Heart disease was rare in America at
the turn of the century. Between 1920 and 1960, the incidence of heart
disease rose precipitously to become America’s number one killer. During
the same period butter consumption plummeted from eighteen pounds per
person per year to four. It doesn’t take a Ph.D. in statistics to
conclude that butter is not a cause. Actually butter contains many
nutrients that protect us from heart disease. First among these is
vitamin A which is needed for the health of the thyroid and adrenal
glands, both of which play a role in maintaining the proper functioning
of the heart and cardiovascular system. Abnormalities of the heart and
larger blood vessels occur in babies born to vitamin A deficient
mothers. Butter is America’s best and most easily absorbed source of
vitamin A.
In the 1940′s research indicated that increased fat intake caused cancer.
The abandonment of butter accelerated; margarine–formerly a poor man’s
food– was accepted by the well-to-do. But there was a small problem with
the way this research was presented to the public. The popular press
neglected to stress that fact that the “saturated” fats used in these
experiments were not naturally saturated fats but partially hydrogenated
or hardened fats–the kind found mostly in margarine but not in butter.
Researchers stated–they may have even believed it–that there was no
difference between naturally saturated fats in butter and artificially
hardened fats in margarine and shortening. So butter was tarred with the
black brush of the fabricated fats, and in such a way that the villains
got passed off as heroes.
It’s no longer a secret that the margarine Americans have been spreading
on their toast, and the hydrogenated fats they eat in commercial baked
goods like cookies and crackers, is the chief culprit in our current
plague of cancer and heart disease. But mainline nutrition writers continue to denigrate butter–recommending new fangled tub spreads instead.These may not contain hydrogenated fats but they are composed of highly
processed rancid vegetable oils, soy protein isolate and a host of
additives. A glitzy cookbook called Butter Busters promotes
butter buds, made from maltodextrin, a carbohydrate derived from corn,
along with dozens of other highly processed so-called low-fat commercial
products.
More on this great article here.
1 comment:
It always intrigues me how butter is blamed. As consumption goes down, other illnesses go up yet butter and other saturated fats are blamed! What a nonsense.
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