The instincto diet allows to observe some facts which remain unobservable when masked by all disorders induced by a “standard” diet. So I could easily see a lot of cases which showed me this effect on immune system and then I formulated an adequate theory. Medicine doesn’t deal with food antigens so that the link between food and immune system disorders couldn’t be taken into account.
It doesn't often, but it sometimes does, as do some scientists (Loren Cordain and Boyd Eaton spring to mind). I think I know what you mean, though, as modern medicine unfortunately tends to downplay food antigens and typically speculatively claim that cooking neutralizes enough of them to not be concerned.
Only one researcher (Jean Seignalet http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nutrition_Seignalet), who had watched one of my lectures made a series of experiences with auto-immune diseases suffering patients and could verify the phenomenon.
Unfortunately, he passed away, as you likely know. Did he publish his findings on this?
Tell me please which plant proteins you ate, how you assured your regulation, which guaranties of non processing you had, and which symptoms you could notice.
I didn't assure anything, I just found that wheat, soy and even rice were more of a problem for me than raw meat, and still are. Even legumes that are edible raw and fruits are less-well tolerated by me than raw meat, fat, organs and eggs.
I think you didn’t understand what I mean: it's not a difference between red or white meat, but the fact that the genetic drift of domesticated animals causes their meat to lack a normal instinctive stop (whatever the color of their meat).
So red meats are OK as long as they're wild or nearly so?
When you talked about red meat, didn’t you mostly refer to the consumption of beef?
Also venison, bison, elk, moose, bear. I'm not really big on moose or bear meat, but the others are yum, yum. Wild venison meat is my favorite so far. I do like duck meat too, just not as much as venison. And wild deer suet is the best suet I've tried so far. It was beautiful to behold. I like wild boar meat too, but I think that is considered a white meat, yes? Of the fowl, duck meat is my favorite so far and it is darker in color than the white-meat fowl.
Honestly, it’s very short to draw conclusions. I waited twenty years before I published mine.
So two years is not enough time to rely on the alliesthetic mechanism? This is quite surprising after reading your published materials and forum posts. When does the alliesthetic mechanism finally become reliable? Only after 20 years, or any sooner?
Gcb, what are your thoughts regarding American Indians eating in some areas mostly Buffalo, well, I suppose they also ate birds, rabbits, turtles, snakes, ok I answered my own question, but some really subsisted on Buffalo, of which I mostly due during the summer months when the animals are killed on green pastures, and mostly eat cow during the winter months. I live in Northern ca. and can get cow eating green, not brown dry grass, all year around. I don't find the stop of a buffalo any different to a cow, the buffalo being almost non messed with in terms of breed stocks..
This is an excellent question, thank you Van. I have heard that the Lakota Oyate used to eat so much buffalo that they were sometimes called the buffalo people (because they have taken in the spirits of the buffalo when they ate them), and that they therefore regard the buffalo as relatives. They claim that the buffalo meat, fat, etc. is "pejuta wašte," good medicine and the source of strength of their warriors.
Mind you, I'm not trying to advocate for any "noble savage" notions or any such nonsense. I just don't dismiss thousands of years of a relatively healthy traditional people's experience without good reason. That would seem to be just as unreasonable, especially given that hominins have been eating raw mammal meats for million of years.