To be clear, I believe that raw foods are vastly superior to cooked foods for health. But I think the evidence strongly, and I mean clearly and strongly and without doubt, point to most modern "diseases of civilization" coming about after the neolithic revolution, not after cooking meat began.
Look, the evidence re Neolithic times is indeed clear-cut but that is solely because we have more archaeological evidence the closer we go to our present day, that's all(ironically, many palaeoists here, despite that, like to defend Weston-Price who heavily championed Neolithic diets).
As I pointed out, despite, inevitably, much less archaeological evidence in general from earlier palaeolithic times, there is now increasing data to show that cooked foods(including cooked meats) led to a rise in schizophrenia and other related conditions, so it is simply a question of not having enough data yet, that's all.
There are other aspects such as that palaeo tribes went in for caloric restriction, undoubtedly ate some raw animal foods, and practised more daily exercise than any population since - all these factors would have helped to reduce some of the negative effects of cooked foods. So it would be misleading to suggest that cooked meat is healthy, per se.
I think it's very counter productive to keep arguing back and forth about the merits or problems with cooked meat. And by counter productive I mean it's got to be discouraging for new members who might still be including cooked meats in their diet, people coming from a cooked paleolithic type diet, to see someone saying that is less healthy than the garbage vegetarians are eating today.
I have a similiar concern. A majority of people new to raw diets deliberately chose those diets because they experienced serious ill-effects from cooked foods( usually including cooked meat) and also because they didn't get most or all of the health benefits they needed/required when trying cooked diets such as the cooked-palaeolithic diet. I'm just 1 example in that cooked palaeo was utterly useless to me(causing me a LOT of pain), but going vegetarian and then raw vegan/fruitarian initially helped remove some of my symptoms(though eventual nutritional deficiencies on raw vegan/fruitarian fouled things up eventually).
Plus, it is dangerously misleading to claim that cooked meat is healthy given the number of studies damning cooked animal foods, and it also heavily discourages people from trying raw meats, which are difficult enough for newbies to get used to, in the first place. So, it makes much more sense to point out that it is no big deal re not eating 100% raw as most of us have to make social compromises every now and then(because so few other people eat raw) but that, preferably, one should avoid cooked meat and go for raw (grassfed) meat whenever one has the opportunity.
Admittedly, I would prefer studies comparing cooked low carbers versus SAD-eaters. It will take time for that to happen(as so many quit cooked low carb after a short while for various reasons! Contrast this with vegetarians who often practise their diet the whole of their lives).
The claim re vegetarians eating garbage is quite apt(quite a number(but not necessarily the majority) eat meat-substitutes or tofu/soy) but it is also heavily misleading to suggest that cooked low carbers eat a healthier diet. Cooked low carb diets, like I said, mostly involve dairy(even Stefansson recommends it), many peddle processed supplements such as candy bars(or even artificial sweeteners) and most will recommend grainfed, commercially-raised meats.
Also, the number of people following crappy cooked low carb diets like the Optimal Diet or Atkins or whatever, far exceeds the very limited number of people following a cooked palaeo diet, so it is misleading to single out the cooked palaeolithic diet as being representative of cooked low carb diets as a whole.
I'm not per se bothered with claims that the cooked palaeolithic diet is healthier(in the long run) than a vegetarian diet due to the issue of long-term nutritional deficiencies. But I draw the line at spurious claims that cooked meat is healthy or the absurd notion that cooked low carb diets in general are healthy.