Guest guest Posted September 17, 2008 Report Share Posted September 17, 2008 http://www.vegsource.com/articles2/robbins_weston_price.htm Reflections on the Weston A. Price Foundation by John Robbins Weston Price was an American dentist who traveled around the world, camera and film in hand, in the late 1920s and early 1930s. An entire chapter in my latest book, Healthy At 100, is devoted to his work. Price specifically sought out native peoples who were still eating their native foods. He asked about their dietary habits, then examined and took photographs of their teeth. At the same time, he undertook similar studies and took similar photos of people from the same cultures who had become exposed to Western foods, and who had begun to substitute foods like white flour, white sugar, marmalade and canned goods for their native diets. The differences, as shown in Price's 1939 book Nutrition and Physical Degeneration, were startling. Time and again, Price found that those people who were still eating their native diets had very few if any dental caries (decay or crumbling of teeth), and appeared to be in radiant health, while their counterparts who were now eating refined and processed foods from the West were exhibiting massive tooth decay and malformation of their dental arches, and were suffering from a growing cascade of illness and dysfunction. Price came to believe that dental decay was caused primarily by nutritional deficiencies, and that the same conditions that promote tooth decay also promote disease elsewhere in the body. Price photographed the teeth and dental arches of the people he encountered. He found that as long as these people consumed their native diet, their mouths and jaws developed so that they never experienced crowded teeth, overbites, underbites, or tooth decay. When their wisdom teeth came in, they always had plenty of room. But as his photographs poignantly showed, once they left the wisdom of their native foods for "civilized" foods the results were ruinous. Now all kinds of dental problems that had been previously unknown became rampant. And it wasn't just dental problems Price found that as people shifted to refined foods, birth defects increased, and people became more susceptible both to infection and to chronic disease. As people ate ever more refined and devitalized foods, he said, they and their offspring became increasingly weaker and more prone to all kinds of illnesses. Today, Price's work has attracted a loyal and devoted following among those who rebel against processed foods and who seek a way of life more in tune with nature's laws. Some of his more ardent followers say his accomplishments are more important than those of Charles Darwin, Linus Pauling, or Jonas Salk, and that he was a greater genius than Albert Einstein. Others say his was the most important health research of all time. Some of the most zealous of his followers now run an organization called the Weston A. Price Foundation. A book by the foundation's president, Sally Fallon, with the appealing title of Nourishing Traditions, has been a best-seller. No doubt the foundation is doing good in awakening some people to the dangers of processed foods, but speaking as someone who has great respect for the work of Weston A. Price, I am sorry to say that to my eyes, the foundation that carries Price's name today is unfortunately exaggerating what was unbalanced in his work, and abandoning much of what was good. For one thing, the foundation exudes an attitude of "you're either with us or you're against us" that is reminiscent of the dark side of cults. Those authors and researchers who the foundation disagrees with are caustically mocked. If these authors happen to to the findings of modern nutritional science, they are mocked and condemned for being "politically correct." Reputable scientists who dare suggest that saturated fat contributes to heart disease are denounced for being "as pc as pc can be-and totally ignorant." Regrettably, those currently running the Weston A. Price Foundation seem to be oblivious to the spirit of compassion which motivated the work of the man under whose name they act. Sadly, they are not just intolerant of people who eat or think differently than the way they advocate; they frequently demean and condemn those with whom they disagree. There is a nastiness, a mean-spiritedness, to their activities that is not worthy of the man in whose footsteps they presume to follow. In fact, the more I've gotten to know the Weston A. Price Foundation, the less I've felt that it is actually carrying on the spirit or the work of the man in whose name it purports to function. For one example, Price never once mentioned the words "soy," "soybean,tofu," or "soy milk" in his 500 page opus, and spoke quite positively about lentils and other legumes, yet the foundation has taken it upon itself to be vehemently and aggressively anti-soy, calling soy foods "more insidious than hemlock." (My thorough response to their specific accusations against soy foods can be seen at http://healthyat100.org/display.asp?catid=3 & pageid=12 For another example, Price discovered many native cultures that were extremely healthy while eating lacto-vegetarian or pisco-vegan diets. Describing one lacto-vegetarian people, for example, he called them, "The most physically perfect people in northern IndiaŠ the people are very tall and are free of tooth decay." Yet the foundation that operates under his name is strikingly hostile to vegetarians. Sally Fallon, the foundation's president, denounces vegetarianism as "a kind of spiritual pride that seeks Što shirk the earthly duties for which the physical body is created." She further insults vegetarians by saying they frequently suffer from zinc deficiency, but think it is spiritual enlightenment. In 1934, Price wrote a moving letter to his nieces and nephews, instructing them in the diet he hoped they would eat. "The basic foods should be the entire grains such as whole wheat, rye or oats, whole wheat and rye breads, wheat and oat cereals, oat-cake, dairy products, including milk and cheese, which should be used liberally, and marine foods." Yet the Weston A. Price Foundation aggressively promotes the consumption of beef, pork and other high-fat meats, while condemning people who base their diets on whole grains. One last example of the discrepancy between Price's actual work and those who today purport to represent it: Price never once mentioned the word "cholesterol," yet the foundation presuming to forward his work has declared war on the idea that high cholesterol levels are associated with higher rates of heart disease. "The truth is that cholesterol is your best friend," they write. "There is no greater risk of heart disease at cholesterol levels of 300 than 180." They might as well say there is no greater risk of lung cancer for heavy smokers, or that the Earth is flat. I regret to say that those running the Weston A. Price Foundation today seem to have their own agenda. They are proponents of the philosophy that in order to be healthy, people must eat large amounts of saturated fat from animal products. They insist that only with the regular consumption of lard, butter and other full-fat dairy products, and beef, can people derive the nutrients they need to be healthy. Toward that end, the Foundation has widely publicized an article written by a former member of the Foundation's Board of Directors, Stephen Byrnes, titled "The Myths of Vegetarianism." The article is harshly critical of vegetarian diets, and concludes with an "About the Author" section which states: "Stephen ByrnesŠ enjoys robust health on a diet that includes butter, cream, eggs, meat, whole milk, dairy products and offal." In fact, Stephen Byrnes suffered a fatal stroke in June, 2004. According to reports of his death, he had yet to reach his 40th birthday. John Robbins is the author of Healthy At 100, The Food Revolution, Diet For A New America, and many other bestsellers. He can be reached through the website healthyat100.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 17, 2008 Report Share Posted September 17, 2008 Thanks yarrow. Awesome, now I know how to respond to those fanatical weston price followers in my earth mommies parenting group. , yarrow wrote: > > http://www.vegsource.com/articles2/robbins_weston_price.htm > > Reflections on the Weston A. Price Foundation > by John Robbins > > Weston Price was an American dentist who traveled > around the world, camera and film in hand, in the > late 1920s and early 1930s. An entire chapter in > my latest book, Healthy At 100, is devoted to his > work. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 17, 2008 Report Share Posted September 17, 2008 my sister in law is a heavy WAPFer. this past christmas, she had a mini nervous breakdown over my wife's and my diet. she acted like she was a christian who's found god and secured a place in heaven, but we're doomed to hell. very fanatical and cultish behavior; even her own father agreed she was acting like she had joined a cult. she cannot tolerate any discussion about food/nutrition because she practically foams at the mouth if you disagree with her. she stormed out of a restaurant after we ordered the tofu tacos; she ordered the bacon cheeseburger. she follows the sally fallon dictates like it's gospel, and practices all manner of arcane diet rituals like soaking nuts and grains ( " the phytic acid is poison! " ), drinking only raw milk (any other type of milk is " poison " ) and demonizing soy ( " asians don't really eat soy, except as a condiment " ...i finally realized she was refering to soy sauce) *except* for fermented products like tempeh. i think robbins' article is spot on; price himself would probably roll in his grave if he saw the venomous malarkey being perpetuated in his name. there is much about price's thoughts on diet that are worthwhile, but it all gets overshadowed by fallon's spin and shillwork for the meat industry. after all, " an institution is the lengthened shadow of one person " (r.w. emerson). blake On Wed, Sep 17, 2008 at 8:34 AM, flower child <zurumato wrote: Thanks yarrow. Awesome, now I know how to respond to those fanatical weston price followers in my earth mommies parenting group. , yarrow wrote: > > http://www.vegsource.com/articles2/robbins_weston_price.htm > > Reflections on the Weston A. Price Foundation > by John Robbins > > Weston Price was an American dentist who traveled > around the world, camera and film in hand, in the > late 1920s and early 1930s. An entire chapter in > my latest book, Healthy At 100, is devoted to his > work. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 17, 2008 Report Share Posted September 17, 2008 , " Blake Wilson " <mbw wrote: > > my sister in law is a heavy WAPFer. this past christmas, she had a mini > nervous breakdown over my wife's and my diet. she acted like she was a > christian who's found god and secured a place in heaven, but we're doomed to > hell. very fanatical and cultish behavior; even her own father agreed she > was acting like she had joined a cult. she cannot tolerate any discussion > about food/nutrition because she practically foams at the mouth if you > disagree with her. she stormed out of a restaurant after we ordered the tofu > tacos; she ordered the bacon cheeseburger. she follows the sally fallon > dictates like it's gospel, and practices all manner of arcane diet rituals > like soaking nuts and grains ( " the phytic acid is poison! " ), drinking only > raw milk (any other type of milk is " poison " ) and demonizing soy ( " asians > don't really eat soy, except as a condiment " ...i finally realized she was > refering to soy sauce) *except* for fermented products like tempeh. > > i think robbins' article is spot on; price himself would probably roll in > his grave if he saw the venomous malarkey being perpetuated in his name. > there is much about price's thoughts on diet that are worthwhile, but it all > gets overshadowed by fallon's spin and shillwork for the meat industry. > after all, " an institution is the lengthened shadow of one person " (r.w. > emerson). > > blake > > On Wed, Sep 17, 2008 at 8:34 AM, flower child <zurumatowrote: > > > > > Thanks yarrow. Awesome, now I know how to respond to those fanatical > > weston price followers in my earth mommies parenting group. > > > > > > <%40>, yarrow@ > > wrote: > > > > > > http://www.vegsource.com/articles2/robbins_weston_price.htm > > > > > > Reflections on the Weston A. Price Foundation > > > by John Robbins > > > > > > Weston Price was an American dentist who traveled > > > around the world, camera and film in hand, in the > > > late 1920s and early 1930s. An entire chapter in > > > my latest book, Healthy At 100, is devoted to his > > > work. > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 17, 2008 Report Share Posted September 17, 2008 Oops something wrong with today. maybe your sister in law read this article, which was posted in my parenting group today. http://products.mercola.com/inner-circle/?source=nl dr. mercola is an anti-vegetarian who praises weston price and says soy is evil and that raw milk is God! , " Blake Wilson " <mbw wrote: > > my sister in law is a heavy WAPFer. this past christmas, she had a mini > nervous breakdown over my wife's and my diet. she acted like she was a > christian who's found god and secured a place in heaven, but we're doomed to > hell. very fanatical and cultish behavior; even her own father agreed she Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 17, 2008 Report Share Posted September 17, 2008 Mercola is part of the whole WAPF shebang. You'll notice that if you search " soy dangers " and topics like that, you always get the same few folks: Sally Fallon, Mary Enig, Mercola, Kaayla Daniel, etc. All WAPFers. Here's a bit on Mercola:http://www.quackwatch.org/11Ind/mercola.htmlI'm stunned that these people think they are " warning " people about the " dangers " of soy. Why aren't they doing the same thing about burgers, steaks, french fries, pork rinds, and macaroni and cheese? Because they all believe that NOTHING is wrong or dangerous about eating those foods. It's type of doublespeak that is just beyond my comprehension. BlakeOn Wed, Sep 17, 2008 at 10:58 AM, flower child <zurumato wrote: Oops something wrong with today. maybe your sister in law read this article, which was posted in my parenting group today. http://products.mercola.com/inner-circle/?source=nl dr. mercola is an anti-vegetarian who praises weston price and says soy is evil and that raw milk is God! , " Blake Wilson " <mbw wrote: > > my sister in law is a heavy WAPFer. this past christmas, she had a mini > nervous breakdown over my wife's and my diet. she acted like she was a > christian who's found god and secured a place in heaven, but we're doomed to > hell. very fanatical and cultish behavior; even her own father agreed she Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.