And cooked animal fat is the unhealthiest kind of food there is, other than trans-fats.
I have to disagree with that. I would bet you my house that if I ate 100% cooked animal fat and you ate 100% white sugar you would die first and be in constant agony from head aches and mood swings within a couple of days.
Well, you would obviously lose the bet , as that involves wild exaggeration. Anyone could survive for a week or more just eating 100% sugar. Hell, there were times , pre-rawpalaeodiet, when I would just eat sugar-heavy Mars bars(or other sugar-heavy snack) and drink coffee or water every day for a week or more(I had no money at the time, being a student). Sure, it didn't help my health but I certainly didn't die from it.
Of course, it's all a bad analogy as peoples' cooked animal fat-intake generally comes with protein(and carbs for many) and sugar is only ever used as a topping not as a main food, by itself. And eating 100% cooked animal fat(no protein or carbs whatsoever) would , in the long run, be just as deadly as eating 100% sugar - no one can survive on such an extreme mono-diet.
There are many foods, including all the neolithic ones, that I believe are more unhealthy than cooked animal fat. I think you're putting too much stock in that list of toxins, when we all know it was when people started consuming cooked plant oils and more carbs that most modern diseases began, not when people started consuming cooked animal fats.
Unfortunately, the claim that modern diseases only began when cooked-plant-oils and more carbs came into the diet, is completely wrong, something invented by Weston-Price and frequently contradicted by others.
For example, there's the Kitavans who had roughly the same levels of health as the Inuit or any other native-tribe(that's not saying much), but who also happened to eat a diet consisting of 69% carbs.
Then, as regards the carbs comment, I notice that zero-carbers and even weston-price-followers love to use the general term "carbs" to describe the damage to health done in the Neolithic. But when we look at the actual evidence, one sees that the decrease in health in the Neolithic had nothing to do with carbs in general, but was mostly due to grains and dairy(and possibly legumes). Fruit/veg didn't cause such problems in the Neolithic era, clearly, as Palaeo peoples did not suffer from fruit/veg-intake, by contrast(palaeo peoples were indisputably healthier than those in the Neolithic, after all).
The other common point made by RVAFers is the notion that all those modern hunter-gatherer tribes Weston-Price looked at, were 100% healthy. Weston-Price was somewhat misguided, believing in a sort of nonexistent Rousseau-esque "Noble Savage" Utopian diet/lifestyle, so he deliberately ommitted certain crucial facts. For example, modern scientists have pointed out that one of the primary reasons why such tribes looked, at first glance, to be healthy, was because of the great deal of daily physical exercise they had to endure.Now, as any decent doctor will tell you, doing high levels of (natural) exercise will help reduce many symptoms of modern diseases.For example, I recall posting on rawpaleodiet a study re the Masai where scientists showed that the Masai had the same atherosclerotic(hardening of the arteries) tendency as Westerners, which was alleviated, to some extent, by hard daily exercise:-
http://aje.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/95/1/26(atherosclerosis is one of the main conditions affected by toxins in cooked foods, particularly cooked animal foods)
The other problems with Weston-Price's analysis is that he judged his subjects solely on personal appearance. It is extremely likely, also, that he only chose the photos of those tribespeople who proved his hypothesis, while discarding the rest(there were no independent observers/researchers involved, after all, and personal bias is endemic throughout the scientific community).
Also, it has been shown, again and again, that the lives of native tribes were nasty, brutish, and short, involving frequent famine(and the occasional feast). Also, these tribes would routinely eliminate any defective children during very early infancy as they, unlike modern Westerners, didn't have the resources/facilities needed to care for them for the rest of their lives. So, Weston-Price's claims, based on frequent photos of healthy adults, that native tribespeople were born/raised with fewer defects than Westerners, solely due to their diet, is quite misleading, as it doesn't take that factor into account.
Anyway, this and numerous other studies routinely show that ingestion of high amounts of cooked animal fat is very bad for you. I see this also in my everyday life. Those older people I know who live off diets high in plant-foods and plant-oils like olive-oil(with the plant-foods mostly steamed or only lightly-cooked) are the ones living the longest, whereas those eating diets high in cooked-animal-food quickly start dying after reaching a certain age. Now, granted, being on such plant-heavy diets means that they suffer from frequent nutritional deficiencies and suffer awful pains(the main reason they avoid (cooked) animal foods is because that aggravates their arthritis/joint-issues), all of which they try to alleviate, partially, by taking numerous mineral etc. supplements every day, but at least they're alive, unlike the ones eating lots of cooked animal food.
*That comment re cooked-animal-fat-consumers reminds me of Stephen Byrnes, who constantly championed a weston-price diet online for years , but who died at the age of 41!"*
That's the trouble with raw animal food diets, while Aajonus is such an obviously dodgy figure, rather too many people believe every one of Weston-Price's claims. I'll sooner or later have to debunk Weston-Price(and Aajonus) on rawpaleodiet.com Ah well, more work for me.
Lastly, I'm not sure one can simply label 1 particular food as definitely being worse than another. There are so many differences. For example, cooked intensively-farmed veal is virtually worthless as a food, whereas raw, 100% grassfed bison/beef tongue is very healthy indeed. Same goes for sugar. White, refined sugar is undoubtedly not worth much