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Soy in moderation is probably okay but here is an article by Joseph mercola

about some caveats of soy.

 

Cinderella's Dark Side

 

The propaganda that has created the soy sales miracle is all the more

remarkable because, only a few decades ago, the soybean was considered unfit to

eat - even in Asia. During the Chou Dynasty (1134-246 BC) the soybean was

designated one of the five sacred grains, along with barley, wheat, millet and

rice.

However, the pictograph for the soybean, which dates from earlier times,

indicates that it was not first used as a food; for whereas the pictographs for

the other four grains show the seed and stem structure of the plant, the

pictograph for the soybean emphasizes the root structure. Agricultural

literature of the period speaks frequently of the soybean and its use in crop

rotation. Apparently the soy plant was initially used as a method of fixing

nitrogen.13

The soybean did not serve as a food until the discovery of fermentation

techniques, some time during the Chou Dynasty. The first soy foods were

fermented products like tempeh, natto, miso and soy sauce.

At a later date, possibly in the 2nd century BC, Chinese scientists discovered

that a purée of cooked soybeans could be precipitated with calcium sulfate or

magnesium sulfate (plaster of Paris or Epsom salts) to make a smooth, pale curd

- tofu or bean curd. The use of fermented and precipitated soy products soon

spread to other parts of the Orient, notably Japan and Indonesia.

The Chinese did not eat unfermented soybeans as they did other legumes such as

lentils because the soybean contains large quantities of natural toxins or

" antinutrients " . First among them are potent enzyme inhibitors that block the

action of trypsin and other enzymes needed for protein digestion.

These inhibitors are large, tightly folded proteins that are not completely

deactivated during ordinary cooking. They can produce serious gastric distress,

reduced protein digestion and chronic deficiencies in amino acid uptake. In test

animals, diets high in trypsin inhibitors cause enlargement and pathological

conditions of the pancreas, including cancer.14

Soybeans also contain haemagglutinin, a clot-promoting substance that causes

red blood cells to clump together.

Trypsin inhibitors and haemagglutinin are growth inhibitors. Weanling rats fed

soy containing these antinutrients fail to grow normally. Growth-depressant

compounds are deactivated during the process of fermentation, so once the

Chinese discovered how to ferment the soybean, they began to incorporate soy

foods into their diets.

In precipitated products, enzyme inhibitors concentrate in the soaking liquid

rather than in the curd. Thus, in tofu and bean curd, growth depressants are

reduced in quantity but not completely eliminated.

Soy also contains goitrogens - substances that depress thyroid function.

Additionally 99% a very large percentage of soy is genetically modified and it

also has one of the highest percentages contamination by pesticides of any of

our foods.

Soybeans are high in phytic acid, present in the bran or hulls of all seeds.

It's a substance that can block the uptake of essential minerals - calcium,

magnesium, copper, iron and especially zinc - in the intestinal tract.

Although not a household word, phytic acid has been extensively studied; there

are literally hundreds of articles on the effects of phytic acid in the current

scientific literature. Scientists are in general agreement that grain- and

legume-based diets high in phytates contribute to widespread mineral

deficiencies in third world countries.15

Analysis shows that calcium, magnesium, iron and zinc are present in the plant

foods eaten in these areas, but the high phytate content of soy- and grain-based

diets prevents their absorption.

The soybean has one of the highest phytate levels of any grain or legume that

has been studied,16 and the phytates in soy are highly resistant to normal

phytate-reducing techniques such as long, slow cooking.17 Only a long period of

fermentation will significantly reduce the phytate content of soybeans.

When precipitated soy products like tofu are consumed with meat, the

mineral-blocking effects of the phytates are reduced.18 The Japanese

traditionally eat a small amount of tofu or miso as part of a mineral-rich fish

broth, followed by a serving of meat or fish.

Vegetarians who consume tofu and bean curd as a substitute for meat and dairy

products risk severe mineral deficiencies. The results of calcium, magnesium and

iron deficiency are well known; those of zinc are less so.

Zinc is called the intelligence mineral because it is needed for optimal

development and functioning of the brain and nervous system. It plays a role in

protein synthesis and collagen formation; it is involved in the blood-sugar

control mechanism and thus protects against diabetes; it is needed for a healthy

reproductive system.

Zinc is a key component in numerous vital enzymes and plays a role in the

immune system. Phytates found in soy products interfere with zinc absorption

more completely than with other minerals.19 Zinc deficiency can cause a " spacey "

feeling that some vegetarians may mistake for the " high " of spiritual

enlightenment.

Milk drinking is given as the reason why second-generation Japanese in America

grow taller than their native ancestors. Some investigators postulate that the

reduced phytate content of the American diet - whatever may be its other

deficiencies - is the true explanation, pointing out that both Asian and Western

children who do not get enough meat and fish products to counteract the effects

of a high phytate diet, frequently suffer rickets, stunting and other growth

problems.20

Soy Protein Isolate: Not So Friendly

 

Soy processors have worked hard to get these antinutrients out of the finished

product, particularly soy protein isolate (SPI) which is the key ingredient in

most soy foods that imitate meat and dairy products, including baby formulas and

some brands of soy milk.

SPI is not something you can make in your own kitchen. Production takes place

in industrial factories where a slurry of soy beans is first mixed with an

alkaline solution to remove fiber, then precipitated and separated using an acid

wash and, finally, neutralized in an alkaline solution.

Acid washing in aluminum tanks leaches high levels of aluminum into the final

product. The resultant curds are spray- dried at high temperatures to produce a

high-protein powder. A final indignity to the original soybean is

high-temperature, high-pressure extrusion processing of soy protein isolate to

produce textured vegetable protein (TVP).

Much of the trypsin inhibitor content can be removed through high-temperature

processing, but not all. Trypsin inhibitor content of soy protein isolate can

vary as much as fivefold.21 (In rats, even low-level trypsin inhibitor SPI

feeding results in reduced weight gain compared to controls.22)

But high-temperature processing has the unfortunate side-effect of so

denaturing the other proteins in soy that they are rendered largely

ineffective.23 That's why animals on soy feed need lysine supplements for normal

growth.

Nitrites, which are potent carcinogens, are formed during spray-drying, and a

toxin called lysinoalanine is formed during alkaline processing.24 Numerous

artificial flavorings, particularly MSG, are added to soy protein isolate and

textured vegetable protein products to mask their strong " beany " taste and to

impart the flavor of meat.25

In feeding experiments, the use of SPI increased requirements for vitamins E,

K, D and B12 and created deficiency symptoms of calcium, magnesium, manganese,

molybdenum, copper, iron and zinc.26 Phytic acid remaining in these soy products

greatly inhibits zinc and iron absorption; test animals fed SPI develop enlarged

organs, particularly the pancreas and thyroid gland, and increased deposition of

fatty acids in the liver.27

Yet soy protein isolate and textured vegetable protein are used extensively in

school lunch programs, commercial baked goods, diet beverages and fast food

products. They are heavily promoted in third world countries and form the basis

of many food giveaway programs.

In spite of poor results in animal feeding trials, the soy industry has

sponsored a number of studies designed to show that soy protein products can be

used in human diets as a replacement for traditional foods.

An example is " Nutritional Quality of Soy Bean Protein Isolates: Studies in

Children of Preschool Age " , sponsored by the Ralston Purina Company.28 A group

of Central American children suffering from malnutrition was first stabilized

and brought into better health by feeding them native foods, including meat and

dairy products. Then, for a two-week period, these traditional foods were

replaced by a drink made of soy protein isolate and sugar.

All nitrogen taken in and all nitrogen excreted was measured in truly

Orwellian fashion: the children were weighed naked every morning, and all

excrement and vomit gathered up for analysis. The researchers found that the

children retained nitrogen and that their growth was " adequate " , so the

experiment was declared a success.

Whether the children were actually healthy on such a diet, or could remain so

over a long period, is another matter. The researchers noted that the children

vomited " occasionally " , usually after finishing a meal; that over half suffered

from periods of moderate diarrhea; that some had upper respiratory infections;

and that others suffered from rash and fever.

It should be noted that the researchers did not dare to use soy products to

help the children recover from malnutrition, and were obliged to supplement the

soy-sugar mixture with nutrients largely absent in soy products - notably,

vitamins A, D and B12, iron, iodine and zinc.

Marketing The Perfect Food

 

" Just imagine you could grow the perfect food. This food not only would

provide affordable nutrition, but also would be delicious and easy to prepare in

a variety of ways. It would be a healthful food, with no saturated fat. In fact,

you would be growing a virtual fountain of youth on your back forty. "

The author is Dean Houghton, writing for The Furrow,2 a magazine published in

12 languages by John Deere. " This ideal food would help prevent, and perhaps

reverse, some of the world's most dreaded diseases. You could grow this miracle

crop in a variety of soils and climates. Its cultivation would build up, not

deplete, the land...this miracle food already exists... It's called soy. "

Just imagine. Farmers have been imagining - and planting more soy. What was

once a minor crop, listed in the 1913 US Department of Agriculture (USDA)

handbook not as a food but as an industrial product, now covers 72 million acres

of American farmland. Much of this harvest will be used to feed chickens,

turkeys, pigs, cows and salmon. Another large fraction will be squeezed to

produce oil for margarine, shortenings and salad dressings.

Advances in technology make it possible to produce isolated soy protein from

what was once considered a waste product - the defatted, high-protein soy chips

- and then transform something that looks and smells terrible into products that

can be consumed by human beings. Flavorings, preservatives, sweeteners,

emulsifiers and synthetic nutrients have turned soy protein isolate, the food

processors' ugly duckling, into a New Age Cinderella.

The new fairy-tale food has been marketed not so much for her beauty but for

her virtues. Early on, products based on soy protein isolate were sold as

extenders and meat substitutes - a strategy that failed to produce the requisite

consumer demand. The industry changed its approach.

" The quickest way to gain product acceptability in the less affluent society, "

said an industry spokesman, " is to have the product consumed on its own merit in

a more affluent society. " 3 So soy is now sold to the upscale consumer, not as a

cheap, poverty food but as a miracle substance that will prevent heart disease

and cancer, whisk away hot flushes, build strong bones and keep us forever

young.

The competition - meat, milk, cheese, butter and eggs - has been duly

demonised by the appropriate government bodies. Soy serves as meat and milk for

a new generation of virtuous vegetarians.

 

Marketing Costs Money

This is especially when it needs to be bolstered with " research " , but there's

plenty of funds available. All soybean producers pay a mandatory assessment of

one-half to one per cent of the net market price of soybeans. The total -

something like US$80 million annually4 - supports United Soybean's program to

" strengthen the position of soybeans in the marketplace and maintain and expand

domestic and foreign markets for uses for soybeans and soybean products " .

State soybean councils from Maryland, Nebraska, Delaware, Arkansas, Virginia,

North Dakota and Michigan provide another $2.5 million for " research " .5 Private

companies like Archer Daniels Midland also contribute their share. ADM spent

$4.7 million for advertising on Meet the Press and $4.3 million on Face the

Nation during the course of a year.6

Public relations firms help convert research projects into newspaper articles

and advertising copy, and law firms lobby for favorable government regulations.

IMF money funds soy processing plants in foreign countries, and free trade

policies keep soybean abundance flowing to overseas destinations.

The push for more soy has been relentless and global in its reach. Soy protein

is now found in most supermarket breads. It is being used to transform " the

humble tortilla, Mexico's corn-based staple food, into a protein-fortified

'super-tortilla' that would give a nutritional boost to the nearly 20 million

Mexicans who live in extreme poverty " .7 Advertising for a new soy-enriched loaf

from Allied Bakeries in Britain targets menopausal women seeking relief from hot

flushes. Sales are running at a quarter of a million loaves per week.8

The soy industry hired Norman Robert Associates, a public relations firm, to

" get more soy products onto school menus " .9 The USDA responded with a proposal

to scrap the 30 per cent limit for soy in school lunches. The NuMenu program

would allow unlimited use of soy in student meals. With soy added to hamburgers,

tacos and lasagna, dieticians can get the total fat content below 30 per cent of

calories, thereby conforming to government dictates. " With the soy-enhanced food

items, students are receiving better servings of nutrients and less cholesterol

and fat. "

Soy milk has posted the biggest gains, soaring from $2 million in 1980 to $300

million in the US last year.10 Recent advances in processing have transformed

the gray, thin, bitter, beany-tasting Asian beverage into a product that Western

consumers will accept - one that tastes like a milkshake, but without the guilt.

Processing miracles, good packaging, massive advertising and a marketing

strategy that stresses the products' possible health benefits account for

increasing sales to all age groups. For example, reports that soy helps prevent

prostate cancer have made soy milk acceptable to middle-aged men. " You don't

have to twist the arm of a 55- to 60-year-old guy to get him to try soy milk, "

says Mark Messina. Michael Milken, former junk bond financier, has helped the

industry shed its hippie image with well-publicized efforts to consume 40 grams

of soy protein daily.

America today, tomorrow the world. Soy milk sales are rising in Canada, even

though soy milk there costs twice as much as cow's milk. Soybean milk processing

plants are sprouting up in places like Kenya.11 Even China, where soy really is

a poverty food and whose people want more meat, not tofu, has opted to build

Western-style soy factories rather than develop western grasslands for grazing

animals.12

FDA Health Claim Challenged

On October 25, 1999 the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) decided to allow

a health claim for products " low in saturated fat and cholesterol " that contain

6.25 grams of soy protein per serving. Breakfast cereals, baked goods,

convenience food, smoothie mixes and meat substitutes could now be sold with

labels touting benefits to cardiovascular health, as long as these products

contained one heaping teaspoon of soy protein per 100-gram serving.

The best marketing strategy for a product that is inherently unhealthy is, of

course, a health claim.

" The road to FDA approval, " writes a soy apologist, " was long and demanding,

consisting of a detailed review of human clinical data collected from more than

40 scientific studies conducted over the last 20 years. Soy protein was found to

be one of the rare foods that had sufficient scientific evidence not only to

qualify for an FDA health claim proposal but to ultimately pass the rigorous

approval process. " 29

The " long and demanding " road to FDA approval actually took a few unexpected

turns. The original petition, submitted by Protein Technology International,

requested a health claim for isoflavones, the estrogen-like compounds found

plentifully in soybeans, based on assertions that " only soy protein that has

been processed in a manner in which isoflavones are retained will result in

cholesterol lowering " .

In 1998, the FDA made the unprecedented move of rewriting PTI's petition,

removing any reference to the phyto-estrogens and substituting a claim for soy

protein - a move that was in direct contradiction to the agency's regulations.

The FDA is authorized to make rulings only on substances presented by petition.

The abrupt change in direction was no doubt due to the fact that a number of

researchers, including scientists employed by the US Government, submitted

documents indicating that isoflavones are toxic.

The FDA had also received, early in 1998, the final British Government report

on phytoestrogens, which failed to find much evidence of benefit and warned

against potential adverse effects.30

 

Even with the change to soy protein isolate, FDA bureaucrats engaged in the

" rigorous approval process " were forced to deal nimbly with concerns about

mineral blocking effects, enzyme inhibitors, goitrogenicity, endocrine

disruption, reproductive problems and increased allergic reactions from

consumption of soy products.31

One of the strongest letters of protest came from Dr Dan Sheehan and Dr Daniel

Doerge, government researchers at the National Center for Toxicological

Research.32 Their pleas for warning labels were dismissed as unwarranted.

" Sufficient scientific evidence " of soy's cholesterol-lowering properties is

drawn largely from a 1995 meta-analysis by Dr James Anderson, sponsored by

Protein Technologies International and published in the New England Journal of

Medicine.33

A meta-analysis is a review and summary of the results of many clinical

studies on the same subject. Use of meta-analyses to draw general conclusions

has come under sharp criticism by members of the scientific community.

" Researchers substituting meta-analysis for more rigorous trials risk making

faulty assumptions and indulging in creative accounting, " says Sir John Scott,

President of the Royal Society of New Zealand. " Like is not being lumped with

like. Little lumps and big lumps of data are being gathered together by various

groups. " 34

There is the added temptation for researchers, particularly researchers funded

by a company like Protein Technologies International, to leave out studies that

would prevent the desired conclusions. Dr Anderson discarded eight studies for

various reasons, leaving a remainder of twenty-nine.

The published report suggested that individuals with cholesterol levels over

250 mg/dl would experience a " significant " reduction of 7 to 20 per cent in

levels of serum cholesterol if they substituted soy protein for animal protein.

Cholesterol reduction was insignificant for individuals whose cholesterol was

lower than 250 mg/dl.

In other words, for most of us, giving up steak and eating vegieburgers

instead will not bring down blood cholesterol levels. The health claim that the

FDA approved " after detailed review of human clinical data " fails to inform the

consumer about these important details.

Research that ties soy to positive effects on cholesterol levels is

" incredibly immature " , said Ronald M. Krauss, MD, head of the Molecular Medical

Research Program and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.35 He might have

added that studies in which cholesterol levels were lowered through either diet

or drugs have consistently resulted in a greater number of deaths in the

treatment groups than in controls - deaths from stroke, cancer, intestinal

disorders, accident and suicide.36

Cholesterol-lowering measures in the US have fuelled a $60 billion per year

cholesterol-lowering industry, but have not saved us from the ravages of heart

disease.

Page 2

 

 

Gurubandhu

 

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You cannot see God at all.

 

Yogi Bhajan

 

 

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Guest guest

Is this all true? Should I be worried about givng my kids soy milk? They

dont like it any how and i am having a very hard time getting them to drink

it. Is rice milk better, I mean does anyone like the taste of rice milk

better than soy? No offense but it sounds like soy milk is worse than cows

milk, thats if I read all of this right. Sorry if I sound like im freaking

out I just want to make sure my kids get the nutrients they need.

 

Thanks, Tabby

 

 

On 5/24/06, Guru Khalsa <greatyoga wrote:

>

> Soy in moderation is probably okay but here is an article by Joseph

> mercola about some caveats of soy.

>

> Cinderella's Dark Side

>

> The propaganda that has created the soy sales miracle is all the more

> remarkable because, only a few decades ago, the soybean was considered unfit

> to eat - even in Asia. During the Chou Dynasty (1134-246 BC) the soybean was

> designated one of the five sacred grains, along with barley, wheat, millet

> and rice.

> However, the pictograph for the soybean, which dates from earlier times,

> indicates that it was not first used as a food; for whereas the pictographs

> for the other four grains show the seed and stem structure of the plant, the

> pictograph for the soybean emphasizes the root structure. Agricultural

> literature of the period speaks frequently of the soybean and its use in

> crop rotation. Apparently the soy plant was initially used as a method of

> fixing nitrogen.13

> The soybean did not serve as a food until the discovery of fermentation

> techniques, some time during the Chou Dynasty. The first soy foods were

> fermented products like tempeh, natto, miso and soy sauce.

> At a later date, possibly in the 2nd century BC, Chinese scientists

> discovered that a purée of cooked soybeans could be precipitated with

> calcium sulfate or magnesium sulfate (plaster of Paris or Epsom salts) to

> make a smooth, pale curd - tofu or bean curd. The use of fermented and

> precipitated soy products soon spread to other parts of the Orient, notably

> Japan and Indonesia.

> The Chinese did not eat unfermented soybeans as they did other legumes

> such as lentils because the soybean contains large quantities of natural

> toxins or " antinutrients " . First among them are potent enzyme inhibitors

> that block the action of trypsin and other enzymes needed for protein

> digestion.

> These inhibitors are large, tightly folded proteins that are not

> completely deactivated during ordinary cooking. They can produce serious

> gastric distress, reduced protein digestion and chronic deficiencies in

> amino acid uptake. In test animals, diets high in trypsin inhibitors cause

> enlargement and pathological conditions of the pancreas, including

> cancer.14

> Soybeans also contain haemagglutinin, a clot-promoting substance that

> causes red blood cells to clump together.

> Trypsin inhibitors and haemagglutinin are growth inhibitors. Weanling

> rats fed soy containing these antinutrients fail to grow normally.

> Growth-depressant compounds are deactivated during the process of

> fermentation, so once the Chinese discovered how to ferment the soybean,

> they began to incorporate soy foods into their diets.

> In precipitated products, enzyme inhibitors concentrate in the soaking

> liquid rather than in the curd. Thus, in tofu and bean curd, growth

> depressants are reduced in quantity but not completely eliminated.

> Soy also contains goitrogens - substances that depress thyroid function.

> Additionally 99% a very large percentage of soy is genetically modified

> and it also has one of the highest percentages contamination by pesticides

> of any of our foods.

> Soybeans are high in phytic acid, present in the bran or hulls of all

> seeds. It's a substance that can block the uptake of essential minerals -

> calcium, magnesium, copper, iron and especially zinc - in the intestinal

> tract.

> Although not a household word, phytic acid has been extensively studied;

> there are literally hundreds of articles on the effects of phytic acid in

> the current scientific literature. Scientists are in general agreement that

> grain- and legume-based diets high in phytates contribute to widespread

> mineral deficiencies in third world countries.15

> Analysis shows that calcium, magnesium, iron and zinc are present in the

> plant foods eaten in these areas, but the high phytate content of soy- and

> grain-based diets prevents their absorption.

> The soybean has one of the highest phytate levels of any grain or legume

> that has been studied,16 and the phytates in soy are highly resistant to

> normal phytate-reducing techniques such as long, slow cooking.17 Only a

> long period of fermentation will significantly reduce the phytate content of

> soybeans.

> When precipitated soy products like tofu are consumed with meat, the

> mineral-blocking effects of the phytates are reduced.18 The Japanese

> traditionally eat a small amount of tofu or miso as part of a mineral-rich

> fish broth, followed by a serving of meat or fish.

> Vegetarians who consume tofu and bean curd as a substitute for meat and

> dairy products risk severe mineral deficiencies. The results of calcium,

> magnesium and iron deficiency are well known; those of zinc are less so.

> Zinc is called the intelligence mineral because it is needed for optimal

> development and functioning of the brain and nervous system. It plays a role

> in protein synthesis and collagen formation; it is involved in the

> blood-sugar control mechanism and thus protects against diabetes; it is

> needed for a healthy reproductive system.

> Zinc is a key component in numerous vital enzymes and plays a role in

> the immune system. Phytates found in soy products interfere with zinc

> absorption more completely than with other minerals.19 Zinc deficiency can

> cause a " spacey " feeling that some vegetarians may mistake for the " high " of

> spiritual enlightenment.

> Milk drinking is given as the reason why second-generation Japanese in

> America grow taller than their native ancestors. Some investigators

> postulate that the reduced phytate content of the American diet - whatever

> may be its other deficiencies - is the true explanation, pointing out that

> both Asian and Western children who do not get enough meat and fish products

> to counteract the effects of a high phytate diet, frequently suffer rickets,

> stunting and other growth problems.20

> Soy Protein Isolate: Not So Friendly

>

> Soy processors have worked hard to get these antinutrients out of the

> finished product, particularly soy protein isolate (SPI) which is the key

> ingredient in most soy foods that imitate meat and dairy products, including

> baby formulas and some brands of soy milk.

> SPI is not something you can make in your own kitchen. Production takes

> place in industrial factories where a slurry of soy beans is first mixed

> with an alkaline solution to remove fiber, then precipitated and separated

> using an acid wash and, finally, neutralized in an alkaline solution.

> Acid washing in aluminum tanks leaches high levels of aluminum into the

> final product. The resultant curds are spray- dried at high temperatures to

> produce a high-protein powder. A final indignity to the original soybean is

> high-temperature, high-pressure extrusion processing of soy protein isolate

> to produce textured vegetable protein (TVP).

> Much of the trypsin inhibitor content can be removed through

> high-temperature processing, but not all. Trypsin inhibitor content of soy

> protein isolate can vary as much as fivefold.21 (In rats, even low-level

> trypsin inhibitor SPI feeding results in reduced weight gain compared to

> controls.22)

> But high-temperature processing has the unfortunate side-effect of so

> denaturing the other proteins in soy that they are rendered largely

> ineffective.23 That's why animals on soy feed need lysine supplements for

> normal growth.

> Nitrites, which are potent carcinogens, are formed during spray-drying,

> and a toxin called lysinoalanine is formed during alkaline

processing.24Numerous artificial flavorings, particularly MSG, are added to soy

protein

> isolate and textured vegetable protein products to mask their strong " beany "

> taste and to impart the flavor of meat.25

> In feeding experiments, the use of SPI increased requirements for

> vitamins E, K, D and B12 and created deficiency symptoms of calcium,

> magnesium, manganese, molybdenum, copper, iron and zinc.26 Phytic acid

> remaining in these soy products greatly inhibits zinc and iron absorption;

> test animals fed SPI develop enlarged organs, particularly the pancreas and

> thyroid gland, and increased deposition of fatty acids in the liver.27

> Yet soy protein isolate and textured vegetable protein are used

> extensively in school lunch programs, commercial baked goods, diet beverages

> and fast food products. They are heavily promoted in third world countries

> and form the basis of many food giveaway programs.

> In spite of poor results in animal feeding trials, the soy industry has

> sponsored a number of studies designed to show that soy protein products can

> be used in human diets as a replacement for traditional foods.

> An example is " Nutritional Quality of Soy Bean Protein Isolates: Studies

> in Children of Preschool Age " , sponsored by the Ralston Purina Company.28A

group of Central American children suffering from malnutrition was first

> stabilized and brought into better health by feeding them native foods,

> including meat and dairy products. Then, for a two-week period, these

> traditional foods were replaced by a drink made of soy protein isolate and

> sugar.

> All nitrogen taken in and all nitrogen excreted was measured in truly

> Orwellian fashion: the children were weighed naked every morning, and all

> excrement and vomit gathered up for analysis. The researchers found that the

> children retained nitrogen and that their growth was " adequate " , so the

> experiment was declared a success.

> Whether the children were actually healthy on such a diet, or could

> remain so over a long period, is another matter. The researchers noted that

> the children vomited " occasionally " , usually after finishing a meal; that

> over half suffered from periods of moderate diarrhea; that some had upper

> respiratory infections; and that others suffered from rash and fever.

> It should be noted that the researchers did not dare to use soy products

> to help the children recover from malnutrition, and were obliged to

> supplement the soy-sugar mixture with nutrients largely absent in soy

> products - notably, vitamins A, D and B12, iron, iodine and zinc.

> Marketing The Perfect Food

>

> " Just imagine you could grow the perfect food. This food not only would

> provide affordable nutrition, but also would be delicious and easy to

> prepare in a variety of ways. It would be a healthful food, with no

> saturated fat. In fact, you would be growing a virtual fountain of youth on

> your back forty. "

> The author is Dean Houghton, writing for The Furrow,2 a magazine

> published in 12 languages by John Deere. " This ideal food would help

> prevent, and perhaps reverse, some of the world's most dreaded diseases. You

> could grow this miracle crop in a variety of soils and climates. Its

> cultivation would build up, not deplete, the land...this miracle food

> already exists... It's called soy. "

> Just imagine. Farmers have been imagining - and planting more soy. What

> was once a minor crop, listed in the 1913 US Department of Agriculture

> (USDA) handbook not as a food but as an industrial product, now covers 72

> million acres of American farmland. Much of this harvest will be used to

> feed chickens, turkeys, pigs, cows and salmon. Another large fraction will

> be squeezed to produce oil for margarine, shortenings and salad dressings.

> Advances in technology make it possible to produce isolated soy protein

> from what was once considered a waste product - the defatted, high-protein

> soy chips - and then transform something that looks and smells terrible into

> products that can be consumed by human beings. Flavorings, preservatives,

> sweeteners, emulsifiers and synthetic nutrients have turned soy protein

> isolate, the food processors' ugly duckling, into a New Age Cinderella.

> The new fairy-tale food has been marketed not so much for her beauty but

> for her virtues. Early on, products based on soy protein isolate were sold

> as extenders and meat substitutes - a strategy that failed to produce the

> requisite consumer demand. The industry changed its approach.

> " The quickest way to gain product acceptability in the less affluent

> society, " said an industry spokesman, " is to have the product consumed on

> its own merit in a more affluent society. " 3 So soy is now sold to the

> upscale consumer, not as a cheap, poverty food but as a miracle substance

> that will prevent heart disease and cancer, whisk away hot flushes, build

> strong bones and keep us forever young.

> The competition - meat, milk, cheese, butter and eggs - has been duly

> demonised by the appropriate government bodies. Soy serves as meat and milk

> for a new generation of virtuous vegetarians.

>

> Marketing Costs Money

> This is especially when it needs to be bolstered with " research " , but

> there's plenty of funds available. All soybean producers pay a mandatory

> assessment of one-half to one per cent of the net market price of soybeans.

> The total - something like US$80 million annually4 - supports United

> Soybean's program to " strengthen the position of soybeans in the marketplace

> and maintain and expand domestic and foreign markets for uses for soybeans

> and soybean products " .

> State soybean councils from Maryland, Nebraska, Delaware, Arkansas,

> Virginia, North Dakota and Michigan provide another $2.5 million for

> " research " .5 Private companies like Archer Daniels Midland also contribute

> their share. ADM spent $4.7 million for advertising on Meet the Press and

> $4.3 million on Face the Nation during the course of a year.6

> Public relations firms help convert research projects into newspaper

> articles and advertising copy, and law firms lobby for favorable government

> regulations. IMF money funds soy processing plants in foreign countries, and

> free trade policies keep soybean abundance flowing to overseas destinations.

> The push for more soy has been relentless and global in its reach. Soy

> protein is now found in most supermarket breads. It is being used to

> transform " the humble tortilla, Mexico's corn-based staple food, into a

> protein-fortified 'super-tortilla' that would give a nutritional boost to

> the nearly 20 million Mexicans who live in extreme poverty " .7 Advertising

> for a new soy-enriched loaf from Allied Bakeries in Britain targets

> menopausal women seeking relief from hot flushes. Sales are running at a

> quarter of a million loaves per week.8

> The soy industry hired Norman Robert Associates, a public relations

> firm, to " get more soy products onto school menus " .9 The USDA responded with

> a proposal to scrap the 30 per cent limit for soy in school lunches. The

> NuMenu program would allow unlimited use of soy in student meals. With soy

> added to hamburgers, tacos and lasagna, dieticians can get the total fat

> content below 30 per cent of calories, thereby conforming to government

> dictates. " With the soy-enhanced food items, students are receiving better

> servings of nutrients and less cholesterol and fat. "

> Soy milk has posted the biggest gains, soaring from $2 million in 1980

> to $300 million in the US last year.10 Recent advances in processing have

> transformed the gray, thin, bitter, beany-tasting Asian beverage into a

> product that Western consumers will accept - one that tastes like a

> milkshake, but without the guilt.

> Processing miracles, good packaging, massive advertising and a marketing

> strategy that stresses the products' possible health benefits account for

> increasing sales to all age groups. For example, reports that soy helps

> prevent prostate cancer have made soy milk acceptable to middle-aged men.

> " You don't have to twist the arm of a 55- to 60-year-old guy to get him to

> try soy milk, " says Mark Messina. Michael Milken, former junk bond

> financier, has helped the industry shed its hippie image with

> well-publicized efforts to consume 40 grams of soy protein daily.

> America today, tomorrow the world. Soy milk sales are rising in Canada,

> even though soy milk there costs twice as much as cow's milk. Soybean milk

> processing plants are sprouting up in places like Kenya.11 Even China,

> where soy really is a poverty food and whose people want more meat, not

> tofu, has opted to build Western-style soy factories rather than develop

> western grasslands for grazing animals.12

> FDA Health Claim Challenged

> On October 25, 1999 the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) decided to

> allow a health claim for products " low in saturated fat and cholesterol "

> that contain 6.25 grams of soy protein per serving. Breakfast cereals,

> baked goods, convenience food, smoothie mixes and meat substitutes could now

> be sold with labels touting benefits to cardiovascular health, as long as

> these products contained one heaping teaspoon of soy protein per 100-gram

> serving.

> The best marketing strategy for a product that is inherently unhealthy

> is, of course, a health claim.

> " The road to FDA approval, " writes a soy apologist, " was long and

> demanding, consisting of a detailed review of human clinical data collected

> from more than 40 scientific studies conducted over the last 20 years. Soy

> protein was found to be one of the rare foods that had sufficient scientific

> evidence not only to qualify for an FDA health claim proposal but to

> ultimately pass the rigorous approval process. " 29

> The " long and demanding " road to FDA approval actually took a few

> unexpected turns. The original petition, submitted by Protein Technology

> International, requested a health claim for isoflavones, the estrogen-like

> compounds found plentifully in soybeans, based on assertions that " only soy

> protein that has been processed in a manner in which isoflavones are

> retained will result in cholesterol lowering " .

> In 1998, the FDA made the unprecedented move of rewriting PTI's

> petition, removing any reference to the phyto-estrogens and substituting a

> claim for soy protein - a move that was in direct contradiction to the

> agency's regulations. The FDA is authorized to make rulings only on

> substances presented by petition.

> The abrupt change in direction was no doubt due to the fact that a

> number of researchers, including scientists employed by the US Government,

> submitted documents indicating that isoflavones are toxic.

> The FDA had also received, early in 1998, the final British Government

> report on phytoestrogens, which failed to find much evidence of benefit and

> warned against potential adverse effects.30

>

> Even with the change to soy protein isolate, FDA bureaucrats engaged in

> the " rigorous approval process " were forced to deal nimbly with concerns

> about mineral blocking effects, enzyme inhibitors, goitrogenicity, endocrine

> disruption, reproductive problems and increased allergic reactions from

> consumption of soy products.31

> One of the strongest letters of protest came from Dr Dan Sheehan and Dr

> Daniel Doerge, government researchers at the National Center for

> Toxicological Research.32 Their pleas for warning labels were dismissed as

> unwarranted.

> " Sufficient scientific evidence " of soy's cholesterol-lowering

> properties is drawn largely from a 1995 meta-analysis by Dr James Anderson,

> sponsored by Protein Technologies International and published in the New

> England Journal of Medicine.33

> A meta-analysis is a review and summary of the results of many clinical

> studies on the same subject. Use of meta-analyses to draw general

> conclusions has come under sharp criticism by members of the scientific

> community.

> " Researchers substituting meta-analysis for more rigorous trials risk

> making faulty assumptions and indulging in creative accounting, " says Sir

> John Scott, President of the Royal Society of New Zealand. " Like is not

> being lumped with like. Little lumps and big lumps of data are being

> gathered together by various groups. " 34

> There is the added temptation for researchers, particularly researchers

> funded by a company like Protein Technologies International, to leave out

> studies that would prevent the desired conclusions. Dr Anderson discarded

> eight studies for various reasons, leaving a remainder of twenty-nine.

> The published report suggested that individuals with cholesterol levels

> over 250 mg/dl would experience a " significant " reduction of 7 to 20 per

> cent in levels of serum cholesterol if they substituted soy protein for

> animal protein. Cholesterol reduction was insignificant for individuals

> whose cholesterol was lower than 250 mg/dl.

> In other words, for most of us, giving up steak and eating vegieburgers

> instead will not bring down blood cholesterol levels. The health claim that

> the FDA approved " after detailed review of human clinical data " fails to

> inform the consumer about these important details.

> Research that ties soy to positive effects on cholesterol levels is

> " incredibly immature " , said Ronald M. Krauss, MD, head of the Molecular

> Medical Research Program and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.35 He

> might have added that studies in which cholesterol levels were lowered

> through either diet or drugs have consistently resulted in a greater number

> of deaths in the treatment groups than in controls - deaths from stroke,

> cancer, intestinal disorders, accident and suicide.36

> Cholesterol-lowering measures in the US have fuelled a $60 billion per

> year cholesterol-lowering industry, but have not saved us from the ravages

> of heart disease.

> Page 2

>

>

> Gurubandhu

>

> If you cannot see God in all,

> You cannot see God at all.

>

> Yogi Bhajan

>

>

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Guest guest

Take a deep breath....<smile>

 

I personally don't use the soy milks as I much prefer the taste of vanilla

rice milk or ANY of the unsweetened almond milks, which come in plain,

vanilla, and chocolate. The unsweetened is a little more difficult to

find. I had to stop using the rice milks recently as I found out they use

barley in it, which contains gluten.

 

I'd rather get my soy from things like Vegenaise and tofu dishes! I use a

lot of the Vegennaise (salad dressings mostly and I eat a huge salad every

day) so I figure I'm getting plenty of soy just from that. About once a

week or so, I will make a tofu dish of some kind.

 

I have never checked to see if any of the other beverages are fortified,

but if your kids drink juices, aren't some of those with vitamins? If you

can't find a beverage that has what you're looking for, perhaps an old

fashioned multi vitamin for kids could be the ticket to putting your mind

at ease.

 

Jeanne

 

 

 

>Message 19

> " tabitha wilbur " tabitha.wilbur

> Wed May 24, 2006 6:29am(PDT)

>Re: Cinderella's Dark Side

>

>Is this all true? Should I be worried about givng my kids soy milk? They

>dont like it any how and i am having a very hard time getting them to drink

>it. Is rice milk better, I mean does anyone like the taste of rice milk

>better than soy? No offense but it sounds like soy milk is worse than cows

>milk, thats if I read all of this right. Sorry if I sound like im freaking

>out I just want to make sure my kids get the nutrients they need.

>

>Thanks, Tabby

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