I am uncertain (that is, insufficiently informed) about the significance of the low-carb philosophy as it relates to T2 people not yet in remission as compared to T2 people who are. In my own case (diagnosed in Dec 2020 with HbA1c of 74) I put most of my effort into calorie-controlled weight reduction, believing that the top priority was to clear away the visceral fat, carbs or no carbs, although I did at the same time keep to moderate carbs to hedge my bets. My HbA1c now is 40 and I have been consuming 135g of carbs max every day for a good five months, with weight stable (and 15.4 kg less than in December). I daresay I could force my HbA1c lower still by reducing my carbs, but am not sure that it would bring major life benefits overall. I am leaning to the view that once the visceral fat has gone and a few months of declining insulin resistance and reawakening of pancreatic beta-cells have done their job, one is essentially operating much as a non-diabetic would, and able to tolerate carbs very adequately - BUT always subject to the overarching imperative of not putting back the visceral fat. I am not an expert, even in regard to my own case, but I do wonder whether the primary advice given here to the newly-diagnosed T2s should not be so much to chop down the carbs and become afraid of a piece of toast, but rather to get that fat cleared away, by whatever means, over a few months (no need to rush it).
Is this a reasonable line of thought? I am not adamant about any aspect of it, as I m on a learning curve myself, but I think that nearly all of us here could really do with some expert, scientifically solid clarification of these issues and strategies.