I think I'm going to have to have a lie down and try to answer these one by one.
You are questioning my sympathy and accusing me of being dismissive. That is a little low but I will answer you. I have every sympathy with anyone going through the symptoms of this shitty disease. I do not dismiss people's symptoms and do not dismiss the fact that one day I may be in the same place. There is plenty of evidence to show that immune response is way up the creek and this varies widely amongst us with what seems like a slow deterioration of symptoms being linked to increased sensitivity to many things. So I am not dismissive of food sensitivities. That doesn't mean I can't defend my profession and correct facts without being accused of being unsympathetic just because I don't have food sensitivity yet. hopefully that explains my sympathies.
I am trying to say that there is no conspiracy of manufacturers to hide things from consumers including free glutamate. The labelling legislation is what needs to change and this dictates what manufacturers can put on their label if consumers want that information.
I think I also challenged your claim that fresh produce manufacturers spray chlorophyll on plants to make them greener. you didn't seem to have any back up other than hearsay in the end despite saying that this was well reported or words to that effect. So I think you are being a little selective in your arguments here.
There also appears to be a difference in terminology. Processed food to me is anything that is fundamentally changed by a food processing plant e.g pasteurisation of milk, making butter, mincing beef bread etc. Unprocessed food would be simply graded and packed produce like eggs, unwashed fresh produce etc. I also use the word artificial in its legal sense ....there are terminology issues here I think. Natural flavourings are still classed as flavourings on the ingredients list, but they are not classed as artificial for claims such as "with no artificial colours or flavours" Yeast extract is classed as natural since its been "farmed" from yeast which is a natural organism like any other we eat.
I am not putting a judgement on what people should or shouldn't eat. Just trying to explain why things are labelled the way they are. it is a point of view and I'm sure I won't convince many who are entrenched in the daily mail version of the food industry and believe in the conpiracy of big business etc. Having worked in the food industry all my working life though...I can't say that this is something I've ever encountered. I have encountered ineptitude of an differing scales....but this isn't really what I would say is an orchestrated plan of deceit as many journalists portray.
I have not read the book, which I may. Unfortunately I have no feeling left in my fingertips to turn pages of books so I will need a kindle version rather than borrow a book. I have a backlog though and I'm steeling myself to read myhills mitochondria not hypochondria next.
Dear
@arewenearlythereyet,
I'm not going to fall out with you over this.
It seems that we are not communicating well here.
I genuinely am at a loss to understand why my personal experience of being hypersensitive to what I perceive to be "processed" foods should provoke such provocative responses from you, together with aspersions that people who disagree with
your point of view,
your opinion, must be Daily Mail readers. You make reference to The Mail three times.
Best bet is to never read the daily mail on food issues. I understand that it's nice to make sweeping statements for effect
oh and that literary milestone the daily mail.
it is a point of view and I'm sure I won't convince many who are entrenched in the daily mail version of the food industry and believe in the conpiracy of big business etc.
I am not a Mail reader. I don't read "news"- papers and I wouldn't use any of them as a research resource.
You yourself use colourful language in your replies, with words and phrases like "blanket scaremongering", "claim" (several times), "bizarre claim", "grossly misinformed", "gross exaggeration", "sensationalist conspiracy theories", "accuse/ accusation/ accusing", and "preservatives are added
so that you don't die" (which
does imply that eating preservative-free foods kills people, and clearly that is not 100% accurate since I am alive to write this). You have deliberately applied "preservative" to include methods other than the chemical additives that were being debated in relation to food sensitivities, including freezing and salt, you have tried to put words in my mouth, have misquoted me, and generally have shown little respect for any opinion or experience I have expressed. All of those traits are,
in my opinion, highly journalistic.
I had started to write a full and proper reply to you last night, but much of what I copy-pasted and quoted from our exchanges seems to have vanished from my screen today, and frankly, I've already spent a disproportionate amount of time on this and am not inclined to extend that much further.
But to respond to a few of your comments:
You are questioning my sympathy and accusing me of being dismissive. That is a little low
No, I haven't questioned your sympathy, I've questioned your
understanding of food and chemical intolerances and asked if having no such intolerances led to you more easily dismissing our concerns over processed food. I did not accuse you of being dismissive, only of dismissing the concerns expressed in this thread:
Having said that, I'm surprised you aren't more cautious when it comes to processed foods. Do you not suffer from any chemical or food and drink sensitivities? I don't care how tightly regulated processed foods are, they are still full of pesticides, herbicides, hormones, preservatives, etc.
(Perhaps I should add "as far as I'm concerned." A substance doesn't have to be in any significant quantity for me to react badly to it, but if I do react badly to it, my perception is that it is "
full " of pesticides/ herbicides /hormones /preservatives, etc.)
And
I don't have chemical sensitivities or allergies to food so luckily don't have to modify my diet too much....thanks for asking and your considered advice
(I don't believe I have offered you any advice re: food allergy or intolerance. The only thing I have said which could possibly be construed as "advice" is my observation that meat commonly contains hormones and antibiotics, and that oestrogen drives particular cancers.)
And
Apparently,
@arewenearlythereyet, you don't experience the same sort of sensitivities that
@Valentijn and myself, and many others with CFS/ME experience. Is it possible that you are so quick to
dismiss our concerns because of this?
Some of which prompted a "red herring alert!" response from you. Please see below:
And I am NOT throwing up red herrings. I was asking an honest question. It isn't unreasonable to ask questions in a discussion, and it isn't unreasonable to imagine that it must be harder for a non-hypersensitive eater to have a real understanding of what hypersensitive eaters go through.
So I am not dismissive of food sensitivities.
I didn't say you were and I don't believe I implied that.
That doesn't mean I can't defend my profession and correct facts without being accused of being unsympathetic
By all means. Correcting facts is how we all learn. And, once again, at no point did I say you were unsympathetic. However, it doesn't matter how factual your comments are regarding food and regulations, because none of it will allow hypersensitive eaters to eat any wider a range of foods than they can already tolerate
I am trying to say that there is no conspiracy of manufacturers to hide things from consumers including free glutamate. The labelling legislation is what needs to change and this dictates what manufacturers can put on their label if consumers want that information.
Aside from touting blatantly unhealthy foodstuffs as healthy (e.g., 0% fat, rapeseed oil, which
in my opinion are actively unhealthy) and glossing over the use of antibiotics, growth hormone, and oestrogen in meat and dairy animals, for all I know, your statement is correct. Your comment above about labelling legislation seems to imply that you think there is an existent problem with the labelling of food, however.
I think I also challenged your claim that fresh produce manufacturers spray chlorophyll on plants to make them greener. you didn't seem to have any back up other than hearsay in the end despite saying that this was well reported or words to that effect. So I think you are being a little selective in your arguments here.
You are right to challenge any statement that is obviously rubbish to you. Again, it's how we learn. You're right, it was essentially hearsay, albeit from someone in the food industry who said they had seen it with their own eyes. It was a long time ago, and it's always possible that I've got the name of the substance wrong, or that they made it up, or that proceedures have since changed. I am more than willing to accept that the information I was given is incorrect.
However, at no point did I claim it was "well-reported or words to that effect". What I said was
I do know that it is reportedly common practice for supermarket warehouses to spray their green veg with chlorophyll to keep it looking green and fresh,
It was reported to me, and I was told it was common practice.
I did not say they
painted it. You used colourful and,
to my mind, heavy-handed phrases such as "grossly misinformed" and "bizarre claim" in your response. You only needed to point out that "copper chlorophyll", if indeed that was what I was unknowingly referring to, had the opposite effect. There was no need to respond in the way that you did.
And yes, there is definitely a difference in our terminology. I defined what I see as processed food, and apparently you have not seen my various definitions. To clarify, for me, processed food is packaged food with additives generally not native to that foodstuff, and which cause an adverse reaction in me.
We clearly have different definitions of "processed". By processed, I mean foods that have had things (often artificial) added and or removed (often natural). And no, don't be facetious, you know very well I advocate unrefined salt use, but yes, I DO avoid NaCl table salt because of the anti-caking aluminium and general lack of the originally present minerals.
I'm sorry to hear about your fingers.
I had a reference lined up for about the biggest cause of mito dysfunction being iodine deficiency, but that too has disappeared from my screen today and it's probably not worth my effort to go and copy it again for you. Feel free to PM me if you want this reference.
I've read Myhill's mito paper. My then-GP was very supportive of the mitochondrial theory for explaining fatigue, and I was therefore able to get a mito biopsy in 2010 because of that support. However, he also taught at a local city hospital, and when I showed him Sarah's mito paper, he pulled it apart, saying it had "holes big enough to drive a coach and four through", and said he would use it as an example to his students of how NOT to write a good paper.
I am not here to argue with anyone, and since I have no wish to continue being placed in such a position, I am leaving this part of the conversation.