where are people getting their information from if they are against weston price so much ?
There is evidence all over the place that shows that hunter-gatherer communities such as Weston-Price studied were unhealthy. For example, here's 2 links re the Maori:-
http://www.abc.net.au/rural/events/ruralhealth/2005/papers/8nrhcfinalpaper00603.pdfhttp://www.nzbr.org.nz/documents/publications/publications-2006/maori_eco_development.pdfThen there's the famous study by Mann which showed that the Masai had the atherosclerotic tendencies of old men:-
http://aje.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/95/1/26Quackwatch has an amusing article which pinpoints the ridiculousness of WP's ideas, which were based on a whirlwind tour of numerous native tribes with poor scientific analysis - quackwatch mentions the high infant mortality within such tribes, their endemic diseases etc. etc.:-
http://www.quackwatch.org/01QuackeryRelatedTopics/holisticdent.htmlCritics of Weston-Price have noted that the hunter-gatherer tribes he claimed were so healthy died in vast numbers after contracting diseases(smallpox etc.) from white colonists, long before they ever took up Western-styled diets, hardly a sign that native diets were remotely healthy. Also, Weston-Price conveniently ignored many other factors:- for example, the fact is that hunter-gatherers, such as the Masai mentioned above, did far greater levels of physical activity and it is well-known on a scientific level, that the more one exercises the more one reduces the amounts of some of the heat-created toxins in the body(ie "AGEs") Plus, these hunter-gatherer tribes had no choice but to frequently go in for feast-and-famine due to changing supplies of foods available; and it is also well-known by scientists that fasting leads to a reduction in the amounts of some of the heat-created toxins from cooking. In other words, these hunter-gatherers ate unhealthy cooked diets but led healthier lifestyles(exercise/not eating too much) which meant that they were a bit better protected from such diets than Westerners, in terms of health, but not much more.
Weston-Price also seems to have ignored other factors such as alcoholism, as being major factors in the decline of many hunter-gatherers. In the case of the Maori, he somehow "forgot" to mention that maori health and lifespan only improved once they turned to western diets, implying that their previous diets were none too healthy.
As for the issue of autism, I don't believe a word of it. For one thing, dairy has been heavily implicated in autism. And most so-called autism "cures" involve merely a reduction in some of a few minor symptoms not an overall cure of the whole condition. More to the point, diagnoses of autism have grown astronomically while diagnoses of other conditions has greatly decreased, implying that many so-called autistic people have widely different conditions from each other, some more minor than others.