Tag: vegetarian
What Exactly Makes Up A Healthy Diet?

What Exactly Makes Up A Healthy Diet?

By David Templeton, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (TNS)

BOSTON — Put 20 of the world’s top nutrition scientists in a room together and what do you get? A 90-minute debate about what a vegetable is and, specifically, whether tubers such as potatoes fit in that category.

While the scientists couldn’t come to a consensus on potatoes at the recent Oldways conference, they did — finally — provide clarity overall on what we’re supposed to eat as part of a healthful diet: more vegetables, fruits, whole grains, low- or non-fat dairy, seafood, legumes and nuts. The group also recommended moderate alcohol consumption, with lower consumption of red and processed meats, sugar-sweetened drinks and refined grains.

Following this pattern should help people avoid spikes in blood sugar, clogged arteries, digestive disorders and chronic disease, it said.

The group also agreed with the 2015 Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee’s endorsement of the Mediterranean Diet, the Vegetarian Diet and the Healthy American Diet.

Oldways, a Boston-based nutrition information nonprofit headed by Sara Baer-Sinnott, led the charge in seeking common ground on which foods and food groups are healthful and which ones people should limit or avoid.

A key problem she sees is the daily barrage of media reports about bacon and butter being good, or kale being toxic, or meat diets being the ultimate in good health. This prompted her to invite 20 of the leading nutrition scientists — Walter Willett, David Katz, Dean Ornish, Neal Barnard, T. Colin Campbell and S. Boyd Eaton among them — to work on a consensus of what foods can extend longevity and prevent chronic disease to benefit people and the planet.

Food and nutrition journalists and bloggers also were invited to discuss how and why the science so often is distorted by reports extolling the virtues of foods long deemed unhealthful while condemning foods scientifically proven to be beneficial. The often noted example was Time magazine’s June 2014 cover story, “Bacon is back.”

“No wonder people say they are confused and have no idea how they should eat and therefore just give up,” Oldways stated in its conference introduction. “Adding to the confusion, public perception is that nutrition advice changes every day, leaving many of us scratching our heads and saying, ‘Can’t those experts agree on anything?’ “

Dr. Eaton, the Harvard scientist who is known as the father of the Paleo Diet, surprised the other scientists by noting that whole plant foods were healthiest, and that he recommended meat consumption only a few times a month, with fish being the most healthful meat. The consensus was that meat consumption should focus mostly on fish and less so, poultry. Beef and processed meats should be limited or avoided.

The Common Ground conference, held Nov. 17-18, wasn’t a cakewalk. It was more of a food fight, with advocates for various diets, including vegans, Paleo and Mediterranean diets, convening with others advocating the benefits of meat and dairy in one room for many hours.

Hence, the sizzling debate about the healthfulness of potatoes. “There was not common ground on including potatoes,” said Dr. Willett, the Harvard University who helped lead the conference.

In addition to offering general support for the Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee recommendations issued in February, it opposed Congress’ decision to censor that committee’s recommendations advocating sustainability.

“Food insecurity cannot be solved without sustainable food systems,” states the Common Ground report. “Inattention to sustainability is willful disregard for the quality and quantity of food available to the next generation, i.e., our own children.”

Oldways is establishing a network of scientists, including many involved in the conference, as a media resource for stories about food, nutrition, including those rogue scientific studies that counter more established nutritional science without regard for the methodology or quality of the study. The news-making studies often lack supportive studies.

“When Sara contacted me, we were working on parallel paths,” said Dr. Katz, a Yale University nutritionist who is founding director of its Prevention Research Center and president of the American College of Lifestyle Medicine.

The consensus statement can be read here: oldwayspt.org

©2015 Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Photo: All kinds of nuts, such as walnuts, above, play a key role in a healthy diet, according to scientists and dietitians. (Larry Roberts/Pittsburgh Post-Gazette/TNS)

 

Charity Declares New York Vegan Capital Of 2014

Charity Declares New York Vegan Capital Of 2014

New York (AFP) — Animal rights charity PETA declared New York vegan capital of the world on Wednesday as Scottish actor Alan Cumming unveiled a replica of the Manhattan skyline carved out of vegetables.

Dan Mathews, senior vice president of PETA, said the Big Apple was “2014 most vegan-friendly city” of the year due to a first vegetarian public school, vegan fast-food outlets, and increasing offshoots of vegan gourmet restaurants.

Mathews said celebrities such as Beyonce and Jennifer Lopez were among those who had taken the 22-day vegan cleanse, saying that incorporating vegan elements into diets was healthy.

“I am a vegan and to be in a city which is so vegan friendly is great,” Cumming, who went vegan a couple of years ago and currently stars on Broadway in “Cabaret,” told reporters.

“Everyone realizes that these things are delicious and good for you and I think it’s an indication of how we’re becoming more conscious about what we do to our bodies,” he added.

Previous winners of “most vegan-friendly city” are Los Angeles, London, and Austin, Texas, Mathews said.

The vegetable skyline took three days to carve from squash, taro root, radishes, eggplant, broccoli, carrots, lemongrass, banana leaves, and beets by food artist James Parker, organizers said.

It was shown to New York mayor Bill de Blasio, with whom Cumming said he discussed Thursday’s independence referendum in Scotland.

Cumming, who on Wednesday published an op-ed in The New York Times calling for independence, told AFP he would not be able to vote because he was in New York.

City Council member Corey Johnson said he was “thrilled” that New York was number one in vegetarian and vegan dining, saying there were more than 140 vegetarian restaurants in the city.

PETA, known for its media stunts, is the largest animal rights organization in the world, with more than three million members and supporters.

AFP Photo/Jewel Samad

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Vegetarian Activists Sue Two Baltimore Cops, Allege Free Speech Violation

Vegetarian Activists Sue Two Baltimore Cops, Allege Free Speech Violation

By Luke Broadwater, The Baltimore Sun

BALTIMORE — Vegetarian activists have sued in federal court two Baltimore police officers who forced them to stop leafleting at the Inner Harbor — the latest legal front after years of disputes over the constitutional rights of protesters in the city.

A former Baltimore teacher and three other vegetarian activists filed the lawsuit last week in U.S. District Court over events that took place in May 2011. The lawsuit, which does not name the city nor the Police Department, alleges the officers violated their constitutional rights.

Since then, a number of other lawsuits have prompted institutional changes. City officials agreed last year to loosen restrictions on when and where demonstrations can take place, and the Police Department recently instituted new rules ordering officers to allow citizens to protest in more locations and film officers in public places.

But the plaintiffs say they still have concerns that some rank-and-file officers aren’t following the rules — or the Constitution. They contend they had received permission from city government three years ago to leaflet in the area.

“The goal is to make sure that no officer feels they are above the law,” said Bruce Friedrich, 44, who was then a ninth-grade teacher at Baltimore Freedom Academy and now works for the animal protection group Farm Sanctuary. The officers “were trying to take advantage of people they thought didn’t know their rights.”

The Police Department and the mayor’s office declined to comment, citing the pending lawsuit.

Friedrich said he and six others were passing out more than 1,000 pro-vegetarian leaflets in downtown Baltimore, near the Barnes & Noble bookstore and the National Aquarium, among other locations, when police officers ordered them to leave the area.

Friedrich, who said officers refused to look at their permit documentation, began to record the officers’ actions on his cellphone, and the police ordered him to stop, according to the lawsuit.

“Unless they were very badly trained, they knew they were violating our rights and they did it anyway,” Friedrich said. “We’re attempting to ensure future people are able to exercise their rights.”

Friedrich’s attorney, Bryan Pease, said the plaintiffs had no issue with city policies and therefore chose to sue the officers individually. In such cases, the city represents the officers in court and covers paying any judgments for on-duty issues.

“The officers directly violated the city’s own policy,” Pease said.

He said he did not know the officers’ full names but would learn them upon receiving discovery materials in court. The city’s police union did not respond to a request for comment.

The Police Department has been sued multiple times over free speech issues.

Last year, Baltimore officials approved a payment of $98,000 to the American Civil Liberties Union to settle a federal lawsuit over protesters’ rights in Baltimore. In settling the suit — in which a group of anti-war protesters called the “Women in Black” were plaintiffs — city officials agreed to change the rules.

The new rules allow groups of up to 30 people to protest or pass out fliers without obtaining a permit at all city parks and 10 designated locations, including the downtown McKeldin Square. The rules also provide for “instant permits” to be issued by police when larger-than-expected crowds attend a protest.

McKeldin Square, long a city-designated protest site, had been taken over for two months in late 2011 by Occupy Baltimore, a national movement against income disparity, among other issues.

The protesters said the city’s Department of Recreation and Parks refused their request to permanently occupy all of the square. The city offered to provide tents in exchange for other concessions, but talks stalled and police cleared the square in a pre-dawn raid in December.

New locations that had previously been off-limits to protesters without a permit include Rash Field, Kaufman Pavilion, the area west of the Baltimore Visitor Center on the Inner Harbor, and the grass field between the World Trade Center and the National Aquarium.

Another lawsuit prompted the Baltimore Police Department to institute a new policy that prohibits officers from stopping people from taping or photographing police actions. Those new rules were unveiled as the city agreed to pay $250,000 to settle a lawsuit filed by Christopher Sharp, who said police seized his cellphone and deleted the video of an arrest at the Preakness Stakes in 2010.

Baltimore Police Commissioner Anthony Batts in March held a rare joint news conference with the American Civil Liberties Union, apologized to Sharp and declared: “We’re changing the culture in the Police Department as a whole.”

David Rocah, a staff attorney with Maryland’s ACLU chapter, was involved with both of the recent settlements.

“When we filed our ‘Women in Black’ suit, the rules that existed were not constitutional,” he said. “There ended up being a complete rewrite of the park rules in a effort to make them constitutional. The rules that came out of that are a significant improvement.”

Rocah added that he hopes the new rules will prevent future violations of the First Amendment. “Our goal when we litigate these cases is to vindicate the important rights at stake and to ensure that the problems don’t recur,” he said.

Friedrich’s suit does not seek specific damages. In addition to constitutional violations, it also accuses the officers of battery and unreasonable seizure. Friedrich, of Washington D.C., is joined as plaintiff in the suit by his wife, Alka Chandna, and fellow activists Elena Johnson of Cockeysville and Lesley Parker-Rollins of Lutherville.

Friedrich said the fliers he was passing out were not offensive in nature.

“They had vegetarian recipes and information about vegetarianism,” he said. “The whole thing was completely absurd.”

AFP Photo