first14808
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 405
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Tablets (oral)
Firstly this is not true, as most traditional diets contained lots of hunted meats until we invaded them and introduced the concept of land ownership etc.
I'm.. not convinced that's true, but depends on where in the world, agricultural level etc. It's the carrying capacity challenge of supporting a population and feeding it, without eliminating wild game. Land ownership of course messed up nomadic hunter/gatherers, but also allowed settled populations to grow more food or harvest more meat from domesticated livestock.
Also, these carbs are much less processed then ours, even a traditional "bread" is much lower GI then a bread made with any floor you can buy from a UK supermarket. (Consider the difference between sweet potatoes, that have very high fibre, and our potatoes that have been bred to be as "white" as possible.)
That I agree with, plus lifestyle changes. The variety of food has increased, but not necessarily the quality, so like you say, highly processed white flour/bread vs nice, crusty stoneground wholewheat. ****, I'm missing bread..

(on which point, rye bread.. good or bad? I need my fix!)