Food is a bit like oil really. Just like people don't seem to be asking the obvious questions about oil, the more we hear about increases in cancer, heart disease, diabetes, and obesity, no one seems to be asking the obvious question - "well what's changed?" If heart disease, diabetes, and cancer were very rare 100+ years ago, well then doesn't it make sense to ask why? Apparently there isn't very much money to be made doing that. I've had an interest in food for years, and what people are 'designed' to eat. It sure isn't the food lining the shelves of the supermarkets!
I started eating organic food a good time ago, but kept eating more or less the same way I had been (a broadly 'healthy' modern diet). Since then I've tried all sorts (including a rather strange stint eating nothing but beans), but nothing seemed to be right. This time though, things are a little bit different. In fact my mother reversed here previously unexplainable anaemia (13 years) within two weeks of eating properly. No more iron tablets. She was quite happy to say the least.
We're lied to about more than just oil and resources! In fact I was quite impressed to see a reference to oil depletion in a book on food from the 70s!
Now I know the same sort of people that take interest in Peak Oil are the same sort of people to read books like this, but if you haven't I'd really recommend reading the following books:
Nourishing Traditions, by Sally Fallon
Nutrition and Physical Degeneration, by Weston Price (written in 1930s no less!)
Sugar Blues, by William Dufty
The Untold Story of Milk, by Ron Schmid
Pottenger's Cats: A Study in Nutrition, by Francis Pottenger
Wild Fermentation, by Sandor Ellix Katz
Once you read some of these books everything begins to fall into place. From the ever worsening anti-social behaviour of our society, to infertility. It's scary stuff!
By happy coincidence I haven't set foot in a supermarket in the last few months. All of my milk, vegetables, meat, and fish come from local farms and shops. I do have some sacks of oat groats, hulled spelt, and brown rice - but I'm actually using them, ha! There's also hardly anything in my recycle bins (someone nicked our tins/jars box but we don't need it anyhow).
So although I might be preaching to the converted, if not, I'd really recommend reading at least the first five of those books. If people started to eat more like this, I think we would become a lot less dependant on other people, and a lot of things would fix themselves. I mean just in my own experience, I'm losing weight, my teeth no longer feel loose and have become noticeably whiter, I no longer snore, and my excessive thirst (and bathrooms trips that accompany) have cleared up. You always have an inkling, but never quite think the wool has been pulled over our eyes as much as this.
ps. I'm not selling anything! I'm just a bit enthusiastic