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Lesson 31 - Refined And Processed Foods Are Hazardous To Your Health

31.1. Introduction

31.2. Questions & Answers

Article #1: Pure Starch Factors By Thomas E. Scown Article #2: Cereals, Grain, Flour

Introduction

31.1.1 What Are Refined Grains?

31.1.2 Why Are Refined Grains Harmful? 31.1.3 Food Processing and Grain Products 31.1.4 The Early History of Grains

31.1.5 The Loaf of Bread

31.1.6 The Fall of the Roman Empire

31.1.7 Refined Grains and Dental Cavities 31.1.8 Bread Not Fit To Eat

31.1.9 A Loaf of Chemicals

31.1.10 Are Homemade Breads Any Better? 31.1.11 The First “Health” Food

31.1.12 How Healthy Are They?

31.1.13 It Used To Be A Grain Of Corn 31.1.14 Why Do People Eat Prepared Cereals? 31.1.15 The Real Harm of Breakfast Cereals 31.1.16 And It’s Indigestible Too...

31.1.17 Are Grains Good Food At All? 31.1.18 Other Refined Grain Products

Every day the scientists looked in on their cage of mice. Each time one or more dead animals had to be removed from the cage. After about sixty days, more and more mice were dropping dead. One of the scientists looked worried.

“I don’t know how much more of this experiment they can take. We may end up killing all of them in the next few weeks if we don’t stop.”

The other scientist nodded his head. “It seems cruel, I know,” he said, “but I think we’re discovering something important here. This diet we’ve got them on should tell us a lot more about proper nutrition—or rather, what poor nutrition can do to an animal.”

The second scientist sighed. “You’re right. Here’s their meal for today.”

“The same as yesterday?”

“Yes, and the same as the day before and the day before that. You know that’s the

only food we’re feeding them for ninety days.”

The younger scientist took the food and tore it into pieces and dropped it among the

mice. They moved sluggishly toward it and sniffed it. Some were huddling in a corner, sick and barely able to move.

He finished feeding the mice their experimental diet. He brushed the crumbs from his hands. “Guess I better get another loaf of bread to feed them again tomorrow. Same brand?”

“Doesn’t matter,” said the older scientist, “Just so it’s white.”

After a ninety-day diet of white bread, 40 of the 64 mice were dead. The survivors had developed many of the diseases of “modern” man—heart problems, anemia, and ex- treme nervous disorders.

White bread, breakfast cereals, flours—all refined grain products contribute-greatly to this nation’s ill-health. Yet studies indicate they make up one-third of the average per- son’s total carbohydrate intake each day.

31.1.1 What Are Refined Grains?

A refined grain, or its product, is made by processing a natural whole grain so that some of its nutrients are lost. Flours, breads, cereals, noodles, pastries—almost all grain products have been refined in some way or another.

White rice, corn grits, wheat flour, hominy, a piece of toast, a cookie, the bowl of snap-crackle-and pop each morning—all are examples of refined grain products. ALL are harmful additions to the diet.

31.1.2 Why Are Refined Grains Harmful?

Refined grains and their food products are substandard foods for several reasons:

  1. They’re excessively starchy—in fact, they’re the most starchy foods eaten by humans. All starches, even unprocessed and unrefined ones, are handled with difficulty by our digestive system. When refined, their starchy nature is emphasized.
  2. They’realmostalwayseateninapoorfoodcombination—suchassandwiches,orsweet- ened pastries, or bowls of cereals. Invariably, they’re mixed or cooked with other starchy foods or heavy proteins, or fried in fats.
  3. They are acidic in nature, due to their mineral content, and consequently, they acidify the body and predispose it to excessive mucus formation.
  4. They are practically devoid of natural fiber and low in moisture, hence constipating.
  5. They must be cooked, altered, and otherwise processed before being eaten. And perhaps most important of all, refined grain products are nutritionally imbalan- ced. It is because of this imbalance that these foods are responsible for several degener- ative diseases. Calcium-leaching from the bones and teeth occur because of the altered phosphorous-calcium balance in these products. Sugar and refined grain products are primarily responsible for all tooth decay in this country, as well as the major cause of brittle bones in the elderly. In natural organic foods that are eaten in their whole and unprocessed state, all the elements for proper nutrition are in their proper balance. This balance is completely de- stroyed in the refining process of grains. For example, the mineral cadmium always exists along with the mineral zinc in foods. The zinc acts as a balancing mineral for the cadmium and prevents it from being absorbed in too large amounts by the body. Cadmium, in excessive amounts, is hazar- dous to human health (it is one of the poisonous elements in cigarette smoke, for in- stance). When grains are refined, the zinc mineral is destroyed but the cadmium is not; so, you get a massive absorption of cadmium without the balancing effect of the zinc when you eat refined grains. As another example, both iron and copper minerals are destroyed when grains are refined. Copper is necessary for the utilization of iron by the body to build a healthy bloodstream. Inorganic iron (useless to the body anyway) is added back to the stripped flour, but of course the copper is not. You can’t fool around with the natural balance of nutrients in foods, and then hope to restore them or negate the harmful effects created by this processing. The B-vitamins, vital for the health of the nerves and body, are quickly destroyed by any refining of the grain. Interestingly enough, the body requires B-vitamins to metab- olize or use these grain products (which is why they are present in the food in the first place). If these vitamins are removed from the grain products, then the body must rob

from the current supply of B vitamins in the body so that these refined grains can be di- gested.

Not only are refined grains and their products nutritionally deficient and imbalanced, they can also contribute to a loss of vitamins and minerals already present in the body.

Two of the most popular ways of eating refined grains are in the form of bread and cereals. We’ll look at these two products in great detail so that we can understand why refined grains have no place in a healthy diet.

31.1.3 Food Processing and Grain Products

Food processing is used to describe everything from home cooking to sophisticated food-manufacturing processes. Actually, anything we do to alter the original state of food, be it cooking, blending, refining, or adding a hundred chemical ingredients, is a form of food processing.

When we talk about food processing and grains, however, we are mostly concerned with food refining. Refining is the breaking down of a whole food into various parts. Grains, for example, are often eaten in the form of flour products such as breads, pas- tries, etc. Few people in America eat grains in their whole forms as they are harvested. Whenever foods are eaten in fragmented, refined, or processed form, a lower level of health invariably results.

Food is man’s most immediate point of contact with nature. As such, it must be suit- ed to the laws that govern our body. While the human body is a remarkably flexible instrument, it cannot adapt to foods that have been radically altered from their natural form. Grains, as we shall see, are probably not an optimum food for man anyway; when they are processed, refined, and altered, they can become injurious.

When beginning the study of a subject such as this, it is useful to get a historical per- spective. Fortunately, one area of food processing has been well documented for several thousand years: bread making. Bread is probably the first refined and processed food product eaten by man. We can understand the effects of refined grains on the body if we study the history of bread-eating from ancient times to the present.

31.1.4 The Early History of Grains

As long as primitive man could live in areas where fresh food was available for 12 months of the year, he had little need for agriculture. Fruits and vegetables, the mainstay of early man’s diet, were well supplied in a semi-tropical environment. Foraging and food gathering were the main methods used to acquire food.

With the changing of the climate and the migration of primitive tribes, new food gathering methods had to be devised. Man needed to find some way to store nutrients for periods of time when no fresh foods were available. Seeds, such as cereal grains, seemed to be one way of solving the food storage problem, and so man became agricultural in lifestyle.

Grains were probably among the first cultivated crops. They were not as tasty or beneficial as the fresh fruits and vegetables, but they could be grown in large amounts for storage in climates where the winters were harsh.

This development occurred only about ten thousand years ago—a very short length in the half-million year or so span of, man: With this growing of grains, cooking de- veloped. If cooking had not started, it is doubtful the cereal crops would have been of much use to man. Cooking, the first food processing, developed simultaneously with grain agriculture.

Early grain processing seems to have consisted of either toasting the whole grain, or heating it up in watery mixtures, such as porridges or gruels.

By the time of recorded history, however, man had learned to process the grains far- ther and farther until he was finally able to make bread from his crops.

31.1.5 The Loaf of Bread

Until about 3000 B.C., grains were pounded in mortars to make a rough meal from which the bread could be partially sifted. This meal was then mixed with water and heat- ed to form a porridge.

The Egyptians developed a grinding process in which the grain was crushed between two rolling stones. This allowed the endosperm of the grain to be reduced to a fine flour so that it could be sifted finer and finer from the coarser bran. This produced a flour that was refined enough for baking or bread-making purposes. As you can see, bread is a relatively new food in the diet of man. The loaf of bread, “staff of life,” has only been around for the last five thousand years or so, or less than 1% of man’s existence.

The Greeks improved upon the grain-grinding process with rotary grindstones, and by 500 B.C., combined flour mills and bakeries were operating in Athens. Bread was being sold commercially, and already there were different types of bread one could buy (such as coarse barley bread for slaves, wheat for the upper classes, etc.)

It was the Romans, however, who gave us our first “white bread.”

31.1.6 The Fall of the Roman Empire

During Roman civilization, flour milling technology rapidly developed, and soon the Romans were making four or five commercial grades of flour. The finest flour, almost a creamy color and not quite as white as that of our white bread, was sold only to the upper classes. Interestingly enough, the wrestlers and athletes of that time were fed the coarser grade of flour “to keep their limbs strong.”

Of course the “finer” or more refined flour eaten by the Romans had far less nutri- tional value and was a more fractured and fragmented food than had been eaten by man until that time. The Romans associated their new white bread with goodness, purity, no- bility, and birth. These emotional feelings of refinement, higher living, snob appeal, etc. soon became inseparable from the texture, taste, and appearance of the white bread. As in modern times, the rich or upper class were the first to adopt the highly refined foods as a mark of “class distinction.” The health of the Roman upper class degenerated through the years—some blame it on the lead content in their cooking vessels, and others point out their fondness for the new white bread. Whatever the reason, as the health of its lead- ers failed, the empire itself crumbled.

After the Romans, it was 1500 more years before the “art” of flour refining reached this height again.

So, what can we learn from this bit of history? Have we proven anything, other than that man became increasingly “sophisticated” in this bread-making abilities? Fortunate- ly, we can trace the health of man as he began eating more and more refined products.

31.1.7 Refined Grains and Dental Cavities

By studying the skulls and tooth remains of ancient, man, from 3000 B.C. all the way to the twentieth century, researchers have been able to devise a table showing the amount of tooth decay experienced by man during various time periods. Let’s look at the figures:

Dental Cavities From Ancient Times To The Present

Time Period Percent of Teeth With Cavities
3000 B.C. 3%
2000 B.C. 4.5%
1000 B.C. 5%
100 A.D. (Roman) 11%

1000 A.D. 5.5% 1950 A.D. 24%

It is no coincidence that the Romans had more cavities than any other ancient people; they also ate more highly refined flour products. After the “art” of flour refining was lost with the fall of the Roman Empire, notice that dental cavities decreased by half, or almost back to their level before refined flour products were introduced. Then, less than a thousand years later, the cavities’ percentage of modern man has increased five times over most ancient peoples. Needless to say, there has been an enormous increase in the amount of increasingly refined flour products in the last few hundred years. Do you think there is a connection? Many people do.

As poor as refined flour and bread products have been throughout history, they were still able to support life, if not enhance it. With the nineteenth century, however, the qual- ity of bread became so poor that it was anti-life, or destructive.

In 1826, an experiment was conducted with the newly developed white bread of in- dustrial England. The researchers discovered that “a dog fed on fine white bread does not live past the 50th day. A dog fed on the coarse whole bread lives and keeps his health.”

31.1.8 Bread Not Fit To Eat

In the nineteenth century, mass production of bread began in earnest. In fact, the first assembly line in the world was devoted to making bread sea biscuits for English crews. This mass production of bread required that the product have good storage qualities.

This extended storage time for bread is the most often cited reason for the amount of refining done to the flour. The nineteenth century miller and baker discovered that the germ of the wheat contains oils and these oils go rancid over a period of time. The germ and the aleurone layers of the grain also contain the major food value of the grain, and these attract rodents and bugs. Remove the nutrients, refine the flour even more, and the rats and insects will leave it alone. They know what many humans still don’t know: that such refined flour products cannot support life and are worse than worthless to eat.

This removal of the wheat germ and other nutritive factors from the bread as a con- venience to the baker and not the customer marked the beginning of an era in food pro- duction. As bread-making progressed in the 1800s and 1900s, any changes made in the process were always done for the benefit of the producer. The consumer just, had to un- consciously adapt his taste to the type of bread that was best suited for mass production and rapid turnover. Bread was the first “technological” food; it was industrial food for the masses, cheap in cost and devoid of nutrition: the first junk food.

31.1.9 A Loaf of Chemicals

Bad as the bread was in the 1800s and through the mid-1900; it became much worse after the end of World War II. The chemical warfare banned in the war in Europe was just transplanted to the bakeries of America as the bread-makers began to slowly poison their customers with all sorts of new additives, bleaches, and preservatives.

Even refined flour still has natural yellow pigments (such as carotene—a precursor of vitamin A). The millers discovered they could remove this color and make their flour even whiter by bleaching it. They started blowing chlorine gas into the flour after it was milled.

Chlorine gas, a deadly poison if inhaled, not only bleaches the flour but also reacts with other molecules in the flour. Many potentially toxic chlorinated lipid compounds are formed from this chlorine gas, such as dichlorostearic acid.

Chlorine also destroys major portions of Vitamin E as well as an important amino acid in the bread protein, methionine (which is classified as “essential” for human nutri- tion).

Other chemical oxidizers are added to bleach and “mature” the flour, such as ni- trogen dioxide, bencoyl peroxide, potassium bromate, potassium iodate, and azocar- bonamide. Are they dangerous? Well, Germany banned all such oxidizers back in 1958, 24 years ago!

For softness and that white-bread texture, mono- and diglycerides are added to the bread dough at the rate of about 1/4 pound per year per person consumption. The effect is to make the bread more “plastic” or squeezable—nobody knows the effects on those that eat such additives.

What has happened since World War II is that man, for 5000 years previously, me- chanically altered the wheat molecule by pounding and grinding. Now he has been chemically manipulating and reorganizing the wheat molecules. These chemical alter- ations in our food must have serious and long-time effects on those that eat such foods.

Out of the 100 pounds or so of commercial bread eaten each year by the average per- son, he also eats besides the refined flour such things as 2 pounds of salt, 3 pounds of sugar, 2 pounds of skim milk powder, 2 pounds of yeast, 1 pound of “enzyme-activator,” 1/2 pound of sulfate, chloride and bromate chemicals, and 1/4 pound of other food addi- tives. When all of these chemicals and nonfoods are eaten together, a multi-toxic effect occurs that has never been thoroughly studied by scientists.

31.1.10 Are Homemade Breads Any Better?

By now, most health-conscious people know that commercial breads (even ‘whole- wheat’ and organic ones) are health-destroying foods. So, these people often make their own bread. Does this make bread a “good” food?

Actually, no. Unless these people freshly grind their flour from organic, whole grains immediately before they make bread, they’re still going to be using a substandard, toxic, and probably rancid flour.

Even if they use freshly ground flour, they still must add such things as salt, a sweet- ener, maybe some yeast, possibly eggs, milk, etc., and the product has been transformed into a mishmash of indigestible food combinations. All bread is usually cooked as well, which also adds to its toxicity.

Some people who feel that they must have bread have managed to compromise by making an uncooked product using only sprouted grains. Used in moderation, this is a marginally acceptable food. Due to its starchy and indigestible nature, however, such foods are not needed nor recommended for an optimum diet. If bread is ever included in the diet, it should be eaten as a starchy food and combined with leafy and nonstarchy vegetables.

The best way to use grain foods is not in bread, crackers, pasta, or whatever, but in their raw sprouted state. However, grains are only eaten when such foods as fruits, veg- etables, sprouts, nuts or seeds are in short supply or not available.

31.1.11 The First “Health” Food

In the late 1880s, Dr. John Harvey Kellogg ran a sanitarium for vegetarian Adven- tists. Searching for a healthy meat substitute for his patients, Dr. Kellogg invented “Corn Flakes” in 1895.

One of Kellogg’s patients, C.W. Post, was experimenting on himself to devise a “food cure.” He came up with “Grape-Nuts,” and the breakfast cereal industry was born. Within five years, Post’s cereals were making over a million dollars a year, and Kel- logg had taken over the town of Battle Creek, Michigan, with his cereal factories. Up in Niagara Falls, Nabisco’s Shredded Wheat had arrived on the scene, and the dietetic

character of the nation was being slowly molded.

These three cereal companies were almost solely responsible for making refined ce-

reals a major part of the American diet. The cereals were originally promoted for their

supposed health benefits, and industrialized America was ready for its first convenience foods. Breakfast cereals had become the first commercial “health” food.

31.1.12 How Healthy Are They?

Television commercials tell us that if we eat one cup of this or that specially fortified cereal, we’ll get 100% of almost all our vitamin and mineral requirements. They don’t tell you that these vitamins and minerals are inorganic fillers and additives which have been laced through a sugar-coated product that is destructive to our health and well-be- ing.

Nor do they tell that the reason they add those vitamins, etc. is because all the orig- inal nutrients in the grain have been heated, rolled, puffed, squeezed and sugared out of existence. The vitamins and minerals are added so the manufacturers can justify the prices they charge for a product that is Only slightly more nutritious than the box it comes in.

And the cereal manufacturers really blow their own horn about these miniscule amounts of nutrition by the advertising on the boxes and on television. If your chief source of nutritional information about breakfast cereals has been the charts and panels on the sides of cereal boxes, then the following facts may open your eyes to one of the biggest food frauds of the twentieth century.

31.1.13 It Used To Be A Grain Of Corn

What is a corn flake? How is it made?

First, the kernels of corn are soaked in lye. Lye is a caustic, corrosive substance that will burn skin off your body. It’s used in making rayon, soaps, and—breakfast cereals.

After the soaking, the kernels are blasted by live steam. Then a flavoring syrup full of mostly white sugar is poured over the soaked and steamed corn.

Next, the kernels are dried until they’re hard. Then they’re run through huge rollers that press down with 75 tons of pressure to flatten them out. Now they’re ready to be toasted, heated and flaked one more time. Then they get their last dosing of preserva- tives, additives and chemicals and are packaged up in a brightly colored box with a pic- ture of an athlete, animal, or cartoon character on the front.

Originally you had a grain of corn, fairly rich in protein, phosphorus, Vitamin A, and the three major B vitamins. Now you’ve got a sugar-frosted flake that has no original vitamins, few minerals, and an altered protein that is harmful to the body. What’s more, you’re probably paying five to ten times as much for this processed, denatured food than you would if you had just bought the original whole grain.

31.1.14 Why Do People Eat Prepared Cereals?

The American public has been completely sold on the healthfulness of eating an ear- ly morning breakfast and on eating cold cereals as a convenient, nutritious breakfast food. Consider what Richard Carter, author of “The Unappetizing Truth About Dry Ce- reals,” says about cereal consumers.

“As they put this mixture into their mouths, many of the feeders actually glow with a sense of well-being. Decades of tradition and millions and millions of dollars in ad- vertising have trained them to regard their ready-to-eat breakfast cereals as the last word in morning nourishment. Any suspicion that the stuff is nutritionally inferior to other breakfast foods, like fresh fruits, is bound to be dispelled by the sales literature printed on the brightly-colored boxes.”

So people eat breakfast cereals because: 1) they feel that they should eat something every day as soon as they get up, according to conventional nutrition; 2) cereals require a minimum of preparation and are easy to eat; 3) people believe that the cereals them- selves furnish “minimum daily requirements” due to the added vitamins and minerals.

In response: 1) Most people would be better off if they did not eat first thing in the morning; this is the body’s time to clean house and it is not ready to digest food. Greater health could result if people would adopt a sensible “No-Breakfast” plan, and ate more nutritious foods later in the day. 2) Fruits are far superior to cereals as a nutritious break- fast food, and they are the ultimate convenience food—no milk, no bowls, no prepara- tion or clean-up whatsoever. 3) Added nutrients to food (“fortified” foods) are riot uti- lized by the body like the naturally occurring organic elements. They in no way replace or serve the same functions as do vitamins, minerals, and co-existing nutrients in natural foods.

31.1.15 The Real Harm of Breakfast Cereals

For many people, breakfast is the same almost every day of the week. Most people eat breakfast out of habit. They rarely make a conscious decision as to what to eat first thing in the morning, and so if they eat cereals they do so almost every day.

The cereal habit is also hard to break not only because of mental habits, but because the high-sugar content of the cereals can create a physical, addictive habit as well. The most popular cereals are 25% to 50% refined white sugar, which makes them sweeter than chocolate candy. Granolas, or health food cereals, are hardly better; with their high honey and maple syrup content, they, too, may be 20% to 30% concentrated sugars.

Eating such heavily sweetened breakfast cereals first thing in the morning plays hav- oc with the blood-sugar levels, and creates the conditions for a life-long sugar addiction.

31.1.16 And It’s Indigestible Too...

Not only is breakfast cereal an abysmal food by itself, it’s usually eaten with such foods as milk and fresh fruits so that it becomes virtually indigestible.

Besides being a totally unsuitable food, pasteurized milk that is poured over cereal combines very poorly with any other food. Milk is a protein with a high fat content. Ce- reals are refined starches and sugars. Putting those types of foods together in the stom- ach is a sure invitation to acid indigestion.

Fresh fruits are generally acidic or sub-acidic in nature. Mixing them with starchy cereals creates a fermenting environment that negates any health benefits of the fruit to begin with. Better to just eat the fruit and forget the cereal.

If anything is to be eaten early in the day, it should be easily digested, high-fluid foods such as fresh fruits. Refined starches clog the body and their waste products create a feeling of heavy lassitude that lasts throughout the day.

31.1.17 Are Grains Good Food At All?

So far, we have discussed mostly refined grain products, such as flours, breads, and cereals. There is little disagreement among health-minded people that such refined grain products are harmful and should be completely eliminated from the diet. But what about whole grains? Are unrefined grains, like rice, corn, and wheat, eaten in their whole state beneficial and optimum foods?

If we strictly apply the test of an optimum food which is that it be palatable and nour- ishing in its raw state, then grains fail. Raw grains, except when they are in their young milky stage or sprouted, are virtually indigestible and high in phytic acid which tends to bind calcium, iron, and zinc and make them unavailable to your body.

Grains are also unbalanced in potassium and sodium. Grain-eaters often try to balan- ce the sodium-deficiency of grains by adding salt which is an inorganic poison. In gener- al, grains are deficient in the alkaline minerals, too rich in nitrogen and phosphoric acid, and tend to acidify the system.

The starches in grains are hard to digest (about ten times more difficult than potato starches) and are prone to fermentation.

Grains, according to Otto Carque author of Rational Diet, are incapable of building strong bones and teeth. Man cannot live exclusively on grains for any length of time and maintain the best of health. If grains are eaten, they must be accompanied by green leafy vegetables to supply needed alkaline elements.

Grains contain the largest amount of starches of all foods. Humans are not naturally starch-eaters. We only have one starch-digesting enzyme, and that is found in the saliva. Starches are difficult foods to digest, and we would do better to look to other foods, such as fruits, vegetables and nuts for our energy and carbohydrate needs. Starches are not a necessary part of the diet. There is not a particle of starch in the entire constitution of your body.

Grains are a relatively new food in the human dietary—hardly 10,000 years old—and refined grain products have really only been around for 200 years in their pre- sent form. Man prospered very well before the advent of grain foods, so they cannot be defended as an essential part of the diet.

In fairness, it must be noted that grains, because of their storage capabilities and oth- er considerations, have formed a major part of the world’s diet for many different pop- ulations. Grains, in their whole form, are not being degraded as an unsuitable food for man—but they are not optimum foods. As long as fresh fruits, vegetables, nuts and seeds are available, grains can be eliminated from the diet forever.

With a reorientation of agriculture from the mono-grain crops to the more productive tree crops (fruits and nuts), the world’s population could be better nourished in a more ecological fashion.

31.1.18 Other Refined Grain Products

Although most grain consumed in America is in the form of breads or cereals, other products are used in large amounts. White rice is generally polished whole rice. This polishing strips away many of the B vitamins and some of the protein—about the same thing that happens to refined wheat. White rice is a nutritionally unbalanced food and should never be eaten.

Corn meal may also be degermed (refined) and then subsequently “enriched” just like the white flour from wheat grain. Eating such refined corn meal was one of the caus- es of pellagra in the South, or so it was speculated many years ago. Refined corn also causes a B vitamin depletion in the body, the same as refined wheat flour.

Pasta such as macaroni, spaghetti, noodles, etc. are usually made from semolina which is a refined white flour made from wheat. It, too, is like eating “white bread.”

Of course, all such pastries like cookies, cakes, pies, doughnuts, and other such desserts are made with both refined flour and refined sugar and are “double-trouble.”

For improved health, all such flour products, whether made from white flour or whole-wheat flour or whatever, should be eliminated from the diet. Once a grain is made into flour, rapid deterioration of the food starts, regardless of the amount of any addi- tional refining or processing.

31.2. Questions & Answers

Are you telling me that I should never eat another slice of bread? I always eat bread with about every meal. What could be wrong with that?

Whether or not you eat bread, or any food, is something only you can decide. We only try to present facts upon which you can base a rational decision. Most peo- ple eat foods without knowing the true nature of the food itself. Bread is a good example of this. Bread has been on the table for hundreds of years. It is a familiar food, so much that we frequently confuse its familarity with its necessity.

Most bread eaten today bears no resemblance to the bread of the past. You’re eating a slice of fortified chemicals in a plastic, pasty form. This includes most whole wheat and other “organic” breads sold today as well as white bread.

Even if you can get “good” bread or make your own, bread is not a recommend- ed food. For one thing, as you yourself said, people tend to eat it with every meal and all sorts of foods. Bread is a very starchy food, and if it is eaten at all, it should only be consumed with leafy green vegetables and little else.

There are better ways to eat grains, if you wan! them, instead of in bread or any flour products. Once you grind grains into flour, you’ve begun the total destruction of a food that was not optimum to begin with.

Of course, we’re not “telling” you to do any one thing or the other, nor are we saying something is “wrong” or “right.” We only wish to present the facts, as we currently understand them, about grains and grain products. You are to evaluate that information, and make your own decision as you see it for better health.

Most people in the world make grains a major part of their diet. Japan has rice, Mexico has corn, Europe uses wheat. Are you saying all these people are wrong?

Again, it is not a matter of right or wrong. When foods are in short supply, such as fresh fruits and vegetables, grains have served as a substitute for optimum nu- trition. We should not allow a substitute to become a standard simply because it is widely used. Then, too, remember a distinction is made between whole grains and refined grains. If all these people had eaten refined grain products for all these years, I doubt if there would be many people left in the world today.

In America, Argentina, and New Zealand, for example, meat-eating is more widespread than grain eating. Do sheer numbers make a practice advisable or not? We’re not playing a numbers game with nutrition—good health and diets are not dictated by majority rule.

My children just won’t eat anything except cereals for breakfast. When I try to give them something else to eat, they become cranky and cry and refuse to eat it. What should I do?

There have been very few incidents where children immediately drop dead when not fed breakfast. If your children refuse to eat a healthy breakfast (usually fresh fruits), then serve them nothing at all. Better to go without food than to eat the sugared, chemical mess that is disguised as food in cereal boxes.

The fact that the children complain, whine and cry should indicate to you that they have become “addicted” to the sugar in the cereals. When their blood-sugar renormalizes and they kick the cereal habit, they will welcome wholesome foods such as bananas or grapes or melon for breakfast.

What’s worse—white flour or white sugar?

An interesting question. I hope you’re not considering eating the less harmful of the two! Actually, you often find these two items used together in foods—like in cakes, pies, doughnuts, cookies, pastries, and so on. The sugar rots your teeth and destroys your nerves while the white flour constipates you and gives you an acid stomach. I know of few white foods that exist in nature. White sugar, white flour, salt, cocaine, heroin, refined fructose—all the white powdery, grainy “foods” are drugs and poisons. Mushrooms I suppose are one of the few natural “white” foods—but even these are often poisonous and substandard foods for humans. So if your food doesn’t have attractive colors (like yellow, red, green, etc.), you should probably avoid it (this would of course mean not eating black, grey and browned meats).

Article #1: Pure Starch Factors By Thomas E. Scown

High energy potential

Artificial Flavorings

There are a number of “foods” which may be classified as pure starch: bleached flour, degerminated corn meal, corn-starch, white rice, “instant mashed potato” powder, dextrose, etc. When these refined starches are introduced into the body, a high percent- age of the starch is quickly broken down into simple sugars. The sudden flood of sugar into the bloodstream stimulates the pancreas to produce an excess of insulin. The in- sulin rapidly burns the sugar, causing the blood-sugar level to drop far below normal. A prolonged state of low blood-sugar has been known to cause brain damage. Even short periods of low blood-sugar may cause trembling of the hands, temporary loss of visual control, alternating spasm and weakness in the muscles over the whole body, and many other effects.

Unfortunately, most people in the “highly advanced” nations are eating an ever-in- creasing proportion of foods composed primarily of pure-starch, sugar, salt, and plastic fat.

High energy potential

Many people have read of explosions in coal mines (from coal dust), but how many people have heard about explosions in flour mills? Many mill workers have discovered, the hard way, that one pound of white flour (suspended in air) has more explosive po- tential than one pound of T.N.T. The ignition factor may be a spark from the brushes of an electric motor.

Over the past one hundred years, dozens of flour mills have been blasted to bits, each of them destroyed by less white flour than the average American eats in one year.

The explosive potential of refined white flour indicates its chemical nature. It is a highly reactive chemical mixture when certain factors are added.

The human body has hundreds of chemicals involved in the act of living. Add to this the highly reactive chemical mix commonly called “white flour” and all manner of physical derangements will occur.

Artificial Flavorings

Such as used in icings and fillings for doughnuts, cookies, and cakes.

One flavoring product, labeled Imitation Strawberry, listed the following ingredi- ents: Vanillin and other aldehydes, ethyl butyrate and other esters, oil lemon and other essential oils, Butyric and other organic acids, benzodi-hydropyrone, ionone and other ketones, alcohol, propylene glycol, water, artificial color and 0.1% benzoate of soda.

This chemical concoction is only the flavoring; there is also additional artificial col- oring added to the “food.”

A point to ponder: Most of these chemicals are made from coal and crude oil. Re- member those news spots on television showing all the sea birds, fish and clams which died from ingesting crude oil from tanker spills?

Article #2: Cereals, Grain, Flour

The basic grains used worldwide are wheat, rice, oats, rye, barley, millet, corn. Grains have been the mainstay of whole populations—particularly rice and wheat. The reason for this universal reliance on grains is the ease of cultivation, the short growing and ma- turing time and the facility of bulk transportation and storage for long periods of time. Grains used today are generally refined products and constituted almost exclusively of starch.

Cereals and grains, in their whole grain dry state, may contribute beneficially to the diet of man. But it must be pointed out that even in their most complete state they are not a necessary food and are quite inferior to true foods for man—vegetables, fruits and nuts.

Refined flour (made from any of the grains) is a devitalized substance not suited for human consumption. In fact, it contributes to the general degeneration of those who consume it. It has become one of the principal items in the diets of modern men in the form of bread, rolls, cakes, cookies, spaghetti, etc. There is no way that such devitalized flour can be ‘revitalized,’ ‘enriched’ or in any way improved by the addition of elements needed in nutrition (vitamins, minerals, etc.). It remains a nonfood, pure starch, of the worst order. Breads and pastries as the “staple” of the diets of modern life are the source of much of the physical distress of man.

Cereals in the form to be soaked and cooked and the roasted flaked cereals in com- mon use today are produced from denatured grains and are a true curse to mankind. These devitalized substances, further adulterated with sugar, salt, preservatives, chemi- cals, coloring and artificial flavoring, are contributing to the rapid proliferation of dis- ease among modern man.

Cereals and cereal products (starches) are among the most difficult substances to di- gest when eaten alone. When eaten in combination with protein, the results are disas- trous, resulting in extreme fermentation, gas, acids and intoxication.

Cereal starches require about 10 times longer to digest than do potato starches—the longer the digestion period, the more the fermentation.

Cereals, grains and all concentrated starch foods are unwholesome for human con- sumption and should be carefully omitted from any health-promoting diet.