Donald Trump is not God for Your Nutrition
The Way-Too-Online Right has a new pet peeve, and it’s one that doesn’t agree with their leader, Donald Trump. It is the desire for health that forces them to accept dubious medical theories and have a hostile attitude towards the agricultural and chemical industries.
Health anxiety comes in many forms. Some men—and it is men in abundance-they will teach their online followers about the supposed benefits of eating only red meat, while other men talk about vaccines that contradict them. Some publicize the dangers of seed oil—that is, oil extracted from pressed seeds such as safflower and rapeseed.
These preoccupations have been circulating all the way up to the highest levels of this organization. Republican vice president JD Vance is ready to attend someone who avoids sesame oil who relies on ghee, a type of clarified butter popular in Indian dishes. “I’m connected to a lot of weird right-wing subcultures,” he said.
Vance is not alone in the above. The conspiracy theory that Big Government and Big Agriculture are colluding to poison the American people is gaining ground among Trump’s top allies.
In comments after suspending his presidential campaign and endorsing Trump, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., declared that “we’re just poisoning poor citizens” by not include enough vegetables or healthy foods in school lunch programs. Days later, Kennedy appeared on Fox News rail against seed oilwhich he said are “linked to autoimmune risks and ADHD,” not to mention “depression.” He added:
Seed oil is one of the healthiest things we have in our diet, and seed oil, the reason it’s in food is because it’s highly fortified. They are very cheap, but they are associated with all kinds of very serious diseases, including systemic inflammation, which affects all of our lives. It’s one of the worst things you can eat, and it’s almost impossible to avoid. If you eat processed foods, you will be consuming seed oil.
Kennedy’s suggestion that seed oil causes ADHD, which was not disputed by the Fox host, is false. National Health Organizations are actually available at 2022 study that “increased dietary intake of polyphenols (some seed oils contain polyphenols) is associated with a lower risk of ADHD in preschool and school-aged children.”
Kennedy and other conspiracy theorists made this case again when Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) invited them to Capitol Hill round talk with good health and nutrition. Speaking about the incident to Newsmax, Johnson without foundation suggested link between autism and seed oil:
Look at the explosion of things like autism, the explosion of chronic health, and [we want to] be able to ask the question, ‘well, what is the cause of this?’ And then you look at the history of, for example, the use of this vegetable—this seed oil—is one of the things that has gone up a lot. Another factor is the number of vaccines we give our children. It’s from a couple when I was younger to date over 80 ratings. I mean is that part of the problem? And we can’t even ask that question, and those who do—people like Bobby Kennedy—have been vilified, ridiculed. He paid a heavy price when he tried to advocate for children’s lives. I mean how sick is that?
As you may have guessed, the medical community does not agree with the claims made by the anti-seed oils movement. American Heart Association it says there is no credible reason to avoid these types of oil, and it can be useful.
Johnson is driving much of this on Capitol Hill, including the press and op-ed Monday on the GOP website where he criticized the seed oil and raised complaints about American health and the “medical establishment”.
Outside of soapboxing politicians, there are many self-proclaimed health experts who scare the public about seed oil while extolling the supposed benefits of unproven, sometimes surprising, foods. . These include the shock jock Joe Rogan and psychologist Jordan Peterson.
Peterson and other right-wing activists also subscribe to the “carnivore diet”. That’s how it sounds. Unfortunately for a Canadian psychologist, reducing your diet to animal products is considered bad for people and a sure way to increase your bad cholesterol (LDL) levels. Peterson expressed his love for it in an interview with skeptical Elon Musk.
When Musk explained that he injured his shoulder from “stupid wrestling with a world class sumo wrestler,” Peterson dismissed the idea that “a carnivore diet will fix that.” This is exchange what followed:
Musk: What is it? sorry?
Peterson: A carnivore diet will fix that.
Musk: It’s, look, it’s all meat. I am pro meat. I don’t think a carnivore diet will fix this.
Peterson: My wife was injured for 40 years. It resolved after two years on a carnivore diet.
Musk: Are you eating steak or something?
Peterson: That’s right. All beef. All beef.
Musk: Sure, sure. I’m a professional—I like meat, but I think this is—I think I’m probably going to need surgery or something. However.
Peterson: I would try the carnivore diet first.
And if you think that sweet sounds, wait until you meet movement blocking the sun.
The funny thing about all of this is how far it is from the god-emperor of the internet himself. Donald Trump is junk food personified. His longtime aide Corey Lewandowski wrote in his book that “In Trump Force One there were four major food groups: McDonald’s, Kentucky Fried Chicken, pizza and Diet Coke.” One Trump meal would include “two Big Macs, two Filet-O-Fish and melted chocolate.”
It’s not just a person’s eating choices that make Trump so bad as the headliner of the new Make America Healthy Again movement.
During his administration, the federal government nutritional values stripping fruits and vegetables from lunch programs (exacerbating the shortages that Kennedy criticized as “burning out poor citizens”). The Trump administration too greatly increased agricultural subsidies Kennedy described it as one of the forms of corruption in the country at one time reducing the role of the FDA food safety police.
In the pre-Trump era, Republicans mocked Michelle Obama’s school lunch program, which Trump. he immediately went back when he entered the White House. Now many of them criticize the poor state of school lunches, but without having a plan to provide a health and nutrition program. Instead, we are left with a constant stream of conspiracy theories pouring from the fevered lips of health cranks.
Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.) wrote an op-ed on Wall Street Journal Monday highlighted one of the many ways the US tax system can be unfairly punitive: Americans wrongfully detained overseas often return home after months or even years of struggling to get credit. a big one from the IRS is waiting for them. Additionally, the agency states that it is obligated not to grant favors.
Coons wrote:
Washington Post reporter Jason Rezaian was detained by Iran for 544 days in 2014-16. When he was released, the Internal Revenue Service expected him to pay back taxes with interest and fines totaling thousands of dollars, despite knowing he had been unfairly treated overseas. IRS agents say they have no legal authority to withdraw the charges.
Detained or wrongfully detained Americans should not be treated as tax evasion. That’s why in March I introduced the Stop Tax Penalties on American Hostages Act and Sen. South Dakota Republican Mike Rounds. The bill would prevent the IRS from issuing late penalties to former hostages and wrongful convictions.
Just as debtors can’t file with the IRS, they also can’t pay off credit cards, car loans or mortgages. These missed payments can damage their credit score. If they don’t earn a salary while in prison, they don’t pay income taxes, reducing their Social Security benefits when they retire.
Fortunately, Coons and his fellow Republicans, North Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis and North Dakota Sen. Mike Rounds, are working to correct these errors.
Read the whole story here.
#Donald #Trump #God #Nutrition