Anyway, you seem to have grown a personal detestation of me, you previously called me a liar and you wrote that I presented myself dishonestly. (You should have been banned for that but I didn’t want you to be banned.). Thus, whatever I may answer, you won’t believe me, so why should I undertake such an effort?
I think its the other way around.
What are the points? If your posts were clear, polite, accurate and concise, I could answer but I don’t want to read and painstakingly try to understand endless pages of aggressive and intricate verbiage.
Simple quesitons to answer:
mostly yes or no
you certainly have the expertise to answer almost all of them off the top of your head in 5 minutes.Was it ok to use the phrase 'perfectly proven' that an entire way of thinking is healthy considering you were referring to two people with seemingly no real life assessment or any real comparison standards or to others who have competing health ideas?
I had asked: What actual evidence is being put forward here as proof?...
and you said none.
Do you agree that without additional evidence this is no more usefull to members than that of raw vegans or cooked foooders with such longevity when it comes to which
specific diet to choose on RPF or elsewhere?
Will you retract the original comment and admit you have not proven anything other raw animal food diets have not without proper evidence?
Will you or others provide blood work, specific photos as requested etc..? (with the expectation that people can't make 100% solid judgements on these)
Do you think if you see qualities in others that you believe are bad that you can trace it back to your thoughts about their diet? Is it understandable for people to question the diet of instinctos if they suspect their health doesn't match up with the healthiest possible human diet or even just other people trying other things?
You cite experiments of instinctos on humans and mice, how specifically do these experiements differ from those of Cordain, the Medical prfession, raw vegans or any others undertaken since the history of science? Havn't these produced drastically different conclusions? Are these instincto conclusions now half a decade old absolutely unquestionable with endless research following? What if people have proven these experiments wrong (on animals or humans) since?
Is it possible these experiments do not lead to finding the idea human diet or that other current methods might estimate a better diet?
How many of these original experimenters or instincto dieters continued with the diet? How many went on to to other raw food diets? Other diets?
Other than social obligations, why would someone go off an instincto diet?
Is it at all possible that some people did not thrive on an instincto diet?
If these ideas are not unquestionable and you are presenting a theory, is it OK to tell people that what they are doing is "wrong" (see quotes in thread - or many other statements) and to give the kinds of 'advice' you give on a regular basis?
Particulary without above 'proof' shouldn't one be
required to imply opinion based on a single theory when its not actually based on experience with a particular thing at hand (or uses other 'present company' member's 'statistics' or other statistics that people actually have some access to) ?
And slightly more complicated: What specific criteria do you use to measure your health? To criticize others as unhealthy? Do you suspect that after 25 years of health experimentation that your health has thrived more than anyone else on any other approach?
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Look forward to your comments