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Welcome to Call to Decision
The top five cancer-causing
foods
by Mike Adams
Ever wonder which foods should be strongly avoided by those at
high risk for cancer? We can begin identifying cancer-causing
foods once we know which ingredients in our food cause cancer.
Some of those ingredients are food additives and chemicals
used to enhance taste, while others are used strictly for
appearance or to increase product shelf life. The key to
avoiding cancer-causing foods is knowing which ingredients are
carcinogens -- or cancer promoters -- and then reading food
labels to permanently avoid consuming those ingredients.
Cancer tumors develop, in part, by feeding on sugar
in the bloodstream. If you eat lots of sugary snacks loaded
with simple carbs, you're loading
your bloodstream with the chemical energy needed for cancer
cells (and tumors) to proliferate. No biological system
can live without fuel for its chemical processes, including cancer
cells. Thus, one of the strategies to pursue for any
anti-cancer diet is to eat low-glycemic diet. That
means no refined sugars...
ever! No refined grains (white
flour, for example), no heavy use of sweeteners and the
lifetime avoidance of sugary soda pop. Aside from starving
tumors, eating foods low in sugar and avoiding simple carbs
will also keep your weight in check while helping prevent blood
sugar disorders such as type-2 diabetes.
What to avoid on the labels: high-fructose corn syrup,
sugar,
sucrose, enriched bleached flour, white rice, white pastas,
white breads and other "white" foods.
Hydrogenated and partially hydrogenated oils -- another danger
-- are developed from otherwise harmless, natural elements. To
make them hydrogenated, oils are heated in the presence of hydrogen
and metal catalysts. This process helps prolong shelf life but
simultaneously creates trans
fats, which only have to be disclosed on the label if the
food contains more than 0.5 grams per serving. To avoid
listing trans fats, or to claim "trans
fat free" on their label, food
manufacturers simply adjust the serving size until the
trans fat content
falls under 0.5 grams per serving. This is how you get modern food
labels with serving sizes that essentially equate to a
single bite of food. Not exactly a "serving" of
food, is it?
Besides being a cancer factor, trans fats promote heart
disease, interrupt metabolic processes, and cause belly fat
that crowd the organs and strain the heart. The essential
fatty acids that the hydrogenation process removes are
responsible for a number of processes in your body. When trans
fats replace these essential fatty
acids, they occupy the same space without doing the same
job. The "anchor" portion of the fatty acid is in
place (which is how the body recognizes the fatty acid and
puts it to work) but the chemically active part of the fatty
acid is twisted, distorted, and missing vital
parts.
After the hydrogenation process, the fatty acid can't
biochemically function in the same way. Things like brain cell
function, hormones, gland function, oxygen
transport, cell wall function (keeping things in or out of
your cells) and digestive tract operation (putting together
nutrients and blocking allergens) are adversely affected.
Food manufacturers don't tell you this on the product label,
of course. Your body needs essential fatty acids and you are
programmed to keep eating until you get them. If you're only
eating trans fats, you'll never feel fully satiated, because
your body will never get the fatty acids it needs for
essential function. Since cancer needs high blood sugar and
low oxygen levels, a person with lots of belly fat who just
can't seem to put down those trans fat cookies or crackers
(also loaded with flour and simple sugars)
presents the ideal environment for the development of cancer.
Since trans fats are often formed during the frying process,
we should also talk about acrylamides.
Acrylamides are not added into food; they are created during
the frying process. When starchy foods are subjected to high
heat, acrylamides form. A Swedish study found that acrylamides
cause cancer in rats, and more studies are under way to
confirm the understanding that acrylamides also cause cancer
in humans.
Sodium nitrite (and nitrates)
Food companies add sodium
nitrite into certain foods on purpose. This carcinogen is
added to processed
meats, hot dogs, bacon, and any other meat that needs a
reddish color to look "fresh."
Decades ago when meats were preserved, it was done with salt.
But in the mid 20th century, food manufacturers started using sodium
nitrite in commercial preservation. This chemical is
responsible for the pinkish color in meat to which consumers
have grown accustomed. Although today the use of refrigeration
is largely what protects consumers from botulism and bacteria,
manufacturers still add sodium nitrite to make the meat look
pinkish and fresh.
The nitrites themselves are not the problem. People get more
nitrites from vegetables
than they do from meat, according to research by the
University of Minnesota. During the digestion process,
however, sodium nitrite is converted to nitrosamine, and
that's where the cancer problems begin. Nitrosamine is a carcinogen,
but since it is not technically an
ingredient, its presence can be easily overlooked on the
packaging. Nitrosamines are also found in food items that are
pickled, fried, or smoked; in things such as beer, cheese,
fish byproducts, and tobacco smoke.
Knowing about all these ingredients doesn't mean there is
simply a "short list" of foods that should be
avoided. You have to vigilant and read labels constantly. Here
are the five worst offenders:
- Hot dogs:
The Cancer Prevention Coalition recommends that children
should not eat more than 12 hot
dogs per month because of the risk of cancer. If you
must have your hot dog fix, look for those without sodium
nitrite listed among the ingredients.
- Processed meats and bacon:
These meats almost always contain the same sodium nitrite
found in hot dogs. You can find some
without nitrites, but you'll have to look for them in
natural grocers or health food stores. Bacon is also high
in saturated
fat, which contributes to the risk of cancers,
including breast cancer. Limiting your consumption of
processed meats and saturated fats also benefits the
heart.
- Doughnuts: Doughnuts contain hydrogenated oils,
white flour, sugar, and acrylamides. Essentially, they're
one of the worst cancer foods you can possibly eat.
Reader's Digest calls doughnuts "disastrous" as
a breakfast food, and many experts agree it's probably one
of the worst ways to start the day.
- French fries: Fries are made with hydrogenated
oil and fried at high temperatures. Some chains even add
sugar to their fry recipe to make them even more
irresistible. Not only do they clog your arteries with
saturated fat and trans fat, they also contain
acrylamides. They should be called "cancer
fries," not French fries.
- Chips / crackers / cookies:
These generally contain white flour and sugar as well as
trans fats, but it's not enough to simply look for these
ingredients on the label; you have to actually
"decode" the ingredients list that food
manufacturers use to deceive consumers. They do this by
hiding ingredients (such as hiding MSG in yeast
extract, or by fiddling with serving sizes so they
can claim the food is trans fat free, even when it
contains trans fats (the new Girl Scout cookies use this
trick).
Besides avoiding these foods, what else can consumers do to
reduce their risk of cancer? The main things are simple: Eat
unprocessed foods and base your diet largely on plants.
Consume foods that have omega-3 fats and other essential fatty
acids. Eat lots of fruits and vegetables; many common ones
have known cancer-fighting
properties. Get regular vigorous exercise, since tumors cannot
thrive in highly oxygenated environments. Keep your blood
sugar stable to avoid being an all-you-can-eat buffet for
cancer cells.
Eat foods high in natural vitamin C, a nutrient that deters
the conversion of nitrite into nitrosamine and promotes
healthy immune function. Make sure you get adequate amounts of
cancer-fighting vitamin D through exposure to sunlight --
about 10 to 15 minutes each day if you have fair skin, or ten
times as long if you have dark skin pigmentation. Stay well
hydrated to ensure that your body rids itself of toxins. Avoid
smoking and don't use conventional fragrance, cosmetics and
personal care products -- virtually all of them contain
cancer-causing chemicals.
Preventing cancer is actually quite straightforward. Even the
World Health Organization says that 70 percent of all cancers
can be prevented with simple changes in diet and lifestyle.
The truth is that most people
give themselves cancer through the foods, drinks and
products they choose to consume. In my opinion, over 90
percent of cancers are easily preventable.
By the way, don't you find it interesting that the cancer
industry seems to have no interest whatsoever in urging
people to avoid eating sodium nitrite, or to stop using
cancer-causing skin care products, or to get more sunlight on
their skin so they can prevent cancer with vitamin D? As
you'll read in many other articles I've written here, it is my
firm belief that the cancer industry has no interest
whatsoever in preventing
cancer, and it primarily interested in treating cancer for
profit. This view is generally agreed upon by noted cancer
experts such as Dr. Samuel Epstein and Dr. Ralph Moss. See www.PreventCancer.com
to learn more
from Dr. Epstein.
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