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Diabetes Soapbox - Have Your Say
Type 2- I not, never have been Obese!
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<blockquote data-quote="Ka-Mon" data-source="post: 196014" data-attributes="member: 27697"><p>His death certificate floating on the internet contradicts what was officilaly said to be the cause of his death. If it's true and the reason why he fell and knocked his head was really a heart attack then in reality his own diet was the reason for his death. It's one of those debates that could go on forever without the people finding out the real truth.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Why was it revised? Was it maybe that after his first heart attack in that same year he realised that he got it wrong and hence revised it? </p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Again, his original diet before his revised one was to eat loads of fat and almost no carbs at the initial phase/s, in the revised version he allowed more carbs and less fat. </p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>So, after his initial high fat low carbs diet, which I believe he recommended as a long term diet but changed to "Not in the long run" (in other words "ok only for a short time") in 2002. His new revised version was to lower the fat consumption as one increased the carbs, which means that according to Atkins, those of us who eat a moderate amount of carbs (or "high carbs" as low carbers call it) and low fat are doing the right thing in the long run. </p><p></p><p>If I remember correctly, Atkins allowed about 20-30 carbs a day after reaching optimal weight, what is the new revised value for carbs?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ka-Mon, post: 196014, member: 27697"] His death certificate floating on the internet contradicts what was officilaly said to be the cause of his death. If it's true and the reason why he fell and knocked his head was really a heart attack then in reality his own diet was the reason for his death. It's one of those debates that could go on forever without the people finding out the real truth. Why was it revised? Was it maybe that after his first heart attack in that same year he realised that he got it wrong and hence revised it? Again, his original diet before his revised one was to eat loads of fat and almost no carbs at the initial phase/s, in the revised version he allowed more carbs and less fat. So, after his initial high fat low carbs diet, which I believe he recommended as a long term diet but changed to "Not in the long run" (in other words "ok only for a short time") in 2002. His new revised version was to lower the fat consumption as one increased the carbs, which means that according to Atkins, those of us who eat a moderate amount of carbs (or "high carbs" as low carbers call it) and low fat are doing the right thing in the long run. If I remember correctly, Atkins allowed about 20-30 carbs a day after reaching optimal weight, what is the new revised value for carbs? [/QUOTE]
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