And how do you guys relate to this part of DV quote?:
"A brief survey of those humans we call the “Indigenous” of the world, especially those who were Hunter/Gatherers reveals a diet that, while varying in the ratio of animal to plant food, still always contains both in ample degrees. These people are always cooks, in that they are never found on “Raw Food Diets”. They eat a mix of raw and cooked foods"
Well, first of all, Inuit and the Nenets of Siberia hardly eat plant foods at all, just a very few berries or seaweed, and then mainly only seasonally. More to the point, these hunter-gatherers are not trying to practise the "Perfect Diet", despite what DV lyingly tries to claim - they are just trying to survive as best they can, with the limited food-resources they have, so they will just eat whatever they can get hold of - if the Inuit could only ever find plant foods in their habitat within reach, that's all they would eat etc.. That's why hunter-gatherers so often opt for tubers, despite the fact, as I showed to PP a long while back re refs, that they find the taste of tubers to be the most repellent of all foods and the least nutritious.
Then there's the issue of cooking. Cooking is useful for making otherwise inedible foods like cyanide-rich cassava tubers more edible, and also for quickly thawing foods that have been left frozen in the snow(usually meats). Since it is well-known that cooking creates opioids which have an addictive effect on the brain(see similiar articles on junk foods and their addictiveness), it would explain why cooking was, eventually, also used on wider varieties of foods over time.
Then there is the truly arrogant, Noble-Savage-like nonsense that DV peddles, though he is not the only blackguard to do so. The unspoken implication he makes is that these hunter-gatherers were somehow near-perfect examples off humanity who somehow always magically "knew" what was healthy and what was not, regardless. Fools like DV don't want to recognise that HG lives were nasty, brutish and short, as that would ruin their overly romantic, quasi-utopian vision of HGs.