helmuth_hubener
Banned
- Joined
- Nov 28, 2007
- Messages
- 9,484
His point is that what you're saying works. Fasting does not.
Indeed, any kind of calorie-restriction does not.
The body does not appreciate being calorie-restricted.
His point is that what you're saying works. Fasting does not.
Thanks. That does summarize my point.I agree with most of what you wrote, but I will go further to say overweight people are overweight due to lack of knowledge of nutrition.
Jerky is fast. Apples are fast.Fast food is bad
Are all processes the same? Freeze-drying is a process. Fermentation is a process.and processed food is bad
People need to absolutely not go on a diet. It doesn't work.People do not need to go on a diet per se,
Exactly; I agree.they need a life-style change.
My point is probably garbled because I'm trying to sum up too much in too short of a post.I don't get your point, Hubener.
I agree with most of what you wrote, but I will go further to say overweight people are overweight due to lack of knowledge of nutrition. Fast food and processed food is bad, but you have to know why it is bad for your health. Certain medications will make people pack on weight too--but you have to know why.
People do not need to go on a diet per se, they need a life-style change.
Genetics can also be a factor. Genes can impact how your body handles what you consume.
And time pressures. It takes time to shop for good foods and time to prepare them. Some get home from work and have only time to feed the kids, clean the house, and go to bed. So they buy something quick- which are usually less healthy alternatives.
Helmut's point in summary. Going on a diet (temporarily changing what you eat and exercise) won't help you in the long run. Changes need to be life-long. But you won't stick with dramatic changes- you will want to revert back to what you are familiar and comfortable with.
Another issue with "dieting". It will slow your metabolism because your body thinks there is a food shortage and it must protect itself. It will start to burn fewer calories and store more fat. Then when you go back to what you did before the "diet", you gain even more weight than before you started.
There is a very wide variety of opinions on what constitutes "wholesome." Most of those opinions appear to be wrong, based on the complete and utter failure of dieting. The research is clear.
If you focus on "number of calories in" and try to reduce that number through willpower, or (even worse) if you focus on "number of calories out" and try to to increase that number while keeping the calorie intake the same, via willpower, all the data shows that you will certainly completely fail.
Genetics can also be a factor. Genes can impact how your body handles what you consume.
Yeah, sure.
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Cathy, is that you?
From what I’ve seen on the Net lately, there are many libertarians who need to ask themselves what issues they are a libertarian on.
For those of you new to libertarianism or who don’t know much about it, it is actually a rather simple political philosophy. When all is boiled down, it can be summed up in a single statement known as the Non-Aggression Principle (NAP): No one has the right to initiate aggression or violence against an innocent person or their property.
That is it. This is about as inclusive a philosophy as you are going to get.
Unfortunately, for such a simple message, it gets contaminated by people who either aren’t libertarians but pretend to be, or are libertarians but for the wrong reason. They are not comfortable with just leaving it at the NAP because that’s not really what got them involved in the liberty movement.
Recently there has been a feud between libertarians over several irrelevant issues, mainly the concept of “privilege,” that showcases this distinct separation between those who are interested in liberty and those who have other axes to grind.
I like to consider myself a calm person. Most of the time. But I lose all patience when someone throws out the word “privilege” out of nowhere. Usually, it’s because the person who employs the word is using it while making a highly judgmental, snide, haughty and ignorant remark about someone else.
For example, I was once accused of denying my “white privilege” when explaining why I had no college debt. I insisted that the fact that I had attended an inexpensive, in-state university, worked through high school saving up for college, spent next to no money during the school year, and lived in a old miner’s shack my last quarter while graduating a year early had something to do with it.
No. It was solely because there is some mystical power called “white privilege” that enabled me to pay my bills and not take out a loan.
Just as a side note, when someone says “privilege,” most of the time they really mean someone else made better life choices and are enjoying the fruits, while they made poor choices and are suffering for it but refuse to accept responsibility for it.
You’d think that as libertarians, these people would be interested in attacking the obvious privileges that the State enjoys, such as a monopoly on the legitimate use of violence, money, taxation, and countless other immunities granted to its members which do not apply to ordinary citizens.
Silly me to think that. Apparently the real problem facing our society isn’t the Federal Reserve, the National Defense Authorization Act, the Patriot Act, NSA surveillance programs, drone strikes, undeclared wars, or warrant-less searches. These are not the greatest threat to our liberties, according to these so-called libertarians.
So what is?
White male privilege with Bitcoin.
You read that right.
The argument started when a female libertarian accused Bitcoin of having white male privilege because its users are overwhelming white men.
This is the kind of argument one would expect to get from conventional political thinking – which is really no thinking at all. Nowhere in this assessment does the libertarian attempt to provide evidence for their highly contentious and facile assertion. Nor do they raise any thought-provoking questions, such as what constitutes “privilege” and what it has to do with libertarianism. If no one’s rights are being violated, then what concern is it of ours?
Bitcoin, in case you don’t know, is an open sourced digital currency anyone can use anywhere in the world. Unlike a central bank, it is run by no one.
This is one of many, many reasons why I so despise the use of the word “privilege.” It’s a cop out for someone who doesn’t know what they’re talking about to make judgments based on superficial observations.
One has to ask if this person had even tried using Bitcoin – or maybe the question answers itself.
One simple question could have settled this for her.
1. What part of Bitcoin gives white males an advantage or privilege in terms of its use that other people do not receive, and in what way are people’s rights violated by this?
The answer, of course, is none.
Yesterday the Libertarian Republic published this column, in which the writer discusses this feud within the context of a bigger argument that libertarians need to branch out more to attract people beyond the white male demographic. The writer is vague in terms of details and concrete steps to take, but it’s fairly apparent what they’re implying. The author argues that we need to stop talking so much about topics like critical theory - which has nothing to do with libertarianism – and talk more about issues like privilege – things that progressives and leftists love to preach on.
Tom Woods has written on these types of libertarians, saying:
Unfortunately, this kind of thinking dominates a certain wing of the libertarian movement, which congratulates itself for its “thick” libertarianism, as opposed to the (I guess) thin kind embraced by the rest of us. Yes, yes, they concede, nonaggression is the key thing, but if you really want to promote liberty you can’t just oppose the state. You have to oppose “the patriarchy,” embrace countercultural values, etc.
Then, once libertarianism has been made to seem as freakish and anti-bourgeois as possible, these same people turn around and blame the rest of us for why the idea isn’t more popular.
In the 1850′s, abolitionists, the only group opposing slavery on moral grounds, comprised a paltry 2% of the voting population. Clearly only a specific demographic believed in emancipation and pushed for it. Was that due to privilege? Or could there perhaps have been other factors involved?
We should be less concerned with the demographic make-up of the liberty movement and more concerned about maintaining its integrity and core beliefs.
Sadly, this is something I see way too often. A druggie hears that libertarianism promotes drug legalization and jumps onto the political bandwagon. Someone doesn’t want to pay taxes – but has no problem with others being forced to pay – and thinks that makes him libertarian. I tend to call them “single-issue libertarians,” because there is only one reason they joined, and it has nothing to do with liberty or freedom.
As the Good Book says, by their fruits ye shall know them. When someone spends more time attacking an unregulated, non-government digital currency instead of the Fed, that tells you something.
Cathy, is that you? I had high hopes that I would never go to RPF and see a post on "privilege"; I have been dashed.
I wondered the same thing.
But it was, like, so confusing, d00d!I hope the two of you weren't under the impression I support this.
Yep. And that does, in fact, appear to be the case!If that were the case, then it would be impossible for anyone to lose weight, ever.
I dispute that trying to change this equation will lead to any good results. The body is supposed to take care of this matter, automagically. It shouldn't be an issue. You should never have to count calories. There's a very nice PID feedback system built right in called "Hunger, Lack-of-Hunger" that manages it all perfectly. Like a well-tuned cruise control system it keeps us cruising right along at a more or less ideal weight.Calories in - calories out = change in body weight. That isn't in dispute. The body can't get bigger without the building blocks to do it and it can't get smaller unless it burns more fuel than it takes in.
This is a very nice theory, but I do not think that there is any empirical research whatsoever showing that it works. Do you know of any studies? I am open to changing my mind and saying "well, I guess Enoch was right -- you can lose weight by using willpower to restrict calories after all, as long as you don't restrict too much," if you can find some good, solid research proving the case.The problem with yo-yo dieting is that people try to cut calories too far and it slows their metabolism, thus reducing the "calories out" part and they gain weight even while eating the same numberor fewer calories than before.
The minimum number of calories you need to consume without slowing your metabolism is called the Basal Metabolic Rate. If anyone wants to lose weight and keep it off, they need to eat less than their Total Daily Energy Expenditure, but more than their Basal Metabolic Rate.
Again: useless and irrelevant! Barking up wrong tree!There are calculators that can provide a pretty good estimate of each: http://www.globalrph.com/revised-harris-benedict-equation.htm
Ummm, you think?There are some problems with actually counting calories. Some protein and fat can be used for functions other than fuel
There is no reason to want that number! All the research shows that getting your hands on that number does not increase your probability of losing weight -- astoundingly, it decreases it!, and the calories listed on a package of food are frequently just wrong, or could be significantly different than what is ultimately available to the body (cooking food often makes it easier to digest.) That doesn't change the calories in - calories out formula, it just makes it difficult to get an accurate number.
Well, you link me to the study. I'd hate to be purveying false or outdated information.Anyone who burns more calories than they consume is going to lose weight, even if they only eat McDonald's and Twinkies. They'll have severe nutritional deficiencies and a host of other problems, but they won't be overweight. And if they don't restrict calorie consumption below their BMR, they won't have a problem keeping it off.
I hope the two of you weren't under the impression I support this.
Yep. And that does, in fact, appear to be the case!
In empirical but complex and exception-filled sciences like biology, results of 100% rarely come about in any experiment that's remotely interesting. But 99% or even 90% is the same thing as 100%, for all practical purposes. That is, since only 10% or less of humans seem to be able to permanently lose weight by going on a diet, none of us should go on diets. For most (essentially all) of us, it will not work. You cannot predict in advance if you're one of the aberrant 10%.
The body is supposed to take care of this matter, automagically. It shouldn't be an issue. You should never have to count calories. There's a very nice PID feedback system built right in called "Hunger, Lack-of-Hunger" that manages it all perfectly. Like a well-tuned cruise control system it keeps us cruising right along at a more or less ideal weight.
Mark Sisson said:... if you are still carting around a spare tire or not-so-lovable handle the “how much” still matters. Back to that grass-fed steak. While it’s healthy, none of us needs more than a few juicy ounces of it at a time (jeez, I’m making myself hungry here). Eat as healthy as you want to eat, but to lose weight, the old rule is still true: you must cut calories. Of course, certain foods will optimize your metabolism. Carbohydrates are a recipe for metabolic and immune disaster. But at the end of the day, calories do count. Here are some easy ways to cut back if you’ve got a few clingers:
10. Cut meat portions in half.
I’m a huge proponent of plenty of protein – at a minimum, 100 grams daily. But often, meat portions are too big. This is especially true in restaurants, but Carrie and I have noticed the prevalence of gargantuan steaks and step-aside-turkey chicken breasts at the market these days, too. (Attack of the bionic meat?) 3-6 ounces is plenty. Focus on source, flavor, and quality, not quantity.
9. Cut out the (hefty) toppings.
I love loading up my daily salad with plenty of ingredients – usually at least a dozen. But I choose low-calorie vegetables, and a good source of protein, rather than fried, crunchy, caloric toppings. Top your salads with veggies, not cheeses and nuts, if you are trying to lose weight. Top ‘em even if you aren’t, in fact.
8. Eliminate starchy vegetables.
If you are lean and healthy, things like yams and carrots are fine. But they do tend to have more calories than greens and cruciferous vegetables, so mind those starchy squashes and tubers if you want to lose a few pounds.
7. Cut legume portions in half.
Peas and other legumes like chickpeas and kidney beans are rich in vitamins and fiber. They also contain good vegetarian protein and healthy fats. But they’re very caloric. If you want to lose weight, cut those lentil, pea, and bean portions in half.
6. Eat only one snack daily.
Snacks can often be as caloric as a meal, particularly things like cheese and nuts. A handful is fine; anything more is a meal. Pay attention to the small bites you take throughout the day because they do add up more than you think.
5. Replace a meal with a protein shake.
If you really want to drop some serious weight (more than those last 5 or 10), replace a meal with a quality, dense shake. Mine packs a generous serving of protein and fiber for minimal calories and virtually no sugar.
4. Replace fruits with vegetables.
Fruits contain sugar, which is fine in limited amounts. But fruits are simply higher in calories than vegetables, something many folks don’t know. Replace those fruit snacks with vegetable snacks for equal – or better – nutrition and fewer calories.
3. Use less oil in cooking.
Try using a tablespoon of oil on a lower heat setting instead of liberal pours. I personally don’t watch my fat portions much, but my metabolism is set at a high level through years of training and living the Primal lifestyle. As your body adjusts, you’ll be able to eat more calories.
2. Watch the nut portions.
Nuts are an amazing nutrient source – protein, fat, fiber, vitamins galore. But they are incredibly high in calories. A serving size is a handful, not a pack.
1. Drink only water.
To really lose weight, make sure you aren’t drinking your calories! (Unless those calories are replacing a bulk meal.) Limit alcohol and eliminate dairy and juices.