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in the sense of fairness @Listlad
i too am slightly losing sight of your point.
i thought it was SHOULD you restrict carbs to your kids.
adults must make their own minds up,
but the example you place of superb athletes
probably doesn't apply in any sort of health way to joe public slobbing out on the sofa eating takeaways and supping beer..(yep, guilty as charged
)
i wasn't diagnosed until 59..and it's as we age that the impact for T2D, really appears.
So for me that's a yes to the original question of should you restrict carbs..(but each of us is different)
restrict as @SlimLizzy suggests..yes...ban..NO.
BUT do be aware that it creeps up on us when we eat the unrestricted carbs that so many do nowadays
(as i mentioned above)
if it was the microwave causing cancer, i doubt many would accept that it IS a safe level in the kitchen, on an everyday basis
if it meant that the accumulations quadrupled the chances of your kids getting cancer (god forbid)
I think the same with carbs.
We are all on here for the reason of Diabetes..at whatever stage we are at or what type we have.
if many find that a high carb diet impacted on them, i doubt the assertion of higher carbs would go unchallenged.
If it is that the lower carbs benefitted people then i think in a auditorium full of those professing the benefits and showing PROOF, as you seem to do (well done btw)
i doubt the message of higher barbs will ever get through,
when it's that VERY principal many blame for their current state.
I am not a high carber. That should be very obvious.
Point taken, by way of explanation I posted really with more than just me in mind. Myself, my wife and my child and also with the rest of the population in mind as it is a national problem. I am looking at diet through several sets of eyes. I do of course completely and utterly see the low carb requirement. That should be obvious. But there are other sides to that line of thinking. If I talk reduced carb it seems to invite rebellious or contentious posts when it ought not really. It’s all a matter of degree.
I believe the NHS will struggle to get dietary solutions across as what suit the needs of one sector of the public will not suit the needs of another. The Eatwell plan for the general public isn’t so bad or wasn’t so bad as long as people stuck to it instead of indulging in the unhealthier side of carbs.
There is room on the forum for lower carbers, I would hope and I see there are a lot of them around and some posted in this very thread.
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