My main point is that he has said a lot of things over the years, many of them contradictory, and this has led to mass confusion and mistrust of the professionals. He originally literally said the laws of physics do not apply.
I'm reading the book she quoted that from. It IS out of context. He spends a lot of time telling you how the laws of physics do matter, just not in the way that is claimed by his detractors. Its the same reason the 2nd law of thermodynamics applies to evolution, just not in the way Creationists claim.
I think he may have believed that at the time, and I suspect he does not really believe it anymore. Yes, he's been adjusting his message with qualifiers over the years, but that doesn't retroactively alter the content of the millions of books and articles that people have read and internalized.
Yet I have yet to see where he has ever actually said what is attributed to him. Where people will say he believes the human body is not subject to the laws of physics, and that he believes the body is magic. He has said things like you can be as gluttonous as you want on fat, but that isn't the same thing as saying you can eat unlimited amounts of calories from fat. It means when you eat a high fat low carb diet you eat until you are full and your brain doesn't keep signaling that it's hungry and drive you to keep eating. He is saying the carbs are not satiating while fat is so satiating you won't be able to eat the amount necessary to put on weight with sufficient amounts of it (eggs are a lot more satiating than piece of cake). A lot of junk food is fat surrounded in sugar, and the foods high in sugar enable one to eat such a lot of fat at the same time. In a cake you'll find a lot of butter and eggs, and it is very easy for many people to eat the whole thing and keep craving it not so long after. If these people tried to eat that much butter and eggs they would have a real hard time of it, not to mention that their insulin levels wouldn't be spiking like crazy.
I don't think we're misunderstanding. I think we're saying he's mostly missing the point. "not even wrong" as they say.
As I said, I can't see where he has ever said what people like Hall say he says, and he has clarified many times in different ways since then if there was any doubt. Yet people like Hall keep acting like he is denying the laws of physics apply to the human body. I gave you an example of the cause of teenage growth being incorrectly identified as due to eating more. I'm not sure why you keep cutting that out. This is one of the example Taubes uses to explain what he means.
Most of his hypothesis seems to be about an alternate history - that's the strawperson. Specifically, he talks about the public shifting their eating habits to avoid fat. But the public didn't do this, so he's presenting a strawman about that. There are other examples.
He has said government guidelines shifted to recommend high carb/low fat diets because fat was being connected to heart disease and since they had cut the fats it had to be replaced by something. Is it any wonder that we have such problems with diabetes when we recommend a high carb diet when carbs spike blood sugar? People with diabetes have a higher chance of developing heart disease, yet the heart association put "approved" ticks on high carb products.
It is, because while the above is true, it does not explain the obesity epidemic. We have had these physiological attributes for millions of years.
If fat is more satiating than carbs, then a low fat, high carb diet will have a profound effect on appetite. I'm not sure why you think this is somehow unrelated or irrelevant. People on high fat low carb diets say they feel more fulfilled and are less hungry and have less cravings. If their weight loss really just purely down to them consuming less calories, then it
still seems like a good idea to reduce carbs and increase fat.
Now he's probably more aware of the gaps in his earlier knowledge and the opportunity was there to update his model to incorporate the science. But instead, his destiny appears to be to hire his own scientists and pump out custom research.
As far as I am aware he is undertaking his own research precisely because he thinks they haven't been done right.
I'm pretty sure they're not. But you can present links to where you read either Dr. Hall or CSPI saying so and I will change my mind.
It would surprise me - I'm unaware of any scientific organization that would have classified trans fats as 'safe'.
CSPI executive director Michael Jacobson said "
Twenty years ago, scientists (including me) thought trans [fat] was innocuous. Since then, we've learned otherwise."
This is the infamous article where they said that transfats were safe.
At the moment, the position of the profession is that there is no safe level of consumption of trans fats, and locally here, they are disappointed that the Canadian government is not banning it from the food supply entirely. But that's about politics (food industry lobbying), not science.
But originally they did say it was safe, their original issue was animals fats and they said transfats should replace it in restaurants.
I think you're confusing hyperbolic journalism with scientific research.
I would recommend just plain ignoring the former, which includes journalists like Taubes.
In what world is calling food dishes "heart attacks on a plate" not hyperbole? It also turned out to be wrong, and certainly was very over the top.
EDIT:
I also just located an old review by another person whose competence in this subject matter I regard as quite strong: Dr. Yoni Freedhoff.
[
Book review: Gary Taubes' Why We Get Fat]
He mischaracterises what Taubes is saying as well. It all seems like there is a conscious effort to misunderstand him. I'm not sure why so many people can read the same thing and come to the conclusion that he believes thermodynamics is not relevant to the human body when you read what he says in context. He has spent a great deal of time going over the topic, yet we just see a few sentences quoted out of context and is represented this way.
Nevertheless he still says he "agrees with the premise":
1.That we eat too many carbs.
2. That carbohydrates, more specifically the refined highly processed ones, contribute dramatically to obesity and disease.
3. That "a myopic" view of dietary fat causing chronic disease and obesity has contributed dramatically to the rise in the societal prevalence of chronic disease and obesity because of the shift to carbohydrates.
4. That saturated fat has been wrongly demonised by the medical establishment for decades.
You have argued against many of these points right here in this thread, but here you say he is competent, why? Because he writes a negative review of Taubes' book? Is that the only thing that matters? It does seem you miss the forest for the trees, just as "calories in calories out" and "a calorie is a calorie" also misses it.