jet

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] jet@hackertalks.com 2 points 10 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago)

This is my experience, if your friendly you get into friendly lobbies. Including teams!

However if your not friendly it doesn't take much to be cast into pvp lobbies! Go on a raid with a trigger happy friend....

It takes something like 10 non-pvp rounds to get into the friendly lobbies

And even one kos round will put you into pvp land.

So matchmaking is quick to put pvp people together, and slow to pull PvE people out of pvp.

But even the ideal PvE lobby isn't 100% friendlies. It's 85-95% friendlies, with one or two antisocial people for flavor.

When I spawn in I watch for raider flares and if I see more then I few I knows it's a pvp lobby and just exit asap

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 4 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Everyone should watch come and see, and when your done watching it... Go for a quiet walk.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Come_and_See

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 1 points 1 day ago

How many people are getting 150g of real bioavailabile protein every day?

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 1 points 2 days ago

Evergreen resources when IM comes up:

https://eylenburg.github.io/im_comparison.htm

https://www.privacyguides.org/en/real-time-communication/

Fwiw Ive tried them all, signal is the most accessible and I have hope for simplex, which hasn't had any measurable impact on my battery

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 2 points 2 days ago

its basically poisoning the food supply with extra steps, which i think is ridiculous to try to frame poisoning food as a ethical thing to do.

5
submitted 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) by jet@hackertalks.com to c/carnivore@discuss.online
 

This is fried chicken reinvented for the carnivore, keto, and low-carb world, and it’s about to change your entire comfort-food game.

In this video I walk you through exact ratios, technique, troubleshooting, and texture hacks to get that classic fried chicken crunch using only meat, eggs, tallow, butter, and seasonings. No almond flour, no pork rinds, no weird substitutes — just pure animal-based mastery with that signature Chris Cooking Nashville rock-and-roll flair.

https://www.chriscookingnashville.com/recipe-cards?cardid=4764877233361

Chicken Pieces

  • 1 whole chicken (cut into 8 or 12 pieces)
  • 18 g kosher salt (for dry brining chicken)
  • Beef tallow, lard, ghee, or other fat of choice for frying

Wet Mix

  • 237 ml heavy cream (or buttermilk)
  • 14.79 ml white vinegar if using cream
  • 2 large eggs
  • 5 g salt or seasoning of choice

Dry Mix

  • 177 g egg white powder
  • 54 g whey protein concentrate
  • 7 g baking powder (optional but recommended)
  • 7 g salt or seasoning of choice (to season dry mix)
[–] jet@hackertalks.com 2 points 2 days ago

And this is what they are willing to say in public! Imagine what they really think

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 2 points 3 days ago

https://community.frame.work/t/framework-supporting-far-right-racists/75986

We support open source software (and hardware), and partner with developers and maintainers across the ecosystem. We deliberately create a big tent, because we want open source software to win. We don’t partner based on individuals’ or organizations’ beliefs, values, or political stances outside of their alignment with us on increasing the adoption of open source software. We’ve sent out large quantities of hardware to folks at Fedora, Bluefin, Bazzite, NixOS, Arch Linux, Linux Mint, Omarchy, and many other distros, and have sponsored either the organizations directly or events with Linux Foundation, LVFS, NixOS, Debian, KDE, Hyprland, and others. Within the team itself, personal distro and OS preferences span basically every Linux distro you can imagine along with FreeBSD. I personally am running machines with Fedora (for machine learning), Bazzite (for gaming), Omarchy (general productivity), and Windows 11 (when I have to).

I definitely understand that not everyone will agree with taking a big tent approach, but we want to be transparent that bringing in and enabling every organization and community that we can across the Linux ecosystem is a deliberate choice.

Edit to add: This is a comment I recently added deep in this thread, but pasting it here so that folks don’t need to dig through to find it:

Update on Oct 14th, 2025:\

A number of folks have reached out to us over the last few days to ask that we share more about which organizations we sponsor. This is certainly something we should have been doing already for transparency, and today we’ve published the list of all of our 2025 sponsorships so far, which total around $215,000. We’ll be keeping this list up to date over time. In addition, we would love nominations of a broader set of mission-aligned organizations we can sponsor, and we’ve created a submission form for this. As you can see from the list for this year, our focus is primarily around funding organizations developing Linux distros and window managers, open source firmware, educational organizations doing open source hardware development, and open source infrastructure that our hardware products and website depend on.

Since this thread started in part around our donation to Hyprland, we wanted to provide additional specific context there. We decided a few months ago to be more deliberate about funding the maturity of the Linux desktop by providing support to both distros and window managers. On the latter, we started sponsorship discussions with the GNOME Foundation ($1,000/month), KDE Foundation ($10,000/year), and Hyprland (600€/month) at the same time, with the plan to announce them together. We sent the funding to Hyprland and GNOME Foundation last week, and have been working with KDE Foundation to finalize our sponsorship. We’ve also been working with GNOME Foundation on announcement timing, as they needed to update the sponsor list on their site. We missed on letting Hyprland know that we wanted to announce these together, and they shared the sponsorship shortly after receiving it last week.

On Hyprland specifically, we were aware that there was past toxicity and controversy in their community, so we did research into it before deciding if we could sponsor the project. What we found was that there were past failures in moderation early in the creation of the project that had resulted in a toxic community, that the project lead vaxry had overhauled moderation years ago as a result, and that the community as it currently stands does not represent the one in which the issues occurred. Over the last few days, we’ve gotten additional outreach from others in the community who were initially concerned about our sponsorship of Hyprland who did their own research and came to a similar conclusion to what we did.

Going forward on this topic:

  1. We are going to continue to update our list of sponsorships as we go to give transparency on what we’re monetarily backing. As noted above, in general we want to coordinate the updates with the organizations we sponsor so that their website updates and announcements happen around the same time as ours.
  2. We’re requesting that you provide additional nominations of mission-aligned organizations that we should sponsor. Note that in the near-to-mid term, we’re still prioritizing organizations focused on open source firmware, software, and hardware that make the ecosystem around our products more mature and accessible. If you have recommendations of other good organizations, please feel free to submit those in the form as well, but they may come into future funding cycles.
  3. Before we sponsor an organization, we will continue to research and confirm that as they currently exist, they uphold appropriate community standards and are structurally set up for that to continue to be the case.
  4. Although this thread has continuously spiraled into unproductive directions that have needed active moderation, we do still plan to keep it open for now and merge additional related new threads into it. Please remember to follow our forum rules though and keep conversation productive and free of personal attacks.
[–] jet@hackertalks.com 2 points 3 days ago (1 children)

I'm tired of endless purity tests, judge companies on the work they do. Not that they didn't hold the line on some canceled developer

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 2 points 3 days ago (1 children)

A gyrocopter!

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 4 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago) (2 children)

The sheer narcissistic paternalism of wishing to remove other people's choices really enrages me, especially as a justification to spread a disease that limits healthy food supplies....

 

TLDR: Spreading Alpha-Gal, which causes people who eat red meat to go into anaphylactic shock, through seeding ticks is moral because meat is immoral, but said over 10 pages

This paper shows how simply outrageous zealotry is, standing naked in front of us all encouraging the spread of allergies to healthy people for philosophical reasons.

People do die from Alpha-Gal syndrome (last month actually). This entire paper is rage inducing.

The bite of the lone star tick spreads alpha-gal syndrome (AGS), a condition whose only effect is the creation of a severe but nonfatal red meat allergy. Public health departments warn against lone star ticks and AGS, and scientists are working to develop an inoculation to AGS. Herein, we argue that if eating meat is morally impermissible, then efforts to prevent the spread of tickborne AGS are also morally impermissible. After explaining the symptoms of AGS and how they are transmitted via ticks, we argue that tickborne AGS is a moral bioenhancer if and when it motivates people to stop eating meat. We then defend what we call the Convergence Argument: If x-ing prevents the world from becoming a significantly worse place, doesn't violate anyone's rights, and promotes virtuous action or character, then x-ing is strongly pro tanto obligatory; promoting tickborne AGS satisfies each of these conditions. Therefore, promoting tickborne AGS is strongly pro tanto obligatory. It is presently feasible to genetically edit the disease-carrying capacity of ticks. If this practice can be applied to ticks carrying AGS, then promoting the proliferation of tickborne AGS is morally obligatory.

Canonical Link (paywall) https://doi.org/10.1111/bioe.70015

Full Text

From the conclusion:

Herein, we have argued that AGS is a moral bioenhancer and that its promotion is morally obligatory. Among other things, that means that researchers have an obligation to develop the AGS‐carrying capacity of ticks, and that means human agents are obligated to expose others to AGS (and possibly lone star ticks), not to prevent the spread of AGS or lone star ticks, and to undermine attempts to “cure” AGS. Indeed, given that AGS is a moral bioenhancement with no significant negative effects on human health (so long as one avoids eating meat), it is not a disease and thus cannot be “cured.”

Lots of assumptions baked into this conclusion... that there are no negative effects from avoiding meat...... Imagine if someone is allergic to plant toxins.....

4
Ran 62 miles fasted (www.youtube.com)
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 2 days ago) by jet@hackertalks.com to c/carnivore@discuss.online
 

Greg talks about his journey on the carnivore diet.

summerizer

Title: “I Didn’t Eat for 39 Hours… Then Ran 62 Miles (Fasted) — Carnivore Ultra Runner Interview”

Summary (from the video only; no sponsors, no CTAs):

• Background

  • Greg describes discovering the carnivore diet via a relative (his uncle).
  • Initial skepticism (“you need fiber/fruit/veg”) shifts after trying it himself.

• Pre-carnivore health/issues

  • Long-standing eczema/skin problems treated repeatedly with steroid creams and pills.
  • A severe rash two years prior led to more steroids; doctors framed it as “this is who you are.”

• Switching to carnivore

  • Adopted a meat- and egg-based diet after conventional approaches failed.
  • Within ~2 weeks he noticed significant improvement in skin/eczema.
  • Reports steadier energy, reduced food preoccupation, simpler meals, and less stress about recipes.

• Training/running context

  • Took up running ~1–1.5 years prior; later got into ultrarunning.
  • Began experimenting with fasted training runs (dinner the night before, then run without breakfast).

• The fasted 100K (≈62 miles)

  • Entered a 100-kilometer ultramarathon with a plan to remain fasted.
  • Did not eat for 24 hours before the start, ate only after finishing.
  • Total time without food ≈39 hours (24 hours pre-race + ~15 hours of racing).
  • During the race he consumed only water and electrolytes (salt-stick type: sodium, potassium, magnesium).
  • Took roughly one electrolyte capsule per hour to prevent cramps/fatigue.
  • Reports no GI issues, no energy crashes, and no “hitting the wall.”
  • Observed other athletes consuming large amounts of carbohydrates (he mentions ~80–100 g/hour as a common target among ultrarunners) and some experiencing bonks/crashes.

• Perceived effects/observations

  • Describes stable, even energy throughout most of the race; acknowledges normal late-race fatigue but no bonk.
  • Says he has “never hit the wall” since being on carnivore.
  • Notes that conventional endurance advice (high-carb fueling) conflicted with his experience.

• Adaptation period & practical notes

  • Warns athletes to expect an adaptation period (possibly 1–2 months of worse performance) when switching diets.
  • Emphasizes electrolytes (sodium/potassium/magnesium) and hydration on carnivore/fasted runs.
  • Typical pre-run approach outside of races: eat the evening meal, then run fasted the next morning.

• Social reaction & debate

  • Fellow runners were surprised he attempted and completed a 100K entirely fasted.
  • Mentions critics of carnivore and says he’s open to being a “guinea pig” for testing/measurement in the future.

Referenced papers (as mentioned in the video):
• None explicitly cited; no DOI-identifiable papers referenced by title or author in the conversation.

 

When most people tell their doctors they’ve gone carnivore, they’re met with fear, confusion, or flat-out resistance. But why? In this conversation with Dr. Tony Hampton, we break down why so many doctors are scared of carnivore, how to work within the medical system without giving up your health journey, and whether you really need your doctor’s permission to heal.

summerizerTitle: Why many doctors oppose the carnivore diet — discussion with Dr. Tony Hampton (board-certified physician & metabolic health expert)

Core question

  • Why do many doctors dislike or discourage a carnivore (“proper human”) diet?

Key points from the conversation

  • Medical training bias: Standard guidance emphasizes low-fat, high-carbohydrate patterns (e.g., DASH/old food pyramid with multiple daily servings of grains and fruits). When patients propose the opposite, many clinicians label it “dangerous.”
  • Lipids & risk markers: Rather than focusing on total LDL alone, the discussion emphasizes:
    • LDL particle characteristics (small/large particles)
    • Triglyceride:HDL ratio (target: <2)
    • Apolipoprotein ratios (ApoB:ApoA1) in the normal range
    • Inflammatory markers (CRP, ESR) in the normal range
    • Metabolic health measures: waist/belly size, blood pressure, blood sugar
  • Statin default: In conventional care, elevated LDL often leads directly to a statin recommendation, without broader metabolic context.
  • Fiber myth: The claim that fiber is required for bowel movements is challenged; examples given that carnivores (animals and people) have normal bowel function without fiber.
  • Protein/kidney concern: Carnivore/keto are characterized as high-fat, moderate-protein (not “high-protein”). Protein is not presented as harmful to kidneys in general; adjustments may be needed for existing kidney disease.
  • Evidence landscape:
    • A “Harvard study” is cited as showing favorable outcomes among people following carnivore, but it was observational; more randomized controlled trials are needed for clinician confidence.
    • Because carnivore is a ketogenic pattern, existing keto evidence is presented as supportive while awaiting carnivore-specific RCTs.
  • Practice realities:
    • Many physicians lack formal nutrition education; even proponents working inside large health systems aim to educate peers and integrate low-carb care.
    • Not all patients need to be strict carnivore; many benefit from moving toward low-carb.
  • Patient approach:
    • Share personal results and data respectfully; request monitoring of meaningful markers.
    • If a clinician is unwilling, consider finding a carnivore/low-carb-friendly doctor; patient autonomy over diet is emphasized.
  • Institutions & outlook:
    • Mentions professional groups (e.g., Society of Metabolic Health Practitioners) working on outreach.
    • Optimism expressed about broader institutional and policy openness to metabolic-health approaches.

Referenced paper(s) with DOI

  • Lennerz BS, Mey JT, Henn OH, Ludwig DS. “Behavioral Characteristics and Self-Reported Health Status among 2029 Adults Consuming a ‘Carnivore Diet’.” Current Developments in Nutrition (observational survey). https://doi.org/10.1093/cdn/nzab133

 

Cancer as a metabolic disease

The big fat surprise

Why we get sick

How not to get sick

Some nice physical reading ahead

 

You don't have to be rich to eat like Mitch

summerizerTitle: How much did I just spend for 2 WEEKS of food on CARNIVORE?

Scope: Speaker shows a Sam’s Club grocery delivery and breaks down what they’ll eat on a budget for ~2 weeks on a carnivore diet. Prices and quantities are as stated in the video.

Items & quantities

  • Smoked salmon: 2 packs, 1 lb each (total 2 lb).
  • Eggs (pasture-raised): 4 flats of 18 eggs (72 eggs total).
  • Chicken thighs: 2 large packs (~5.2 lb each) at $7.38 per pack; “enough for at least 10 meals.”
  • Hickory-smoked bacon: 4 lb total (brand mentioned as hickory-smoked/Wright-style).
  • Frozen beef burger patties: 6 lb total.
  • Optional add-on: a “couple of ribeyes.”

Notes on use/meals

  • Salmon is paired with eggs; also called out as a quick air-fryer option.
  • Burger patties are the main beef source (ribeye consumption reduced due to price).
  • Bacon and eggs highlighted as a go-to meal.
  • Chicken thighs planned across multiple meals (≥10).

Costs (as stated)

  • Main order total (including delivery and tip): $110.
  • Optional ribeyes: ~$30 for “a couple.”
  • Estimated 2-week spend with ribeyes included: < $150.

Overall takeaway (from the video content)

  • The speaker demonstrates a 2-week carnivore plan centered on eggs, chicken thighs, bacon, burger patties, and some smoked salmon, obtained via Sam’s Club delivery, keeping total spend around $110–$150 for the period.

Referenced papers

  • None mentioned in the video.
 

In this thought-provoking presentation, Nina Teicholz addresses the complexities and implications of the U.S. Dietary Guidelines. She highlights how these guidelines, established in 1980, have become the gold standard for federal feeding programs and medical associations, yet are correlated with rising chronic disease rates. Teicholz critically examines the dietary recommendations, arguing that the increase in carbohydrate consumption and the decrease in intake of fats, including saturated fats, may not be supported by the latest scientific evidence. Additionally, she delves into the controversy surrounding the guidelines and the need for reform in light of conflicting research.

summerizerTitle: The Guidelines are Broken, and Always Have Been — Nina Teicholz

Scope:

  • Summary strictly reflects the talk’s content as transcribed in the provided SRT. No sponsor/advertising or off-video commentary included.

Core thesis:

  • U.S. Dietary Guidelines are an “incredibly powerful policy” shaping school meals, military rations, hospitals, WIC/elderly feeding, and public messaging.
  • From inception, guidance (notably limits on saturated fat and total fat) rested on weak/indirect evidence and has not delivered the intended health benefits.

Historical setup & policy influence:

  • 1961: American Heart Association issues first official policy recommending Ancel Keys’s idea to cut saturated fat.
  • 1980 onward: U.S. Dietary Guidelines formalize low-fat, grain-heavy patterns; ripple effects worldwide.

What the Guidelines promote (as described):

  • Emphasis on fruits, vegetables, grains; non-/low-fat dairy; “protein foods” increasingly from non-animal sources.
  • Explicit ~10% cap on saturated fat.
  • Allowed/encouraged vegetable (industrial) oils; talk specifically mentions soybean oil.
  • Sugar guideline noted at ≤10% of calories.

Trends shown/claimed (from the talk’s charts and narration):

  • Americans ate more of what the Guidelines told them to increase (grains, vegetable oils) and less of what they told them to reduce (red meat, eggs); poultry increased.
  • Carbohydrates as a share of total calories rose; Guidelines simultaneously raised recommended carbohydrate amounts.
  • Despite alignment with guidance, obesity and diabetes rose sharply over time (presented as discordant with expectations).

Evidence grading & methodological critique:

  • Major clinical trials were reviewed and many did not support core low-fat/saturated-fat claims.
  • Process concerns:
    • Advisory committees (DGAC) allegedly avoided direct, transparent review of relevant RCTs on saturated fat and low-carbohydrate diets.
    • Reliance on external/secondary reviews and computer modeling rather than prioritizing clinical trials.
    • Inconsistent evidence grading; associative/observational results weighed over trials even when trials exist.
    • Committee composition and conflicts of interest raised as risks to impartial evaluation.

Specific topic notes mentioned:

  • Saturated fat: A 2020 “review on saturated fat” (described in the talk) is cited as emblematic of selective evaluation.
  • Lipids: Total cholesterol framed as an inadequate marker; discordance between LDL-C and outcomes referenced; interest in lipoprotein subfractions implied.
  • Red/processed meat: Claims of weak associative evidence with small effect sizes and heavy confounding; restrictions portrayed as poorly supported.
  • Eggs/dietary cholesterol: Historical limits described as lacking robust trial support; later evidence portrayed as not confirming harm for most people.
  • Refined grains: Allowances characterized as inconsistent with nutrient density and metabolic health aims.
  • Sugar: The speaker argues sugar received comparatively less emphasis than fat for decades.
  • Low-carbohydrate diets: Said to be under-reviewed/sidelined despite RCTs showing improvements in glycemia and cardiometabolic risk factors.

Policy stakes & international context:

  • Because the Guidelines drive procurement, labeling, reimbursement, and education, misalignment with trial evidence has wide consequences.
  • The talk suggests global scientists increasingly question the saturated-fat hypothesis; U.S. processes lag in updating.

Q&A highlights (end of talk):

  • Audience engagement touches on current perceptions of red meat and broader acceptance of claims despite evidentiary weaknesses.

  • Session ends shortly after a final audience exchange.

  • BMJ 2015 feature by Nina Teicholz critiquing the DGAC evidence base: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.h4962

 

This study claimed that high cholesterol on keto was safe — but did they hide the truth? I’m Dr. Eric Westman, and in this video I break down the controversial “Lean Mass Hyper-Responder” study, the accusations of buried data, and what the real science shows. After decades of clinical work with low-carb patients, I’ve seen how misinformation spreads fast, so let’s look at what actually happened here.

summerizer

Video Summary (for/against context; based solely on the video)

Context

  • Format: A reaction/rebuttal in which Dr. Eric Westman plays and responds to a critical video by Mike the Vegan about a ketogenic diet coronary CT angiography (“Keto-CTA”) study.
  • Core dispute: Whether the Keto-CTA study’s data and rollout support the claim that very high LDL/ApoB in lean, metabolically healthy ketogenic dieters did not predict plaque progression.

“Against” (Mike the Vegan’s critique)

  • Data handling / transparency
    • Accuses the authors of “gross manipulation” and burying key outcomes.
    • Claims the public rollout was mishandled, including release of a figure that a senior author later said “was not the final paper.”
    • Says some data had to be “squeezed” out of the authors and that this situation is unusual.
  • Study framing
    • Objects to calling it a “trial” or “prospective trial,” asserting it’s actually a prospective cohort and that repeated “trial” language is misrepresentative.
  • Missing/underplayed outcomes
    • Asks whether key CTA outcomes (e.g., percent change in non-calcified/total plaque) were “shoved under the rug.”
    • Highlights mixed outcomes across participants (some progressed, some regressed) and argues the presentation overstates safety of high LDL/ApoB.
  • Authorial disagreement
    • Points to apparent discord among study authors and cites Dr. Budoff’s statements criticizing how a figure was released/handled.
  • Call for oversight
    • Urges JACC: Advances (the publishing journal) to review what went wrong and at minimum issue a correction.

“For” (Dr. Eric Westman’s rebuttal)

  • Primary finding defended
    • Emphasizes the study’s central observation: in lean, metabolically healthy ketogenic dieters, LDL-C/ApoB did not predict plaque progression, whereas baseline plaque burden was a strong predictor of future plaque change.
  • Imaging method context
    • Stresses the distinction between CTA (visualizes plaque directly, including non-calcified plaque) vs CAC (calcified plaque scoring), framing CTA as a more granular modality for this question.
  • Heterogeneous outcomes are expected
    • Notes it’s normal that some participants regress, some progress, and some remain stable over time; interprets this variability as consistent with real-world clinical experience.
  • Study nomenclature and intent
    • Treats the “Keto-CTA” label as a colloquial descriptor; focuses attention on what the imaging showed over time, not on the “trial” vs “cohort” wording dispute.
  • Clinical takeaway for this population
    • Reiterates the population studied (lean, metabolically healthy, long-term ketogenic dieters) and the specific result (plaque predicts plaque; LDL/ApoB didn’t in this cohort over the measured interval).

Neutral clarifications presented in the video

  • Population & duration: Lean, metabolically healthy adults on long-term ketogenic diets underwent research-grade coronary CTA; follow-up imaging assessed plaque change.
  • Baseline plaque matters: Existing plaque at baseline was repeatedly described as the best predictor of subsequent change.
  • Outcome mix: Across individuals, progression, stability, and regression were all observed.

Papers referenced in the video (DOIs)

  • KETO Trial (baseline cross-sectional CTA)Carbohydrate Restriction-Induced Elevations in LDL-Cholesterol and Atherosclerosis: The KETO Trial (JACC: Advances, 2024).
    DOI: 10.1016/j.jacadv.2024.101109
  • Keto-CTA longitudinal analysisLongitudinal Data From the KETO-CTA Study: Plaque Progression and Predictors in Lean Individuals on a Ketogenic Diet (JACC: Advances, 2025).
    DOI: 10.1016/j.jacadv.2025.101686

 

Urgency meets circumstance!

 

This was a really well researched talk, surprisingly high quality.

summerizerTitle: 3 Reasons Why RFK Jr. Wants You To Eat MORE Saturated Fat

Core aims of the video

  • Clarify why headlines about saturated fat often sound alarming versus what the best evidence shows.
  • Keep the discussion apolitical and focused on study design and data quality.
  • Offer a simple, real-food template that can include saturated fat without fear, especially for people with insulin resistance.

Why many clinicians still fear saturated fat

  • The classic “diet-heart” model: saturated fat (SFA) can raise LDL; LDL is causal in atherosclerosis; therefore SFA must raise risk.
  • Guidelines and medical training have reinforced this logic for decades.
  • Some trials showed benefits when SFA was specifically replaced with polyunsaturated fat (PUFA), which shapes clinician perception.

What the best evidence shows (by study design)

Randomized controlled trials (RCTs)

  • A rigorous Cochrane review of long-term RCTs found that reducing SFA for ≥2 years lowered combined cardiovascular events by ~17%, with little or no clear change in total mortality; benefits were greater when SFA was replaced with PUFA. DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD011737.pub3

Observational cohorts

  • The PURE study (18 countries) reported that higher total fat—including SFA—was associated with lower total mortality, while higher carbohydrate intake was associated with higher total mortality. Total fat and SFA were not significantly associated with cardiovascular disease (CVD) or myocardial infarction; SFA showed an inverse association with stroke. DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(17)32252-3

Broad evidence syntheses / food-based framing

  • A 2020 JACC State-of-the-Art Review emphasized evaluating foods in their matrix (e.g., dairy, unprocessed meats) rather than isolating single fatty acids. It reported no benefit on CVD or total mortality from simply cutting SFA in isolation, and highlighted that food-based patterns and replacements matter. DOI: 10.1016/j.jacc.2020.05.077

How to keep the conversation apolitical

  • Be precise about study designs: distinguish RCTs (causal tests) from observational studies (associations).
  • Pay attention to what SFA is replaced with (PUFA vs refined starch/sugar) when interpreting results.
  • Focus on clinical markers and outcomes rather than teams or headlines.

Practical eating template (especially for insulin resistance)

  • Reduce refined starches and sugars.
  • Within a whole-food pattern, you can include natural sources of SFA (e.g., beef, eggs, butter, cheese, full-fat yogurt) without fear when the overall metabolic context is improved.

How to track progress (not teams or headlines)

  • Waist size
  • Triglycerides
  • HDL
  • Fasting insulin
  • Apo (e.g., apoB)

Bottom line from the video

  • The risk story for saturated fat depends on context and replacement. RCTs suggest event reduction when SFA is lowered (especially when replaced with PUFA), large cohorts like PURE do not support harm of higher SFA within varied global diets, and modern syntheses (JACC) argue for food-based guidance rather than blanket SFA limits. The video’s practical stance: improve metabolic health first; then saturated fat from whole foods can fit.

 

Back in 2011, Denmark passed a law taxing foods high in saturated fat. The tax was apparently effective in reducing saturated fat intake among Danish consumers, which reportedly dropped by about 4% during the time it was in place.

That's intense

TLDR Summary

  • There is no convincing evidence that replacing saturated fat with PUFA reduces risk.
  • Saturated fat is found in many healthy foods

This article builds on https://www.dietdoctor.com/researchers-challenge-who-draft-recommendations-on-saturated-fat-restriction

Which brings up these points

  • Foods containing saturated fats are very diverse
  • Unconvincing evidence that reducing saturated fat decreases heart disease risk
  • Reliance on LDL cholesterol values to determine risk
  • Many nutritious foods are high in saturated fat

TLDR for the TLDR - Chasing lower LDL numbers does not translate into better health in isolation.

 

Professor Noakes has published more than 750 scientific books and articles. He has been cited more than 16 000 times in scientific literature, has an H-index of 74 and is rated an A1 scientist by the National Research Foundation of South Africa. After coming across research which denounced current international dietary guidelines as fallacy, Prof Noakes started researching the effects of carbohydrates, proteins and fats on the human race. His research convinced him that a high fat, low carb diet is the healthiest option for many. After being left frustrated by a decline in his personal health, Prof Noakes has made it his mission to reverse the global trend and redefine the dietary guidelines. The Noakes Foundation is the catalyst for this change. It seeks to reveal what genuine healthy nutrition looks like and, in doing so, make a difference in the lives of millions of people.

summerizerTitle: How Do We Really Fuel Athletic Performance? — Dr. Shawn Baker & Prof. Tim Noakes

Participants

  • Host: Dr. Shawn Baker
  • Guest: Prof. Tim Noakes

Core Thesis

  • The prevailing narrative that high-carbohydrate intake is essential for peak athletic performance is overstated. Human performance can be supported—and in many cases improved—by relying more on fat oxidation, with carbohydrate needs being lower than commonly promoted.

Key Points

Metabolic Priorities & Fuel Use

  • Muscles preferentially burn carbohydrate when insulin is elevated; high-carb eating keeps insulin high and suppresses fat oxidation.
  • At rest, using “jet fuel” (carbohydrate) makes little sense metabolically; fat should be the dominant fuel outside of high-intensity bursts.
  • Muscle glycogen appears to act more as a regulator/signal of carbohydrate oxidation rather than a strictly limiting fuel during most efforts.

Glycogen: Role, Misconceptions, and Evidence

  • Classic glycogen-loading concepts have been overemphasized; performance does not track linearly with “topping up” muscle glycogen.
  • Studies cited from the 1990s: subjects with high muscle glycogen at rest still preferentially burned carbohydrate due to hormonal signaling (insulin), not because glycogen was limiting.
  • Infusion experiments (described) suggest carbohydrate burning can be driven by carbohydrate availability/insulin rather than necessity.

Hypoglycemia & Performance

  • Performance drops are linked to falling blood glucose during exercise; athletes often interpret this as “needing more carbs,” yet the underlying issue is metabolic inflexibility driven by chronically high-carb intake.
  • Training/lifestyle that improve fat oxidation reduce susceptibility to exercise-associated hypoglycemia.

Carbohydrate–Insulin Model & Metabolic Health

  • A high-carb pattern (especially frequent feeding) elevates insulin chronically, promoting carbohydrate dependence and insulin resistance over time.
  • Many modern athletes show signs of insulin resistance despite high training volumes; shifting to lower-carb patterns can improve metabolic health and fuel flexibility.

Low-Carb / Fat-Adaptation in Sport

  • Fat adaptation (weeks to months) increases the body’s capacity to oxidize fat at given workloads, decreasing reliance on frequent carbohydrate dosing.
  • For submaximal endurance intensities, fat provides ample energy; carbohydrate needs cluster around higher-intensity efforts.
  • Practical takeaway: prioritize fat-based fueling for most training/competition, with situational carbohydrates for decisive high-intensity segments if needed.

Hydration, Sodium, and “Electrolyte” Messaging

  • Sweat sodium loss is often overstated; the body adapts by conserving sodium with reduced sweat sodium over time.
  • Hyponatremia risk is driven more by overconsumption of fluids and excess sodium intake patterns than by sweat losses alone.
  • The sports drink/electrolyte narrative has commercially amplified sodium and carbohydrate needs beyond what physiology requires for most athletes.

Elite Performance Context

  • Success of East African runners is tied to lifelong habits, body composition, altitude exposure, and training culture—not to high supplemental carbohydrate regimens per se.
  • Training quality and metabolic health trump aggressive carb-loading in explaining elite outcomes.

Aging, Training, and Monitoring

  • Maintaining performance with age is feasible via consistent training, strength preservation, and metabolic health.
  • Personal monitoring (glucose, insulin context, performance metrics) can guide individualized fueling rather than defaulting to high-carb prescriptions.

Industry Influence & Narratives

  • Historical sports science was influenced by commercial interests (carb drinks/“electrolytes”), shaping guidelines that overprescribed carbohydrate and sodium.
  • Re-examining these narratives with physiology-first reasoning suggests lower carbohydrate requirements and more reliance on fat for most athletic work.

Actionable Summary

  • Train the ability to burn fat (dietary pattern + aerobic base).
  • Use carbs tactically for high-intensity efforts rather than continuously.
  • Avoid overdrinking and unnecessary sodium loading; let thirst and adaptation guide.
  • Track personal responses (energy, glucose trends, performance) to fine-tune fueling.

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