Fifteen years ago this week, I had
an eye-opening experience…about perspective. As was my daily habit, on the way
to work I stopped at a food cart to order breakfast: coffee with heavy cream
and artificial sweetener, 2 fried eggs, plain, and 2 strips of bacon.
The cart was owned by a father and
son who were post-1989 immigrants from Russia who were both excited to be
taking a citizenship course. They quizzed me daily on American History and were
always amazed that I correctly answered every question they put to me, except
one day…
They asked me, “Do you know what
day today is?” I said, “No.” They were both delighted. They’d stumped me! They
said triumphantly, “It’s May 9th, the day that World War II ended!”
I smiled and replied, “You mean it’s the date WWII ended in Europe.” They both looked puzzled. I continued, “War
continued in the Pacific.” There was a long pause while they thought about
that, and then the son said, “Oh, you mean Vietnam!”
I had to explain that for the
United States: WWII was fought on two fronts; that the Japanese had attacked
the U. S. at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on December 7, 1941; and that the Pacific
theater of the war didn’t end until August ‘45 when the U. S. dropped atomic
bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Japan then surrendered, September 3, 1945, on
what we call V-J Day. Americans refer to the end of WWII in Europe as V-E Day.
To a degree it’s understandable
that Russians have a different perspective of WWII. U.S. military losses in 4
years of war on two fronts were only 5%
of Soviet military losses in 4 years
of war on one front. Every country has a chauvinist view of history, but
there’s no denying that U. S. deaths, none on its own territory, were just over
400 thousand,
whereas Russian military and civilian deaths,
most on their own territory, were 27 million.
A similar disparity exists today in
the battle over a healthy diet. The leaders of the public health and medical
establishments, and the civilian population that follows their advice, are
dying in droves from a multitude of metabolic diseases brought on by the diet
they eat. This diet has produced an epidemic of obesity, type 2 diabetes,
cardiovascular diseases, including stroke, Alzheimer’s disease, and increased prevalence
of many types of cancer, particularly pancreatic cancer
The vast majority of these victims
– both the leaders and the unwitting populace who follow them – are engaged in
a losing battle. And the agri-industrial complex that abets them, by producing
prodigious amounts of processed foods in accordance with the advice to eat less
saturated fat, more Omega 6-loaded, processed vegetable oils, and a diet
largely comprised of refined carbohydrates and simple sugars, is killing them.
I don’t blame the two Russian men
for not knowing about the war the U. S. fought in the Pacific before and after V-E Day. Their government was
justly proud of the enormous sacrifice the Soviet Union made to win WWII. Their
government should be faulted, however, for educating them poorly. I doubt that
they knew, for example, that U. S. industrial production provided huge amounts of war material in Soviet
flag ships sent from the U. S. west coast to Vladivostok, free from Jap attack due to a Soviet -Japanese non-aggression
pact!
Unavoidably, however, one must
conclude that the outcome of the “healthy diet” battle will be determined by
the leaders on the field of battle. If you continue to follow the government’s
advice, and go into battle led by General Mills and General Foods, and make
unhealthy choices, you will end up…well, up the (Battle) Creek.
The U. S. had a definite advantage in WWII. We
had two oceans to protect us, enormous natural resources, the industrial
capacity to produce the means to fight, and the individual, human potential to
meet the challenge. Today, as
individuals, we are faced with another challenge: to make the right choices
about what to eat, free from influence from an inherently conflicted
agri-industrial complex. You can
still make a decision to improve your
chance for survival in this battle. A new perspective can help you make that
choice.
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