Something my Father-in-law found...
Impossible Foods, co-founded by Google, Jeff Bezos and Bill Gates, has taken its product, a totally fake plant based hamburger, internationally, setting its sights on countries such as Australia and New Zealand, as well as Europe and Asia. I was not aware of the ownership structure of this compnay, this is on a par with the Vaxx, but much more subtle.
For instance, the Impossible Burger is made with soy leghemoglobin (heme), a color additive produced in a genetically engineered yeast. The ingredient, used to make the burger appear to “bleed” like real meat, never underwent adequate safety testing, according to the Center for Food Safety (CFS).
Last year, CFS challenged the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) approval of soy leghemoglobin. CFS claimed that because the ingredient is “new to the human diet, and substantial quantities are added to the Impossible Burger, the FDA should have required extensive safety testing before approving its use as a color additive, as required by law.”
CFS said in its lawsuit that soy leghemoglobin is made using “genetic engineering on steroids,” a process they say has “virtually no regulatory oversight.” Animal studies commissioned by Impossible Foods found soy leghemoglobin caused inflammation or kidney disease and possible signs of anemia.
But Impossible Foods dismissed the findings as “non-adverse” or as having “no toxicological relevance.” Despite the legal challenges, a federal appeals court in May upheld the FDA’s approval of soy leghemoglobin.
The Impossible Burger is now in grocery stores and restaurants nationwide. It is also expected to hit schools K-12 after Impossible Foods secured Child Nutrition Labels, a voluntary food-crediting statement authorized by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
One may conclude that Gates, Google and Bezos are wealthy enough to be able to claim that what they promote is so useful to their customers that it does not require testing and approval. One could ponder the question whether or not the FDA, USDA, CDC, HHS are merely divisions of the Gates cabal. One might also assume that a food that lacks nutritional value, attacks the kidneys and shows signs of causing anemia would be a valuable adjunct to the Vaxx and enhance its lethality.
Rice has been a staple of Asian diets for centuries and yet obesity is basically a non issue over there. Types of carbs/ quantity/lack of physical activity are where the problem lies. Calories in calories out is all there is to weight loss/ weight gain. Your body does indeed need fat, however fats are extremely calorically dense and this is where the extra calories creeps into most Americans diets ie fried foods and the like.
I'll admit chopsticks and Communism are truly great for weight loss, but it's not so simple, especially, as you say, fats are a necessity (and carbs are optional). Fats may be calorically dense, but they're not only vital, they offset that density by being more filling, slower to digest, and promoting healthier/more stable metabolism. It's not the fat in fried foods that's the problem, it's the breading. 100% agree about portions and physical activity; but much of this is to blame on depression and food addiction. Too many, consciously or not, seek solace in unhealthy places as the sickness and corruption that pervades our culture and our world leaves our souls perpetually disturbed.
100% agreed on the end statement there. Main point I'm trying to convey to folks is that excluding or including a certain food or food groups is not the magic key to weight loss and being healthy. Rather than some mystical property of these diets i.e. "just try this one weird trick for a six pack!" keto, fasting w/e it's more the fact that the diets give them a structure to their eating and make them keep track of what they eat when previously they did not. In addition if you simply lose the weight only to put it back on a short time later the diet was meaningless. It needs to be something you can continue for life, if keto and one of these other diets is that for an individual, that's great!
Tl;DR: you don't have to be a carbophobe, fatphobe/ sugarphobe whatever to be healthy and lose weight