weird?
i was just extrapolating from what you said: that there have been no fundamental changes in dna but only in gene expression
however:
changes in traits, esp. if reflecting dietary or biosphere modifications have an epigenetic effect & may end up being heritable variations
people have different priorities
among those for whom carnivorism is a natural foodstyle, some of the choices are:
raw vs cooked
fresh vs prefrozen
entire vs ground
grass vs grain
who can tell what the overall impact of those choices is? how would those alternatives be sorted out & quantified on their physiological & behavioral impact over a period of time?
myself, i prefer all the choices i listed on the left: raw, fresh, entire, grass; however, since carnivorism is my natural, firm, nontradable choice, i may on occasion be led by the circumstances to let go of any of my preferred meat features > great! if that strategy keeps me free of the fruit pest it's most welcome
"the nutrient profile of grassfed meat is very much different from that of grainfed meat"
this is a crucial point
the moderators of this forum, meant to be focused on raw paleo, owe it to their readers to explain, precisely, the nutritional differences between pastured & grain fed beef
their comparative study may be based on:
~ their own personal experiences, whatever they may be
~ the experiences w/ both types of beef of as many raw carnivores as available
~ scientific studies in biochemistry, nutrition, epigenetics, evolutionary biology, etc.
~ food databases such as usda, nutritiondata.com, etc.
~ other
we sure want to see that comparative nutritional profile!
if you're advocating pastured beef, you owe it to your readers to substantiate your claim or else let grass fed beef wither as an urban legend
from my experience, 1 thing i can say is that, to me, pastured beef smells & tastes different from its feedloted counterpart -- a subjective impression, which at least to some degree must be the result of my buying pastured beef only in the form of really fresh primal cuts... hard to tell
another thing i can say is that i prefer to give my money to farmers who feed their cattle according to the animals' original (aurochian) digestive system -- this shows an anthropomorphic projection, since it's based on my own feelings about myself & not on any knowledge of the current animal's feelings or preferences
anyhow,
~ it's claimed by various paleo authors that in the last 10,000 years since the dawn of the farming-herding-urbanizing-civilizing revolution humans have not genetically adapted to cereals, legumes, nonhuman milk especially past weaning age (& for that reason modern humans are advised not to include these items in their diet)
~ there are both anecdotal individual reports & scientific research findings to partially support this paleo dietary claim -- albeit focused mostly on traits, not on genes & only in some human populations -- even though the said paleo claim remains at odds w/ current cultural standards
are there, likewise, any research findings that show that auroch/cattle have or have not, gene- or trait-wise, adapted to the same dietary items in perhaps the same timeframe?
further,
are there any long-term scientific or personal studies of the effects of grass vs grain beef on human physiology or behavior? or any historical comparison of the effects of carnivorism before & after the grain feeding technique & feedloting were adopted? does stefansson say anything about cattle raising practices in the contiguous us states?
+ another gem from the expert:
"there would be virtually no difference between grassfed meat from an aurochs and meat from modern cattle raised on a similiar diet of grasses/herbs"
how do you know (if you do)?
how was the "similar diet" measured & ascertained (if it ever was) in paleo aurochs & modern cattle?
which leads to:
what's the difference between cattle standing in a feed lot & aurochs stranded between glaciations?
what was there for aurochs & horses to eat between glaciations?
it is as if the cro-magnon had taken the secret of their sophisticated, complex brain with themselves