Whatever the case may be, a whole host of new diseases cropped up over the past 100 years just as seed oils and other industrialized food products were being introduced. Maybe seed oils aren't the issue, but there's good reason to believe they play a significant part.
>>13696842>It's all correlative basicallyThat's nutritional science these days.
There is a serious and more grounded issue with seed oils, and that's omega-6 content. Popular seed oils far and away are the primary input of omega-6 in the modern diet, and I believe there's actual research to back up how unhealthy those are when out of whack with other inputs.
That plus novel feed for livestock has greatly upset a central fat/cholesterol balance in humans.
>>13696609>bell pepperNightshade eaten. Opinion discarded.
>>13696926>paleotardsI think these guys are focused more on pre-civilized diets (hunting/gathering) that simply ancestral post-pastoral diets (heavy grain). There's a point there, that we evolved for hundreds of thousands of years eating X and then suddenly changed 5-10,000 years ago to eating Y and then changed about 100 years ago to eating Z, and then all of a sudden infinity issues popped up, so maybe stop eating Z, and maybe while Y isn't instadeath we should go back to X.
To add, they did not have refined grains until around the 20th century. Modern white bread type flour is often literally bleached, dosed with chemicals, and has the most nutritious part of the grain removed. This also vastly impacts the digestibility and accelerates glycemic loads.