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12 Steps to Whole Foods

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GreenSmoothieGirl Resource Library<br />

Dr. Colin Campbell: The China Study<br />

This is the largest and most comprehensive nutrition study in his<strong>to</strong>ry, conducted jointly by Oxford and Cornell<br />

universities. It offers the most empirical evidence ever gathered validating a plant-based diet.<br />

Colin Campbell is a professor of nutrition at Cornell University and has sat on the highest nutrition governing<br />

boards in the U.S. He is the son of a cattle rancher and believed, in his early nutrition research, that he would<br />

find lack of protein <strong>to</strong> be the cause of childhood liver cancer in the Philippines.<br />

He found just the opposite: the wealthier children with good access <strong>to</strong> meat/milk were dying of liver cancer, not<br />

the poor children who could afford only plant food. Time and again, Campbell and many other researchers<br />

discovered the same results: that in animals and humans, high consumption of animal protein causes all the<br />

modern Western diseases, including cancer, heart disease, au<strong>to</strong>immune diseases, and much more.<br />

The rodent studies are fascinating: two groups of mice are put on 5% animal protein pellets (casein, from milk)<br />

and 20% animal protein pellets, respectively. That parallels an almost-vegan diet versus the typical American<br />

diet. At the typical rodent life span, the 5% group were lean and healthy and the 20% group were full of<br />

cancerous tumors and many were dead (and all would die prematurely).<br />

Even more fascinating is how the researchers could switch the groups’ diets. Lean, healthy rodents develop<br />

tumors and die when placed on the 20% animal protein diet, and formerly cancerous rodents lose weight,<br />

tumors are eliminated, and they live and thrive when placed on the 5% animal protein diet. These studies were<br />

duplicated, with the same results, by other researchers all over the globe.<br />

Campbell went on <strong>to</strong> conduct the largest, most longitudinal, most comprehensive nutrition study in human<br />

beings in his<strong>to</strong>ry, yielding hundreds of statistically significant correlations. He has been studying 360,000<br />

people in China for about 30 years now. Whether or not you completely eliminate animal foods from your diet,<br />

this book is so compelling that you will be motivated <strong>to</strong> make a commitment <strong>to</strong> a plant-based diet and share the<br />

message with others.<br />

William Dufty: The Sugar Blues<br />

This book was written in the 1950s in a very provocative and engaging style. This seminal book is your chance<br />

<strong>to</strong> get up the motivation <strong>to</strong> kick the sugar habit. As many nutrition authors have stated, sugar is killing us. And<br />

it’s more addictive than cocaine. (I’m not telling you anything you don’t already know, am I?) Even more<br />

fascinating is Dufty’s claim that the sugar industry sabotaged his efforts <strong>to</strong> publish his expose.<br />

Sally Fallon: Nourishing Traditions<br />

This book provides a massive amount of great information and <strong>to</strong>ns of recipes (newtrendspublishing.com, 877-<br />

707-1776). I mostly disagree with the author about meat and dairy (which she embraces, in fermented and<br />

organic forms), in light of The China Study’s implications as well as a large body of other research<br />

documenting the virtues of avoiding animal proteins. But I agree with everything else she promotes, and the<br />

book is worth owning just for the fermented foods information and recipes, where Fallon is the reigning<br />

authority.<br />

© Copyright Robyn Openshaw <strong>12</strong> <strong>Steps</strong> <strong>to</strong> <strong>Whole</strong> <strong>Foods</strong> 343

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