Bishop of Colorado Springs Stands Up For The Truth!

Bishop Michael Sheridan of Colorado Springs has issued a new Pastoral Letter to the Catholic Faithful fo the Diocese of Colorado Springs on the Duties of Catholic Politicians and Voters, in which he says:

There must be no confusion in these matters. Any Catholic politicians who advocate for abortion, for illicit stem cell research or for any form of euthanasia ipso facto place themselves outside full communion with the Church and so jeopardize their salvation. Any Catholics who vote for candidates who stand for abortion, illicit stem cell research or euthanasia suffer the same fateful consequences. It is for this reason that these Catholics, whether candidates for office or those who would vote for them, may not receive Holy Communion until they have recanted their positions and been reconciled with God and the Church in the Sacrament of Penance. . . .

As in the matter of abortion, any Catholic politician who would promote so-called “same-sex marriage” and any Catholic who would vote for that political candidate place themselves outside the full communion of the Church and may not receive Holy Communion until they have recanted their positions and been reconciled by the Sacrament of Penance.

Go, Bish!

Shameless Promotion II

Was looking at my site stats and found that CatholicManiacs had blogged me:

Jimmy Akin is SO Cool.
Most of you probably know who Jimmy Akin… He’s the main apologetics dude over at Catholic Answers. And he’s into all sorts of similar stuff to the staff here at Catholic Maniacs. What stuff?

Babylon 5 and its creator Michael J. Straczynski
Stargate SG1
Jonny Quest (Go Here)

And he seems to share similar views on a host of other issues. Check him out.

Much obliged, guys!

Now I’m going to have a theme song stuck in my head for the rest of the day:

It’s time for Cath-lic Ma-ni-acs.
And they’re zany to the max.
They’ll blog till they collapse.
They’ve got baloney in their slacks.
They’re Catholic Maniacs!

The Pyramid of Evil

A reader writes:

One thing I remember seeing in the news is that children in the US are much more overweight than in past generations.

Actually, the problem is much worse than children. The whole US population is much more overweight than in past generations. According to current statistics, two thirds of the American population is overweight (having a Body Mass Index [BMI] of 25 or more) and one third of the population is obese (having a BMI of 30 or more). This means that only a third of the population has a healthy weight by BMI reckoning [Source]. Now, there are some problems with the BMI scale (it doesn’t take into account muscular people or people who have suffered muscle loss), but it provides enough of a benchmark to show that there is a huge problem. Further, the problem is getting worse, and the trend toward obesity has been dramatically accellerating in recent years.

If your explanation of weight gain is true, and it may very well be, how does one also explain the much greater incidence of obesity among children (as well as adults) than in past generations? If the problem of obesity is primary biological, why would we see such a large increase in the percentage of obesity in today’s generations?

Actually, I haven’t thus far commented on why people gain weight. I’ve merely pointed out that the body tries to maintain a particular weight level homeostatically, which is why people find significant weight loss so difficult: Your body fights you as you start trying to lose. Under most diet strategies, the body will simply up your hunger level and give you cravings to get you to make up the calories that you are trying to avoid by following your diet program. How a person got to being overweight is a different question.

As far as why our generation is so much more overweight than prior ones, there are three basic reasons:

  • The first reason is that we exercise less than former generations did. A hundred years ago, most people worked outdoors, which meant much more physical activity than we office-dwellers get today.
  • The second reason is that we take in more calories per day than prior generations
  • The third reason has to do with your question concerning the nature of the food we eat:

Perhaps it is not only a function of how many calories one eats, but also what kinds of calories one eats. Does a person gain more weight from eating 500 calories worth of donuts than they would from eating 500 calories worth of fruit, for example?

The form of the calories don’t matter that much in and of themselves. A thousand calories of protein or fat or carbohydrates is still a thousand calories. But the type of calories does have an effect on the body’s metabolism because the body has to do different things in order to burn different macro-nutrients (i.e., protein, fat, and carbohydrates). If you change the ratio of the macro-nutrients you are eating, your body’s metabolism changes in order to digest and/or store them.

And that’s where part of the problem comes in: One of the macro-nutrients–carbohydrates–triggers an insulin response in the body that can send your blood sugar skyrocketing (which is why diabetics have to regulate their carbohydrate intake and often need to take insulin to help control their blood sugar). But blood sugar will quickly fall again, and when that happens your body starts to get weak (which is why people get sleepy in the hour after lunch), and your body triggers a new hunger response in order to get you to eat more and thus raise the blood sugar level back to where it was (which is why you get hungry an hour after eating carbyhodrate-rich Asian food). The result is that eating too many carbohydrates puts you on a blood sugar roller-coaster that keeps leaving you weak and hungry, and when you eat to get your blood sugar back up, you take in more calories.

Now, guess what the big change has been in the last hundred years in our diets? That’s right: We take in way more carbohydrates, particularly refined carbohydrates that will make your blood sugar go nuts. Wherever this high-calorie, high-carb, high-refined carb “Western diet” gets introduced in the world, the problems of overweight, diabetes, and heart disease quickly follow. It’s simply not what our species is meant to eat. We’re hunter-gatherers by nature, and hunter-gatherers have a diet rich in protein and fat but not carbs, and especially not refined carbs.

Now, why has the weight problem been accellerating in America? Here’s part of the reason:

foodpyramidI’m sure you recognize the famous “Food Pyramid” or, as I prefer to call it, the “PYRAMID OF EVIL.” Like everbody else, I assumed when the pyramid first came out that it represented the diet you were supposed to eat to be healthy, but back then I hadn’t studied diet and nutrition. After my weight situation forced me to do so, I came back, looked at the pyramid again, and was shocked. “Man! This is the Give-Your-Children-Diabetes Pyramid!” I exclaimed.

The recommendations it makes are absolutely insane. It’s way out of whack with what our species is designed to eat. Six to eleven servings of grain a day is completely crazy for a hunter-gatherer species. The additional two to four servings of fruit only makes the problem worse.

People have the idea that fruit is a healthy food that ought to be eaten in large quantities, but this falls apart when one applies a little common sense. Ask yourself: What is the one foodstuff that everybody (hi-carb dieters, lo-carb dieters, the Food Pyramid, everbody) agrees needs to be eaten in very limited quantities? Sugar. Now, what is it that makes up prefer to eat fruit over vegetables? Sugar. Fruit has lots of sugar in it. In fact, that’s the main difference between a fruit and a vegetable: What we call a fruit has more sugar than what we call a vegetable. Biologically, they tend to perform the same function (they both tend to be the seed-bearing parts of a plant). One simply tastes better to us because it has more sugar in it, and so we have a different word for it.

If you compare the amount of sugar and other carbohydrates in fruits to the amount in manmade confections, the differences are not that great. They can even stand your expectations on their head. A typical 8″ banana that you’d buy in a store has 31 grams of carbohydrates in it. By contrast, a Hostess powdered sugar donut has only 19 grams of carbs. There are some advantages of fruit over pastry, but not near as much as people have been led to believe. About the best that I can say for most fruits is that they are less unhealthy as a major component of your diet (though, as with anything, in limited quantities they’re fine).

Now, here’s something you probably didn’t know about the Food Pyramid: Know which government agency puts it out? You’d think that it would be one of the ones that monitors public health, like the Food and Drug Administration or the National Institutes of Health or even the Center for Disease Control, right? Wrong. It’s a creature of the United States Department of Agriculture–the body tasked with monitoring and (in practice) looking after the interests of the farm industry.

The Food Pyramid is a marketing ploy designed to get people to eat the foods that the farm industry wants them to eat.

Why does the farm industry want people to eat certain foods? Look at the ones at the base of the food pyramid and compare them to those at the top. Except for the “use sparingly” category, the foods at the top almost all (a) come from animals and (b) require refrigeration. The ones at the bottom almost all (a) come from plants and (b) don’t require refrigeration. The significance of those facts is that the ones at the bottom of the pyramid are all low-cost to manufacture (plants don’t require as much investment to raise as animals) and high-profit items (because the cost of the end product doesn’t have things like refrigeration coming out of its profit margin).

Getting people to eat low-cost, high-profit foods may serve the interests of agribusiness, but those aren’t the foods our species was designed to rely upon, and making them the principal components of our diet is bound to lead to problems–like overweight, diabetes, and heart disease.

Exercise Not A Cure-All

A reader writes:

I agree that just because someone is overweight doesn’t necessarily mean they eat to much…however it does mean they don’t exercise

I’m sure that you probably don’t mean this to be taken as a technical statement, but . . . it’s . . . not . . . true. It comes across as a diss to people who are overweight. It sounds like a cavalier dismissal of their situation, including whatever efforts at exercise they may be making. It would be better to make the statement in a more qualified manner, for as it stands it is subject to a number of criticisms:

1) Exercise is not a binary phenomena. People don’t fall into two classes of “those who exercise” and “those who don’t exercise” with no further relevant distinctions. Physical activity is something that exists on a continuum, and merely falling into the “does exercise” category is not a guaranteed cure for the problem of overweight.

2) Even falling into the category of “does a lot of exercise” isn’t a guarantee of losing body fat. Look at professional football players. Those guys tend to get a lot of exercise, but they also tend to have a lot of body fat (because they consume more calories in order to simultaneously [a] keeping doing the exercise and [b] keep their bodies at the homeostatic weight points they want to remain at).

3) Depending on the metabolic state one is in, doing exercise can increase the appetite one has, as the body tries to stay at its homeostatic weight point and responds by increasing appetite as physical activity increases. If you just add some exercise without addressing dietary considerations, this is likely what will happen to you: You’ll just eat more. (Paradoxically, there are also states–which dieters can exploit–where the body decreases appetite as exercise increases. The point is simply that not everyone who exercises is going to lose weight.)

4) Even when one is in high weight loss mode, exercise is rarely if ever a sufficient condition for that weight loss. Exercise tends not to add that much to the calories we burn each day. Consider:

A 6’0″, 200 lb., 30 year old man is likely to have a Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) of 2019 calories per day (BMR Calculator). This is the number of calories he needs just to lay in bed, without adding any physical activity. If you add his daily work duties to this (let’s say he does office work), you might get the number up to 2500 calories.

Let’s just stick with his BMR for the moment, though. How much physical activity would he need in order for exercise to equal what he needs to just keep the lights on and the machinery working? Well, he’d need to generate another 2019 of calorie burning through exercise. How much is that? It depends on the exercise he does, but let’s take a common one that is easily within the reach of almost all dieters: walking. If a person of his weight walks briskly for half an hour, he will burn approximately 220 calories. This means that in order for his exercise-based calories to equal his BMR-based calories, he would have to walk briskly for 4.6 hours a day. (NOTE: There are some quibbles to make with these numbers, but they don’t affect the scale of exercise required, so we can stick with these numbers for purposes of showing the principle.)

Very few people are able to make that kind of exercise investment, and so exercise rarely plays as big a role in calorie expenditure as BMR. The result is that diet rather than exercise tends to be the most important factor in weight loss. In order to effectively lose weight, dietary change is what is needed. Exercise is an important adjunct to this (otherwise I wouldn’t do five miles of aerobic power walking per day, plus weight training), but exercise by itself is not the solution to weight problems for most people. It’s not even the major factor. Diet is more important.

6) Exercise also is not a necessary condition for weight loss. A few years ago I was dealing with a significant weight problem and lost almost seventy pounds without doing any exercise, simply by making a dietary change.

Diet rather than exercise tends to be the dominant factor in weight loss. The trick is, how to take in less calories than you expend without being eaten alive by hunger–a subject I imagine we’ll end up discussing in the fullness of time.

Terrorism Hits Lowest Level In 34 Years!

Some good news in the War on Terror:

The fights in Iraq appear to be having a positive effect on the War on Terror. Osama bin Laden has had a lot of reasons to hit the bottle of Old Jihad lately. According to a State Department report released last month, terrorism hit its lowest level in 34 years in 2003. While terrorists killed 307 individuals that year, it was still a pronounced improvement from the 725 killed in 2002. There are two likely reasons for that dramatic reduction. Over 3,400 suspected members of al Qaeda have been locked up. Many others have likely gone to Iraq. While being engaged (and being detained, and being killed) by Coalition soldiers, those terrorists are not attacking Western civilians [Source].

Thomas Sowell on the Brown Decision

sowellI tend not to read the writings of pundits, liberal or conservative, because I find them too prone to spin and rhetoric and not prone enough to serious data collection and analysis. As a result, I find Thomas Sowell fascinating. He produces a higher level of analysis, with better data underlying it, and that makes him worth reading.

We’re approaching the 50th anniversary of the Brown vs. Board of Education decision, and this week Sowell has been doing a retrospective on the decision, attempting to analyze its effects–positive, neutral, and negative.

It’s in three parts: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3.

The series is worth reading, though I think it’s weakest part is the third. It’s interesting, but I don’t know how much it has to do with Brown. In the piece, Sowell links the Brown decision to the era of judicial activism–which would be better termed “judicial legislation”–that it introduced. I don’t know that I buy that. While it’s true that Brown stood at the beginning of a major upturn in the amount of judicial legislation going on by the Supreme Court, I don’t know that this can be said to be an effect of Brown. It seems to me that one could equally well say that the Warren Court was simply more willing to legislate from the bench than prior courts and that Brown was just an early effect of this underlying tendency, not a cause of the judicial legislation that followed.

It’s been a while, though, since I did a lot of reading on the history of the Court, so that could be wrong. It could be that the Brown decision emboldened the court to engage in judicial legislation and established a willingness to engage in it that had not previously existed. I’d have to go to research to try to figure out which is the case and, since I haven’t done that research, I’ll be content for now with pointing out both possibilities.

BBC: Brain 'may trigger over-eating'

MEMO TO THE BBC: Get the loading dock ready. There’s a big truckload of “Duh!” coming your way.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m always glad when stories appear in the press pointing out that obesity is not simply a product of gluttony. I just get annoyed when this is portrayed as a revolutionary new discovery. It isn’t. We’ve know it for a long time. It’s simply that the news media (of which the BBC news service is at least ostensibly a part) has not done an effective job communicating the fact. Instead of doing real investigative journalism into the subject, they have been content to pass off to the public the expostulations of countless diet and exercise quacks, including that people are obese because they simply and irresponsibly eat too much.

Wrong.

Eating more calories than the body requires is part of the obesity phenomenon, but the situation is way more complicated than that, and it isn’t hard to tell why. Let’s do a little math:

1) Suppose that a particular 20-year old person needs to consume 2500 calories a day given his metabolism and level of exercise. (This is not at all unreasonable. The “2000-calorie recommended daily intake” that you read about on food labels is–for some unexplained reason–based on the calories consumed by the average post-menopausal woman. It is not representative of what a younger person or a male person needs to eat.)

2) Now suppose that the person actually eats 10% too many calories, or an extra 250 calories per day. Know how much weight the person will gain in a year?

3) 250 calories x 365 days = 91,250 calories. Since there are about 3550 calories per pound of body fat, the person would gain 25.7 lbs. in the course of a year.

4) Now let’s suppose that we project the trend into the future. Suppose that the person continues to eat 250 too many calories per day for a decade. At the end of ten years, when the person is 30, he will have gained 257 lbs. and can be expected to weigh between 400 and 500 lbs.

Know very many 30-year old people who weigh between 400 and 500 lbs?

Didn’t think so.

Even people who give no attention at all to their caloric intake (such people being legion) do not usually gain 26 pounds a year or end up weighing between 400 and 500 pounds by the time they are thirty.

The only possible explanation for this is that the great majority of people–even overweight people–are not overeating more than 250 calories a day.

Now let’s flip the situation around:

5) Suppose that the same 20-year old person underate by 250 calories per day? How many pounds would he lose in a year? That’s right 25.7.

6) And what would happen in a decade? He’d be dead.

If he were magically able to continue losing weight evenly throughout the decade, he would have exhausted his entire body mass before the decade was up. In reality, though, unless you are The Incredible Shrinking Man, you can’t continue to lose body mass indefinitely. You’d probably die around the time you hit 70-90 lbs.

This means that people do not undereat by more than 250 calories per day, either.

Except for a the rare cases of a few individuals who starve themselves to death or who gain 250 pounds in a decade, most people consistently stay within an average of 250 calories of where the number they need to metabolize each day or within about 10% of the needed amount.

Further, even people who give no attention at all to their diet do this. The only conclusion is that there is a mechanism in the human body that pushes us to stay within that range of our needed caloric intake. (In actuality, the range is narrower than I have indicated, but I wanted to use simple obvious numbers to make the point.) Our bodies have a “weight regulator” fuction that works like a thermostat, keeping our caloric intake within a modest range of the number of calories we need per day.

From a phenomenological perspective, the tools the body uses to keep us in that range are feelings of hunger and satiety. When the body wants to jack up our calorie intake, it hits us with feelings of hunger. When it wants to tamp down our calorie intake, it hits us with feelings of satiety.

This means that the great majority of overweight people are not simply gluttonously sucking down food. If they were, their weight would quickly spiral out of control and keep going up until they died. Instead, they are simply eating when their body tells them to eat and not eating when it tells them to stop. In other words, they are responding to the biological imperative that is implanted in them.

Now, for obese people something has obviously gone wrong with the situation or they wouldn’t be overweight, but for most the problem is not the vice of gluttony. They are simply doing what their body is telling them to do.

I don’t have space in this blog entry to talk about what has gone wrong or how it can be fixed, but I’ll be happy to do so if folks want me to.

For now, we need to bear the above in mind when we are tempted to look down on people who are overweight–or who are more simply overweight than we are. Unless they’re experiencing rapid weight gain at the moment, they’re not eating beyond what their bodies are asking them to.

BBC: Brain ‘may trigger over-eating’

MEMO TO THE BBC: Get the loading dock ready. There’s a big truckload of “Duh!” coming your way.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m always glad when stories appear in the press pointing out that obesity is not simply a product of gluttony. I just get annoyed when this is portrayed as a revolutionary new discovery. It isn’t. We’ve know it for a long time. It’s simply that the news media (of which the BBC news service is at least ostensibly a part) has not done an effective job communicating the fact. Instead of doing real investigative journalism into the subject, they have been content to pass off to the public the expostulations of countless diet and exercise quacks, including that people are obese because they simply and irresponsibly eat too much.

Wrong.

Eating more calories than the body requires is part of the obesity phenomenon, but the situation is way more complicated than that, and it isn’t hard to tell why. Let’s do a little math:

1) Suppose that a particular 20-year old person needs to consume 2500 calories a day given his metabolism and level of exercise. (This is not at all unreasonable. The “2000-calorie recommended daily intake” that you read about on food labels is–for some unexplained reason–based on the calories consumed by the average post-menopausal woman. It is not representative of what a younger person or a male person needs to eat.)

2) Now suppose that the person actually eats 10% too many calories, or an extra 250 calories per day. Know how much weight the person will gain in a year?

3) 250 calories x 365 days = 91,250 calories. Since there are about 3550 calories per pound of body fat, the person would gain 25.7 lbs. in the course of a year.

4) Now let’s suppose that we project the trend into the future. Suppose that the person continues to eat 250 too many calories per day for a decade. At the end of ten years, when the person is 30, he will have gained 257 lbs. and can be expected to weigh between 400 and 500 lbs.

Know very many 30-year old people who weigh between 400 and 500 lbs?

Didn’t think so.

Even people who give no attention at all to their caloric intake (such people being legion) do not usually gain 26 pounds a year or end up weighing between 400 and 500 pounds by the time they are thirty.

The only possible explanation for this is that the great majority of people–even overweight people–are not overeating more than 250 calories a day.

Now let’s flip the situation around:

5) Suppose that the same 20-year old person underate by 250 calories per day? How many pounds would he lose in a year? That’s right 25.7.

6) And what would happen in a decade? He’d be dead.

If he were magically able to continue losing weight evenly throughout the decade, he would have exhausted his entire body mass before the decade was up. In reality, though, unless you are The Incredible Shrinking Man, you can’t continue to lose body mass indefinitely. You’d probably die around the time you hit 70-90 lbs.

This means that people do not undereat by more than 250 calories per day, either.

Except for a the rare cases of a few individuals who starve themselves to death or who gain 250 pounds in a decade, most people consistently stay within an average of 250 calories of where the number they need to metabolize each day or within about 10% of the needed amount.

Further, even people who give no attention at all to their diet do this. The only conclusion is that there is a mechanism in the human body that pushes us to stay within that range of our needed caloric intake. (In actuality, the range is narrower than I have indicated, but I wanted to use simple obvious numbers to make the point.) Our bodies have a “weight regulator” fuction that works like a thermostat, keeping our caloric intake within a modest range of the number of calories we need per day.

From a phenomenological perspective, the tools the body uses to keep us in that range are feelings of hunger and satiety. When the body wants to jack up our calorie intake, it hits us with feelings of hunger. When it wants to tamp down our calorie intake, it hits us with feelings of satiety.

This means that the great majority of overweight people are not simply gluttonously sucking down food. If they were, their weight would quickly spiral out of control and keep going up until they died. Instead, they are simply eating when their body tells them to eat and not eating when it tells them to stop. In other words, they are responding to the biological imperative that is implanted in them.

Now, for obese people something has obviously gone wrong with the situation or they wouldn’t be overweight, but for most the problem is not the vice of gluttony. They are simply doing what their body is telling them to do.

I don’t have space in this blog entry to talk about what has gone wrong or how it can be fixed, but I’ll be happy to do so if folks want me to.

For now, we need to bear the above in mind when we are tempted to look down on people who are overweight–or who are more simply overweight than we are. Unless they’re experiencing rapid weight gain at the moment, they’re not eating beyond what their bodies are asking them to.

And While We're On The Subject Of The Millennium . . .

Another reader writes:

My question is: In our parish men’s group the question of the 1000 year reign mentioned in the Book of Revelations was brought up. The question of it’s literalness was the focus. While it was discussed that it is only figurative I wanted to get your response to this and any materials, articles and resources you can recommend.

I’d recommend this article on the Catholic Answers website.