False.
Your body improves insulin sensitivity the less carbs you eat over a prolonged period of time.
Meaning your blood glucose improves and can take in MORE Carbs when you introduce them. Why do you think as competitors get leaner and lose weight they can handle more carbs? Because they body is insulin sensitive and primed to intake them.
Monitor someone who does keto the leaner they get the more carbs they can eat via refeeds to regulate t3, leptin, and hormone levels.
Your knowledge is as bad as CompeteNPC who makes the dumbest threads and has no scientific backing to any of your statements
So again your statement is false, your threads prove 0 points, and its your "Subjective" thinking on the topic. Which again you can't prove
Another fact, when someone is low carb for so long and adds more food (in a proper manner IE Reverse dieting) they will lose weight for a period of time due to their body's metabolism increasing. this is called the LTDLFE
LTDFLE stands for Long-Term Delayed Fat Loss Effect (I’d note that I have also seen a LTDGE which is a Long-Term Delayed Growth Effect but that’s another topic for another article). Basically, this is the phenomenon whereby fat loss continues to occur even after the diet has been ended and/or calories have been raised back towards/to maintenance or even above. In the same way that fitness sometimes continues to increase after the period of heavy loading, it’s almost as if there is some type of fat loss inertia whereby the diet continues working even after the person ends it.
https://bodyrecomposition.com/fat-loss/the-ltdfle.html/
when studies put the low-carb folks on a high-carb maintenance diet, their levels of T3 rose
This showed that increasing carbs, regardless of the calorie and macronutrient totals, seemed to show greater T3 production
So we know that carbohydrates are important for thyroid production… but it’s also important for another hormone: Leptin.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10567012
If carbohydrates are too low for too long, you will produce less T3 (thyroid hormone), which can ultimately slow down your metabolism making it harder to consistently lose fat.