Scott Brady
Founder
There is no protein power of meat as far as energy goes. That is NOT the fuel source for the human body. Glucose is.
Wow, that entire argument neglected the nutritional requirements for building and maintaining skeletal muscle, which is something difficult and complex to achieve as a vegan. Glucose is an ubiquitous fuel source for humans, but does nothing for maintaining and building muscle and maintaining healthy organs and tissues, etc.
Fuel is only a part of the equation.
It is clear that you feel strongly about your dietary choices, but to say Dan is wrong in his reasonable recommendation is completely incorrect and cannot be validated by any respected scientific source. It is purely speculation and justification of your own choices. Be who you want to be, and eat what you want to eat, but spare us the insults and sudo-science.
There is no mainstream scientific evidence that proves a vegan only (or raw for that matter) extends your lifespan- NONE. Trust me, I have researched this at great length. You will find many claims, but they have proven time and again to be anecdotal. In fact, the all-cause death statistics for vegetarians are actually higher than omnivores- much higher (Burr and Sweetnam, 1982) and that vegetarians only had a .11% lower incident of heart desease.
There is no mainstream scientific evidence that proves a vegan diet improves mental or physical performance (in fact, quite the oposite).
As always, the best course of action is moderation and reasonable application of proven dietary methods. These methods may need to be adjusted person to person, but one method can never be applied successfully to all people. It is simply impossible. Japanese people have on average very long lives with diets very lean and mostly with proteins from fish, but so do certain Mediterranean cultures with lots of fatty foods, wine, etc.
I think it is completely reasonable for someone to be vegan for health (allergies, etc.) or ethical reasons, but to say a diet with some organic, lean meat is unhealthy is, well. . . bull :cow: