Those examples support what I was talking about--the Atkins diet has petered out quite a bit from its peak and Breatharianism has never exceeded a miniscule following. If Paleo follows those examples then it will eventually fall dramatically in popularity and be eclipsed by other diet trends, just as Paleo has been eclipsing Atkins. Even one of the top promoters of Atkins, Jimmy Moore, went Paleo.
Check out the collapse of interest in Atkins on Google trends:
And with the collapse in interest of Atkins went a parrallel collapse in interest in carbs:
As usual, you are conveniently ignoring the fact that all these diets go up and down in cycles over decades - for example Atkins was very popular in the 60s. This does not have anything to do with whether the diet works or not, but on whether a new book is out or not, or maybe an Internet guru appears etc. The Palaeolithic diet also has similiar cyclic activity. As regards Breatharianism, while I have no doubt it is less popular than many other diets, I am pretty sure your claim that its followers are nonexistent is pure bull - I had a dinner with a cousin of mine a while back in which she enthused about the wonders of Breatharianism - she's a new-age follower and eagerly follows every new trend in that field, with an emphasis on the wackiest ones.
So you're chickening out? It's easier to cast stones than to put constructive effort into something and put one's theories to the test, isn't it? If you're going to criticize my poll then the least you could do would be to create or suggest a better one. If all polls are completely worthless then mine is no worse than any other and it was a waste of time for you to point out alleged defects and motivations behind it ("deliberately distorted", "biased" and so on)--you could have just claimed from the start that all polls are completely worthless instead of suggesting that mine was particularly bad. If instead it's possible to improve upon it, then feel free to do so.
What I actually stated was that polls were worthless in terms of providing reliable data. I had further, correctly, stated that your poll was worse than just useless, being actually deceitful. Also, there's no point in my putting forward an honest poll of mine if it's anyway going to be inaccurate like every other poll, anyway.
So are you saying that Skinny Devil "did fine even on high-raw vegan/low raw animal food diets but ... reported having issues with cooked meats"? I know he eats more plant foods than what most raw Paleos report, but I didn't know that he did fine on a high-raw vegan/low raw animal food diet. I guess it would help if you would define what you mean by high-raw vegan/low raw animal food diet.
I mean that Instinctos on c.10% raw animal foods/90% raw plant foods are fine on such a diet. Of course, like cherimoya said, it all depends. Such Instinctos who had been 100% raw vegan for years beforehand would likely not beneft so much, but otherwise as long as the raw animal food component provided enough nutrients to avoid nutritional deficiencies, there would be no problem.
How on earth do you square the notion of a high-raw dieter being "fanatically pro-cooked-Paleo"?
You wre belittling the raw component of the diet, suggesting, wrongly, that it wasn't anywhere near as important as the palaeo component.
The point was never that cooked Paleo is optimal, but that your claims regarding the lack of importance of the Paleo aspect of raw Paleo and your minimization of benefits experienced by people who swtiched from more conventional diets like SAD-type diets to cooked Paleo have been excessive. Joy2012's question was a valid one and can't be so easily dismissed as you tried to do, and clearly Joy isn't "fanatically pro-cooked Paleo."
I did not dismiss the palaeo component as unimportant, you were the one belittling the raw component, I was just defending raw diets. I, after all, am aware of the benefits of avoiding dairy, grains and legumes from one's diet. I merely point out the obvious, that the cooked component of cooked-palaeo is so harmful to health that it negates, to a large extent, the benefits gained from avoiding non-palaeo foods. Besides, if cooked-palaeo were so wonderful, then why is it that switching from pasteurised dairy to raw dairy suddenly makes (some) people healthier? Clearly if cooked-palaeo really were so effective, then even raw dairy should, in all cases, be also harmful to everybody's heath.