Why Sugar is Toxic to the Body and in particular the BRAIN Part 2 of 5.
SUGAR: HARMFUL TO HUMANS AND ANIMALS
Shipwrecked sailors who ate and drank nothing but sugar and rum for
nine days surely went through some of this trauma; the tales they had
to tell created a big public relations problem for the sugar pushers.
This incident occurred when a vessel carrying a cargo of sugar was
shipwrecked in 1793. The five surviving sailors were finally rescued
after being marooned for nine days. They were in a wasted condition due
to starvation, having consumed nothing but sugar and rum. The eminent
French physiologist F. Magendie was inspired by that incident to conduct
a series of experiments with animals, the results of which he published
in 1816. In the experiments, he fed dogs a diet of sugar or olive oil
and water. All the dogs wasted and died.
The shipwrecked
sailors and the French physiologist's experimental dogs proved the same
point. As a steady diet, sugar is worse than nothing. Plain water can
keep you alive for quite some time. Sugar and water can kill you. Humans
[and animals] are "unable to subsist on a diet of sugar". The dead dogs
in Professor Magendie's laboratory alerted the sugar industry to the
hazards of free scientific inquiry. From that day to this, the sugar
industry has invested millions of dollars in behind-the-scenes,
subsidized science. The best scientific names that money could buy have
been hired, in the hope that they could one day come up with something
at least pseudoscientific in the way of glad tidings about sugar.
It has been proved, however, that (1) sugar is a major factor in dental
decay; (2) sugar in a person's diet does cause overweight; (3) removal
of sugar from diets has cured symptoms of crippling, worldwide diseases
such as diabetes, cancer and heart illnesses. Sir Frederick Banting, the
codiscoverer of insulin, noticed in 1929 in Panama that, among sugar
plantation owners who ate large amounts of their refined stuff, diabetes
was common. Among native cane-cutters, who only got to chew the raw
cane, he saw no diabetes. However, the story of the public relations
attempts on the part of the sugar manufacturers began in Britain in 1808
when the Committee of West India reported to the House of Commons that a
prize of twenty-five guineas had been offered to anyone who could come
up with the most "satisfactory" experiments to prove that unrefined
sugar was good for feeding and fattening oxen, cows, hogs and sheep.
Food for animals is often seasonal, always expensive. Sugar, by then,
was dirt cheap. People weren't eating it fast enough. Naturally, the
attempt to feed livestock with sugar and molasses in England in 1808 was
a disaster. When the Committee on West India made its fourth report to
the House of Commons, one Member of Parliament, John Curwin, reported
that he had tried to feed sugar and molasses to calves without success.
He suggested that perhaps someone should try again by sneaking sugar and
molasses into skimmed milk. Had anything come of that, you can be sure
the West Indian sugar merchants would have spread the news around the
world. After this singular lack of success in pushing sugar in cow
pastures, the West Indian sugar merchants gave up.
With
undaunted zeal for increasing the market demand for the most important
agricultural product of the West Indies, the Committee of West India was
reduced to a tactic that has served the sugar pushers for almost 200
years: irrelevant and transparently silly testimonials from faraway,
inaccessible people with some kind of "scientific" credentials. While
preparing his epochal volume, A History of Nutrition, published in 1957,
Professor E. V. McCollum (Johns Hopkins university), sometimes called
America's foremost nutritionist and certainly a pioneer in the field,
reviewed approximately 200,000 published scientific papers, recording
experiments with food, their properties, their utilization and their
effects on animals and men. The material covered the period from the
mid-18th century to 1940. From this great repository of scientific
inquiry, McCollum selected those experiments which he regarded as
significant "to relate the story of progress in discovering human error
in this segment of science [of nutrition]".
Professor McCollum
failed to record a single controlled scientific experiment with sugar
between 1816 and 1940. unhappily, we must remind ourselves that
scientists today, and always, accomplish little without a sponsor. The
protocols of modern science have compounded the costs of scientific
inquiry. We have no right to be surprised when we read the introduction
to McCollum's A History of Nutrition and find that "The author and
publishers are indebted to The Nutrition Foundation, Inc., for a grant
provided to meet a portion of the cost of publication of this book".
What, you might ask, is The Nutrition Foundation, Inc.? The author and
the publishers don't tell you. It happens to be a front organization for
the leading sugar-pushing conglomerates in the food business, including
the American Sugar Refining Company, Coca-Cola, Pepsi-Cola, Curtis
Candy Co., General Foods, General Mills, Nestlé Co., Pet Milk Co. and
Sunshine Biscuits-about 45 such companies in all. Perhaps the most
significant thing about McCollum's 1957 history was what he left out: a
monumental earlier work described by an eminent Harvard professor as
"one of those epochal pieces of research which makes every other
investigator desirous of kicking himself because he never thought of
doing the same thing".
In the 1930s, a research dentist from
Cleveland, Ohio, Dr. Weston A. Price, traveled all over the world-from
the lands of the Eskimos to the South Sea Islands, from Africa to New
Zealand. His Nutrition and Physical Degeneration: A Comparison of
Primitive and Modern Diets and Their Effects, which is illustrated with
hundreds of photographs, was first published in 1939. Dr. Price took the
whole world as his laboratory. His devastating conclusion, recorded in
horrifying detail in area after area, was simple. People who live under
so-called backward primitive conditions had excellent teeth and
wonderful general health. They ate natural, unrefined food from their
own locale. As soon as refined, sugared foods were imported as a result
of contact with "civilization," physical degeneration began in a way
that was definitely observable within a single generation. Any
credibility the sugar pushers have is based on our ignorance of works
like that of Dr. Price.
Sugar manufacturers keep trying, hoping
and contributing generous research grants to colleges and universities;
but the research laboratories never come up with anything solid the
manufacturers can use. Invariably, the research results are bad news.
"Let us go to the ignorant savage, consider his way of eating and be
wise," Harvard professor Ernest Hooten said in Apes, Men, and Morons.
"Let us cease pretending that toothbrushes and toothpaste are any more
important than shoe brushes and shoe polish. It is store food that has
given us store teeth." When the researchers bite the hands that feed
them, and the news gets out, it's embarrassing all around. In 1958, Time
magazine reported that a Harvard biochemist and his assistants had
worked with myriads of mice for more than ten years, bankrolled by the
Sugar Research Foundation, Inc. to the tune of $57,000, to find out how
sugar causes dental cavities and how to prevent this. It took them ten
years to discover that there was no way to prevent sugar causing dental
decay. When the researchers reported their findings in the Dental
Association Journal, their source of money dried up. The Sugar Research
Foundation withdrew its support. The more that the scientists
disappointed them, the more the sugar pushers had to rely on the ad me
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