, high-calorie, nutrient-poor products.

Forks Over Knives could have been subtitled "Pork Over Lives," because it highlights the addled agricultural policies and industry meddling that keep our government agencies more focused on protecting corporate profits than promoting good health. Michelle Obama's Let's Move! campaign may be wholehearted, but our government's overall efforts to halt the diet-related diseases that are crippling Americans young and old have been half-assed, to be blunt. The Federal Trade Commission's latest dietary guidelines are as toothless as a gummy bear, and only marginally more sound, nutritionally.

The free-market fanaticism that lets our children to be shamelessly targeted by food corporations sets them up for a lifetime of ill health. The end result is profits for those companies, their shareholders and the health care industries who profit from disease.

Meanwhile, our politicians insist that we're bankrupting our childrens' future with our reckless spending. They're slashing budgets left and right, pulling the plug on crucial programs, all so that little Ethan and Emma won't be saddled with crushing debt in a few decades.

But forget about unbalanced budgets. It's unbalanced diets we really need to worry about. Because the soundest economy in the world won't save a nation of ballooning bellies and mushy muscles.

Cross posted from Alternet

 

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10:33 PM on 06/15/2011
I stumbled upon a treatment plan developed by Dr. Max Gerson while I was researching the benefits of organic nutrition. The Gerson Therapy uses organic foods and natural supplements to activate the body’s ability to heal itself. It is no secret this method is vastly different than the treatment medical professionals insist upon recommending to patients, thereby making me question just who is to blame for the lack of support for safe and organic foods. Not wanting to fall into the cliche of shouting 'politics' while voicing conspiracy theories, but I do believe being unhealthy is far more beneficial to Corporate America than having healthy citizens.
05:34 PM on 06/01/2011
If you live in Central Ohio, plan to see the new original theatre production, "The Food Play" being held at the North Market in Columbus, brought to you by Available Light Theatre. They're examining "what does it mean to eat right" and "what is good food" in their very eclectic style! Check out: http://thefoodplay.com/
01:52 PM on 05/25/2011
Why is there always an agenda regarding nutrition? Meat and dairy producers are vilified but corporate ag is left out? If you want to get down to the nitty gritty of nutrition and be healthy, eat the foods we evolved to eat, in the form we ate them. There are no essential carbohydrates, but there are essential fats we need to eat to survive. Evolutionarily we got these from meat although the body could survive on veg alternatives to these. The point is that it isn't about being a vegetarian or highly carnivorous. It's about remaining a hunter gatherer and being smart about what we choose to use for fuel.
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polishlogician
No sugar tonight in my tea..
05:15 AM on 06/17/2011
I tend to agree, Monsanto and its over-pesticided, over-fertilized, over-tilled, genetically-modified soybeans are given a pass...like they're just living in harmony with mama earth...

soy can take up 7x times the real estate of comparable, and dare I say, native palm oil and palm kernel oil harvesting...
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Dibbles
Et cum spiri tu tuo
05:22 PM on 05/23/2011
Kerry:

I was at my local grocer the other day in the produce department. I noted that organic bananas I usually purchase there were out. The produce manager assured me that they would be replenished the next day. We had a follow up conversation about why I buy organic bananas now. I thought I'd share this with you and your readers.

My wife, who's very active in the organic movement in our local community, works with a group that grows an all organic assortment of produce in a donated plot of land for food pantries in our community. They also do community outreach. Anyway, with all her knowledge, she felt buying non-organic bananas was the right way to go because the thicker rind of the banana greatly reduced the chemical pesticides etc. from leeching into the fruit.

This I also believed made it a good decision, until I learned that banana fruit growers in central America were paying poor natives, often shoeless, to work in the banana groves that were sprayed with pesticides. I learned that these large growers, Del Monte and Dole's insecticides were so powerful that the chemicals would leech into the bloodstream of the workers in the groves through their feet. The chemicals caused those workers en mass to become infertile.

The workers sought justice through the courts, only to be outspent and maneuvered by those same powerful industries that sell bananas. The workers all lost.

Now I buy organic bananas to protect farm worker health.
08:10 AM on 05/24/2011
Do you grow a garden?
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Dibbles
Et cum spiri tu tuo
11:31 AM on 05/24/2011
Johnny:

Yes. We have a small plot to the South in our front lawn area on a Cul-de-Sac in Madison, Wisconsin. We're the only one on our circle with a vegetable garden. We've built hoop houses for lettuce and onions and have been eating salads since last month. We ate them a month earlier the Spring before, but this Spring has been colder, rainy, and overcast for long periods.

Signed: Organic Banana Man.
12:23 PM on 05/22/2011
Just saw the show and I was very impressed. I hope it becomes as popular as Food Inc. and some of the Michael Moore films. Industry involvement in food policy is slowly being exposed. As for the environmental impact of our food choices there is another film recently released in the UK, 'Planeat'. For those who don't believe our food choices affect our environment I just shake my head. The land used to grow food to feed the animals is mind boggling. It is not sustainable. The 'dead zones' in the oceans keep growing from the run off from factory farming and we further deplete the oceans with over fishing. This is madness.
02:10 AM on 05/20/2011
I recommend that people read Campbell's book, The China Study. It is extremely well written. It changed my health in a very positive way.
If more people adopted his thesis, it would cause major economic dislocations, but they would be offset by enormous savings in health care costs, that may destroy this country's economy.
" Every truth passes through three stages before it is recognized. In the first it is ridiculed, in the second it is opposed, in the third it is regarded as self- evident."
We are in the second stage, of this truth, It will be violently opposed by the meat and dairy industry and the medical industry who are much more interested in pills and procedures.
Doctors want to be in control of your health, not you, the patient.
This country is ranked 38th in the world in terms of longevity, but we have health care costs that are double any other country
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elcerritan
My bio is not micro
12:34 PM on 05/20/2011
Campbell's book is a lot pseudo-scientific claptrap. His anti-animal protein thesis isn't at all supported by the underlying data he purports to be relying on. We have significant health issues in this country, but Campbell's vegan agenda isn't the answer. Read these critiques -- there are even more detailed devastating ones out there, but these are succinct and to the point:

The China Study Revisited: New Analysis Of Raw Data Doesn't Support Vegetarian Ideology
http://www.sciencebasedmedicine.org/?p=6¬092

The China Study vs. the China study
http://www.proteinpower.com/drmike/cancer/the-china-study-vs-the-china-study/
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theveggiedude
my body is a temple, not a living graveyard
10:01 PM on 05/20/2011
Campbell was not pro-vegetarian when he started his China Study, but his critics like to make him out to be biased. His paper was peer reviewed by the scientific community as is the case with any study. If anyone thinks it is missing the point, then do your own research to prove otherwise, and then have it peer reviewed by academics. Until then, kindly shut up.
12:28 PM on 05/22/2011
perhaps you could read his book or see the movie. There are others who have also written on this subject -Dr. Joel Fuhrman,Dr. Caldwell Esselstyn, Dr McDougal, and many others. We don't see the affects of protein deficiency unless people are malnourished. We do however see the affects of protein excess in the people consuming a standard american diet of animal foods at every meal. The consumption of animal foods has drastically increased in the past 50 years, thanks partly to the fast food industry and way of eating.
02:09 PM on 05/19/2011
The idea that changing diets will somehow drastically change our economy is a patent falsity. In part of an essay I wrote, "Man and Nature," I explain how the fantasies of going back to a more "organic" or "local" network of eating dissolve once they confront material historical reality: http://wp.me/pgGDG-fq
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theveggiedude
my body is a temple, not a living graveyard
10:03 PM on 05/20/2011
Funny. My household budget was dramatically reduced after going veggie. LOL
02:17 AM on 05/19/2011
I wonder what slaughterhouse employees do about "Take your child to work day" ?
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Finnegans Wake
riverrun, past Eve and Adam's, from swerve of shor
11:36 AM on 05/19/2011
Hopefully, teach them the trade. A lot of family-owned slaughterhouses are giving way to giant industrial slaughterhouses, whose quality is questionable, and whose hiring practices and safety records are often called into question.
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elcerritan
My bio is not micro
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ninjasrolled
Orbiting a small unregarded yellow sun
12:06 AM on 05/19/2011
Sorry, not gonna go vegan. I am a label junkie (obsessive about NOT eating food with labels), have a garden, hit the farmers' markets as much as I can in the summer, belong to a co-op, try to go organic as much as I can, and go in with friends on sides of beef that we freeze for the year. But I simply won't give up ice cream, cheese, yogurt and milk. As far as I'm concerned, I'll shave off those last years of my life in trade for enjoying dairy and meat. Yes, in moderation. Yes, I try every year to go more and more healthy and local. But vegan is a line I will. not. cross.
12:16 AM on 05/19/2011
I don't think fat is the problem...it's the kind of fat. Remember margarine? Ha, the joke is that we believed the adage, "better living through chemistry." Eat what your grandma ate, and all in moderation, exercise hard and you'll never have to pick up the vegan mantle. :-)
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polishlogician
No sugar tonight in my tea..
05:21 AM on 06/17/2011
I'd tend to agree...
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jumbotron16
a slight improvement over jumbotron15
12:48 AM on 05/19/2011
Same here. Because there is no compelling reason to do so.
07:21 PM on 05/19/2011
No compelling reason to do so? Really?
10:26 PM on 05/18/2011
I disagree. I live in China now where you rarely see an overweight person, and most Chinese are energetic, optimistic and healthy well into old age. What you notice is that the Chinese do eat meant--but they hardly ever eat *processed* foods like Americans do--which are filled with chemical additives, sucrose, hydrogenated vegtable oils, hidden fats, sodium and sugar, and are denutriated. This is what's making people obese in the USA and killing them (but making big profits for big pharma and the medical and food-processing industries). In the 50's and 60's Americans were mostly all about meat and potatoes, yet were usually not overweight and I'm sure much healthier than now (the US had by far the highest average life expectancy rate in the world well into the 1970's--now it's below average for all nations). I almost never saw my father eat vegtables or fruits other than beans sometimes, yet he lived well into his 80's, was always healthy and not obese.
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11:33 PM on 05/18/2011
zackly
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Finnegans Wake
riverrun, past Eve and Adam's, from swerve of shor
12:00 PM on 05/19/2011
The version of Chinese food sold to Americans is almost universally full of sweeteners, corn starch thickeners, breading...
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Gabe Brummett
left wing/right wing - same bird.
05:59 PM on 05/18/2011
my family supports our local economy by purchasing meat and veggies from farmers we know and trust. the idea that we can somehow escape environmental catastrophe, and cure our illness by just giving up meat is a fallacy. a vegan/vegetarian diet is still reliant on industrial infrastructure, which is exactly the problem veggie folks want to avoid! while it's great that everyone is becoming more aware of how and why they should eat healthy - we need to look much deeper .

http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/food/the-future-of-food-is-not-distinguishable-from-the-future-of-the-land/2011/05/05/AFhvN2iG_print.html
09:28 PM on 05/18/2011
No support for the local farmers here. Everything has flooded so, no farmer's markets this summer!!! What would happen if we were only able to eat locally???? Big food will help us stay alive, we are no longer at the mercy of Mother Nature's whims.
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Gabe Brummett
left wing/right wing - same bird.
08:45 AM on 05/19/2011
the problem lies in the fact that big food relies on oil, in it's production and transport. it's not sustainable. i can't speak to the situation taking place where you live. it's beyond terrible. but the solution to industrialization is not more industrialization. all of those chemicals in the mississippi river, that have created the dead zones in the gulf, are a result of industrial agriculture all the way up to northern minnesota. there are massive flood plains for that river in iowa that is not allowed to flood - it's now planted in corn and soy.Big food is not going to save anyone in the long run, perhaps it will help you stay alive until the water recedes and you're able to plant again....but our collective future is bleak if we're to depend on big business agriculture to save us.
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Ranveig Elvebakk
Innovator, author and lecturer on weight and nutri
02:57 PM on 05/18/2011
The WHO has stated, rightly so, that 80% of illness can be prevented by life style. Read:Nutrition. The amazing thing is, 80% of illness can also be reversed by nutrition. Clinical practice affirms that, as does years of research. Yet we keep ruminating about bedroom temperature, genes, red meat a list of other far-flung candidates (see http://tinyurl.com/foodtree) to help us avoid the issue: Refined sugar. How long, lord, how long before we reconcile with the scientific evidenece before us?
04:14 AM on 05/18/2011
Big pharma and related "health" care entitites need "hosts" to run their products through. Ka-Ching!
Like the Diamonds' early Fit For Life book, think of the creatures that are vegetarians: giraffes, equines, oxen, elephants, rhino ("How wud rhino?") etc. As a 69 yr old former college boxer & footballer, former pro footballer ... I have practiced (actually, make that ((almost)) perfected) vegetarianism and veganism for 20+ yrs. ... doing just fine, thank_U_very_much : 7 )
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elcerritan
My bio is not micro
12:23 PM on 05/18/2011
"think of the creatures that are vegetarians"

??? Um ... what are we supposed to think of them?
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Finnegans Wake
riverrun, past Eve and Adam's, from swerve of shor
02:09 PM on 05/18/2011
Think of the carnivores like cheetahs, lions, and tigers! They're pretty zippy, too.

So did you get any starts in the NFL? I see you were drafted in the same class as Marty Schottenheimer... You know, if you're not BSing.
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hopefulidealist
Be yourself, everyone else is already taken.
04:26 PM on 05/18/2011
I think what Ted meant, but did not elaborate is that those animals have been found to have lower instances of degenerative diseases.
02:13 AM on 05/19/2011
whoops. after getting on the site, click on Draft, Baltimore Colts and then go down to the 12th round.
01:00 AM on 05/18/2011
Our industrialized food supply is America's problem. How it's grown, broken down and distributed is the cause of our populations ill-health. We eat what our animals eat and if animals are fed foods that are effectively a waste products, kept in horrific conditions, and harvested in a killing machine that makes Auschwitz look like a party -- is it a surprise that that kind of meat causes problems? That same paunch on a cow gives us that marbled meat that paunchy meat eaters love and causes heart disease. Now, don't get me wrong - I am not a vegetarian, but an advocate for local food production of meat raised in healthy environments and vegetables and grains grown sans use of fossil fertilizers and pesticides. I have a hard time with chickens who can't procreate because selective breeding has made two types of birds; egg layers and meat birds. The meat birds grow so fast that their bones bend under their weight and the birds are ready for the oven in 6 weeks. Then you have the egg layers who will no longer sit on nests to hatch theirs eggs. It's a big problem that the breeders have effectively bred the ability to procreate out of them. Not only is it weird because procreastion is the base of any life, but it's dangerous. What would happen if there were a nation-wide disaster? Have you thought about how you would feed yourself?
04:38 PM on 05/18/2011
What the chickens are fed may cause more of the characteristics and problems you describe than breeding. Layers in these factories don't even make it a year while 4 or more years is a natural life. The sibs of 4 week old birds dying suddenly or having tumors is not something I want to have as any part of my diet.
Much of the world's population would be in trouble food - wise if a big price in oil occurs. Wonder if our super rich ruling class will be more in touch than Marie Antoinette?
12:03 AM on 05/19/2011
I have chickens and rarely do they go broody - I live in a city and cannot have rooster. But I do have a friend who does live the country and has a rooster and a dozen or so hens. She'd like to have a homogenous group with chicks, poulets, hens, etc. but her girls don't sit on the eggs long enough for them to hatch. Selective breeding has effectively decreased chickens' ability to procreate...it's a really bad problem. The other chickens- meat birds - are an abomination as it takes six weeks to get to 5 lbs...six weeks. Their bones cannot support their weight. They are inactive and waddle from water to food to a place to rest and do it over & over again. All the chickens we have are pasture fed and are very well looked after, so it's not the food. It's the breeding. There's a whole industry surrounding fertile eggs, hatching, and shipping to your door. As far as the elite, I don't think they have a clue. All I can say and advocate is to buy local and grow your own food...create communities that support one another. Even though I have chickens, my neighbor rabbits and I have access to farms - I still worry that if everything goes south, our local communities will not be able to support our food needs. It's a problem that can only be solved with personal commitment.
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Finnegans Wake
riverrun, past Eve and Adam's, from swerve of shor
04:52 PM on 05/18/2011
Great post, welcome to the party. You'll find quite a few like-minded people here on HuffPo. In this very thread, in fact.
12:11 AM on 05/19/2011
Thanks, food is a huge issue for me. I can't take the suffering of anyone/thing and the food industry is totally corrupt. I have a few years before I retire, but once I do I'd like to advocate for change to our current food practices. But who knows, a collapse may be here before I can begin.
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12:28 AM on 05/18/2011
Is it meat that's bad, or big ag that's bad?
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hopefulidealist
Be yourself, everyone else is already taken.
11:16 AM on 05/18/2011
It's Big Ag. Their practices, policies, morals (lack thereof) AND it's the government's fault as well! Way back in the day, the original head chemist of the FDA (Wiley) was pushed out b/c he tried to show why chemicals were bad and not needed in our food. There are over a billion chemicals used daily in producing the food you eat. I say you b/c I am all organic, sustainable all the way. I say Big Pharm and Big Gov stay the hell outta my food! I can't stand how the government continually sides with Big Corp over the health and welfare of our citizens. It's all about the all mighty dollar. Read The Meat You Eat and Empty Harvest....wonderful books!!!
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01:23 PM on 05/18/2011
So you don't believe it's the meat, but what processing companies do with the meat?