Re: Raw Veganism by Hidden Username ..... Parasites Support Forum (Alt Med)
Date: 9/9/2015 9:39:37 PM ( 9 y ago)
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URL: https://www.curezone.org/forums/fm.asp?i=2275418
I'm not trying to start an argument with you, but so much of what you said are programmed cliche's that vegans are confronted with all the time.
The truth is B12 should be synthesized from a healthy gut, meat eaters and vegans can both be deficient.
Here's a quote from an article on the subject:
"Studies show that those following a typical animal-based diet require more vitamin B12 than those who do not. This is because the typical diet leads to digestive atrophy. Because B12 is peptide-bound in animal products and must be enzymatically cleaved from the peptide bonds to be absorbed, a weakened gastric acid and gastric enzyme secretions (due to a cooked food diet) causes an inability to efficiently extract vitamin B12 from external food. Nevertheless, raw food vegans can actually get more B12 by reabsorption from bile than they do from external food. Wolfe argues that the natural soil microbes and bacteria found on wild plant foods and unwashed garden plants are typically adequate to supply our B12 requirements. The natural microbes in the soil need to be duplicated and to colonise in our digestive tract, without fermentation or putrefaction."
http://www.vibrancyuk.com/B12.html
Here's one from Dr. McDougall
"Vitamin B12 Deficiency—the Meat-eaters’ Last Stand
Defending eating habits seems to be a primal instinct for people. These days Westerners are running out of excuses for their gluttony. Well-read people no longer believe meat is necessary to meet our protein needs or that milk is the favored source of calcium. With the crumbling of these two time-honored battle fronts the vitamin B12 issue has become the trendy topic whenever a strict vegetarian (vegan) diet is discussed. Since the usual dietary source of vitamin B12 for omnivores is the flesh of other animals, the obvious conclusion is that those who choose to avoid eating meat are destined to become B12 deficient. There is a grain of truth in this concern, but in reality an otherwise healthy strict vegetarian’s risk of developing a disease from B12 deficiency by following a sensible diet is extremely rare—less than one chance in a million."
https://www.drmcdougall.com/misc/2007nl/nov/b12.htm
Just food for thought...
HM
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