Johnston
Active member
You are right in that there is not a vital NEED for carbs in the survival sense, but you're throwing the baby out with the bathwater here, and it's not necessary for MOST people to totally eliminate them. They can have their place and be useful. They certainly are not BAD if used correctly. It's like saying a car is BAD because of all the people killed in them every year. That's mostly down to clueless driving, just as with nutrition where most people are clueless about how much of what they need to be eating.
Ketogenic diets (which I'm familiar and have dabbled with in the past) are no less a 'fad' than IF, although from an evolutionary point of view you can argue for both, given our ancestors would likely have adapted to both. There is plenty of medical research & discussion going on about IF also by the way, so again you can't separate it from the keto approach in that way either.
The far bigger issue here is MODERN WHEAT & GLUTEN. This is the one aspect of peoples diets that in my experience has the biggest impact on health and weight loss. It's perhaps a controversial issue with some, but cutting it out CAN make a HUGE difference. Plenty of documented cases of doctors seeing patients with diabetes cured, and other ailments as well. I know because I've done this myself, and I know plenty of others who have also, with amazing results. Our bodies simply have not evolved to eat this so called 'food', which has very little nutritional value whatsoever, and many detrimental effects. Plenty of research out there on this.
You simply cannot put ALL carbs in one basket here and say they're ALL damaging and must be eliminated! Not only is that untrue and simply impossible for some people, but it's just not necessary. I'm not criticising keto as a lifestyle, as it has its merits, but it's not FAR SUPERIOR to a well balanced wheat/gluten free diet. In essence a paleo approach (aspects of this are a bit iffy, but the core principal is sound). Again, plenty of research from respected nutritional professionals out there on this.
I know about sodium intake being important by the way.
Ketogenic diets (which I'm familiar and have dabbled with in the past) are no less a 'fad' than IF, although from an evolutionary point of view you can argue for both, given our ancestors would likely have adapted to both. There is plenty of medical research & discussion going on about IF also by the way, so again you can't separate it from the keto approach in that way either.
The far bigger issue here is MODERN WHEAT & GLUTEN. This is the one aspect of peoples diets that in my experience has the biggest impact on health and weight loss. It's perhaps a controversial issue with some, but cutting it out CAN make a HUGE difference. Plenty of documented cases of doctors seeing patients with diabetes cured, and other ailments as well. I know because I've done this myself, and I know plenty of others who have also, with amazing results. Our bodies simply have not evolved to eat this so called 'food', which has very little nutritional value whatsoever, and many detrimental effects. Plenty of research out there on this.
You simply cannot put ALL carbs in one basket here and say they're ALL damaging and must be eliminated! Not only is that untrue and simply impossible for some people, but it's just not necessary. I'm not criticising keto as a lifestyle, as it has its merits, but it's not FAR SUPERIOR to a well balanced wheat/gluten free diet. In essence a paleo approach (aspects of this are a bit iffy, but the core principal is sound). Again, plenty of research from respected nutritional professionals out there on this.
I know about sodium intake being important by the way.