Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Layne Norton on Exposing Fitness Pseudoscience and Misinformation
Episode Date: March 13, 2024In the age of social media, it's easier than ever to fall victim to fitness misinformation. From fad diets to questionable supplements, how can you tell what's legit and what's just clev...er marketing? In this episode, Layne Norton shares his strategies for identifying pseudoscience and making informed decisions about your health and fitness. In case you’re not familiar with him, Layne is not just an acclaimed scientist with a PhD in Nutritional Sciences; he's also a pro bodybuilder and powerlifting champion who has spent years combating misinformation and educating the public on evidence-based practices in health and fitness. With his background in nutritional sciences and his experience exposing frauds, Layne is the perfect guide to help you navigate the often confusing world of fitness advice. In this wide-ranging discussion, you'll learn: - Why appeals to science are often used to sell fitness BS -How personal bias, emotional investment, and tribalism can cloud judgment and perpetuate fitness myths - The importance of understanding credentials and the limitations of expertise - The importance of prioritizing human trials over mechanistic or animal studies - How the COVID-19 pandemic impacted public trust in science - Layne's top tips for developing an evidence-based mindset - And more... Whether you're a fitness newbie or a seasoned pro, this episode will equip you with the critical thinking skills you need to cut through the noise and make informed decisions about your health. So, if you're ready to learn how to spot fitness BS from a mile away, click play and let Layne Norton be your guide! Timestamps: (0:00) - Please leave a review of the show wherever you listen to podcasts and make sure to subscribe! (05:20) - The misuse of science and how to vet health and fitness claims as a layperson (07:20) - The role of personal bias in filtering information and skepticism (9:52) - What credentials matter? (17:40) - Why smart, credentialed people can still believe in pseudoscience (23:26) - The problem with relying on mechanistic data over outcome data (31:20) - The role of identity (34:51) - Confirmation bias and selection bias (40:00) - Food pyramid and government conspiracies (48:20) - Try Whey+ risk-free today! Go to buylegion.com/whey and use coupon code MUSCLE to save 20% or get double reward points! (50:56) - What is the seed oil controversy? Are seed oils unhealthy? (1:10:30) - How COVID-19 reduced public confidence in the scientific community (1:17:50) - The role of personal identity in seeking the truth (1:29:03) - Where can people find you and your work? Mentioned on the Show: Try Whey+ risk-free today! Go to buylegion.com/whey and use coupon code MUSCLE to save 20% or get double reward points! Layne Norton's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/biolayne Layne Norton's Website: https://www.biolayne.com/ Carbon Diet Coach App: https://www.carbondietcoach.com/ Physique Coaching Academy Course: https://www.biolayne.com/physique-coaching-academy/
Transcript
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Hey there, I am Mike Matthews and this is Muscle For Life.
Thank you for joining me today for a new episode on fitness misinformation,
which is everywhere these days.
And a big reason for that is social media.
Thanks to social media being what it is, thanks to its perverse incentives,
it's easier now than probably ever before,
at least in the last 10 or 11 years
that I've been in the fitness racket.
I think it's easier now to fall victim
to fitness information than at any point
in the last decade or so.
FAD diets, FAD exercise programs, FAD supplements.
It can be hard to tell what's legit and what is just clever marketing simply relying on credentials for example is not enough there
are many very credentialed people much more credentialed than i am who are complete frauds, complete quacks, just in it for the fame and the money and the status and so forth.
Simply going by results is not enough. Before and after pictures, before and after
stories. Are the before and afters real? Well, if you have a good reason to believe they're real,
that is better than not having a good reason to believe they're real, that is better than not having a
good reason to believe that they're real. But what about the survivorship bias? What about
all of the people who failed to achieve their fitness goals with this person's methods, with
this diet, with this exercise, with these supplements? You're only being shown the people who did succeed with them.
And then in the cases where people did succeed with a certain diet or exercise program or
supplement stack or whatever, you have to wonder why they succeeded. Was it for the reasons given
that are used to sell the diet exercise program or supplement stack?
For example, if somebody starts eating the carnivore diet, if they eat the carnivore way
and they lose a bunch of weight, was it because they started eating nothing but meat and butter
and eggs? Or was it because they dramatically reduced their calorie intake, whether they
realized it or not? And if they did succeed because their calories dramatically fell,
spoiler alert, it is always because of an energy deficit. It is always because of a calorie deficit
that we lose body fat, at least to a meaningful degree. If that's why, then of course you have to wonder,
well, could they have gotten the same results or better results, or maybe had a better experience
of it with a totally different diet that provided the same amount of calories, like an omnivorous
diet with fruits and vegetables and whole grains and seeds and legumes and
maybe some diet soda as well. Maybe some sugar every day. And so anyway, you get my point.
It all can be very confusing, especially when you are dealing with slick marketers.
And in this episode, you are going to be hearing from Lane Norton on this topic, on how you can become a more informed consumer of fitness
information, how you can better spot pseudoscience and marketing trickery and make more optimal evidence-based decisions for your health and fitness.
And in case you are not familiar with Lane, he is not only an accomplished scientist with a PhD
in nutritional sciences, he's also a professional bodybuilder and a champion powerlifter who has
spent many, many years combating misinformation and educating people on
true evidence-based health and fitness practices.
Lane, it's nice to see you again.
Thanks, Mike. Glad to be back on. It's good to see you again.
Yeah, I think the last time I might, I don't remember if i didn't have video going i think i might have recorded
our last interview in uh in a sauna in my mechanical my basement of my house in virginia
because my kids are making so much noise i had to get away somewhere
the joys of working from home exactly yeah exactly. But yeah, no, I appreciate you taking the time to come back and
talk with me and talk with the listeners about how appeals to science are widely abused in our space
and used to sell people on all kinds of BS ranging from fad diets to exercise routines and techniques to supplements and on and on.
And this is obviously something that you are regularly harping on and exposing frauds for.
And so I thought you'd be the perfect guest for it. And to start us off, I thought it would be helpful to get your response to what I think happens just in my
random discussions I've had with people over the years where, okay, so you are a layman and you're
not a stupid person. Maybe you're ignorant to some degree, like we all were when we were first
getting into this. And you're looking for some advice, you have a problem or you have some fitness goal you want
to achieve. You're looking for some advice. You're on social media, which is where a lot of people go
to try to get advice. And maybe I would include YouTube in that. And you find somebody who seems
to know what they're talking about. They're well-spoken. Maybe they have some credentials
and they are making appeals to science. They're explaining things in a way that makes sense to
you, that you can understand. And so you can either try to vet these claims and you're not
really even sure how to go about that. Or you can just take them at face value, try them out and see what happens. And so that is
what some people, and I would say maybe even many people, that's kind of the position that they're
in. And they figure, well, what's the harm? I don't know with all this keto talk and weight
loss and it sounds, it makes sense to me, it sounds sciency,
I'm just going to give it a go. And then next time it's the supplement, it's the keto supplement,
or it's the NMN supplement, or, and next time it's the Mike Menser style of training versus
the opposite versus maybe a high volume intensity and on and on and on. What are your thoughts just
about that phenomenon, that kind of confused layman who doesn't know, is it worth the effort
to even try to vet this stuff or is it easier to just give it a go? So there's a lot to unpack
there. And I've really done a lot of thinking about this sort of thing. And I think the first
thing to keep in mind is that
we all have our own personal biases and belief systems that we have come to have developed
over the course of time. And whether we realize it or not, when we are intaking information,
when something aligns with our personal experience and our personal kind of fits into that personal
belief system or personal bias, our level of skepticism is very, very low. If something is
kind of contrary to our personal belief system, our personal bias, our level of skepticism is
ridiculously high. And so what happens is we end up filtering things for what just kind of confirms what we wish to believe to
be true. And this is very problematic for multiple different reasons. One, because just what you said,
like I tell people all the time, it's like you just ask some basic questions and just have like
a baseline level of skepticism for everything. I think I got very fortunate. I mean, I would never
tell people I covered this the other day. I would never tell people that I don't have my own personal
biases because of course I do. I'm a human being. Like there's no, everybody who says they don't
have bias is probably more pious than most people. Because they're just not aware of it, which is the
worst place to be. Right. And so, you know, but when, when, when I like a great example is this, this new protein paper, I'm sure you've heard about like the hundred grams of protein and, and how, you know, the, the clones around, you know, going into my analysis of that paper, like right away on the video, I said, listen, like, this is actually contrary to some of the data that I found, or seems to be contrary to some of the data I found and contrary to kind of like my personal
bias towards protein distribution. So like, okay, I have a bias towards it, but here I'm being up
front and admitting that, right? That's the first problem is we're filtering things based on our own
personal bias. And most of us don't even realize we're doing that. The second problem is that, like, Mike, if you and I are talking, if we're talking about a subject,
pretty soon, if one of us is more knowledgeable on the subject than the other, it'll become clear
to both of us who is more knowledgeable on that subject pretty quickly, right? What we're really
bad at doing is when two people are more knowledgeable than us on a subject and they disagree, us determining who
is more knowledgeable of the two, we are very, very bad and ill-equipped to do that. Another
aspect of that is the credentialing. Like you said, people, I did a story series on this a while
back where I'm like, listen, you just, you can't switch your brain off ever. You can't. And I think
there's a lot of people that are just like, well'm just wondering man like what kind of credentials to look for so i know who i can trust and the reality is like there are
grady there's a greater increasing levels like for example if i see somebody just talking garbage
online and they have no credentials they have no whatever it's just something i strongly disagree
with i go okay well they're you know
they don't have any back down in this like they're they're an idiot then you get like okay well
somebody's a personal trainer okay well there's you know you have to depending on the specific
certification you have to go through you know there is some required for that then it's okay
well this person is a chiropractor a naturopath okay well there's a little more that goes into
that even though you could argue that a lot of it isn't really relevant to what the claims are being made.
Also, a lot of times naturopaths and chiropractors will just list DR without, you know, actually
saying what they're in, which is why I don't put Dr. Lane Norton with no PhD on the back of it.
I always put like, I usually just put Lane Norton PhD in nutritional sciences so people know. And then going up to physician, right? Like, okay, well, this person's a doctor,
we can trust them. Well, no, not necessarily. I mean, do, if somebody is a physician,
that means that they have gone through, you know, quite a bit of school. It means that,
you know, they've had to learn some information, at least memorize some information.
But, you know, a lot of times they're speaking well outside of their area of expertise. And I
think one of the things people don't really realize is knowledge across disciplines doesn't
necessarily transfer. In fact, quite often it doesn't transfer. All you need to do is go and
look up Neuberg Prize Syndrome. Anybody can do this. Go look up Neubauer Prize Syndrome and you will find a laundry list of Neubauer Prize winning scientists, some of the most brilliant minds in
the world who believed in absolute buffoonery and other areas of science. Like we're talking
healing crystals, eugenics, like the whole deal. And so area of expertise matters. Okay. So for
example, for nutrition,
a lot of doctors have very, very little training on nutrition.
Very little training.
But then even if you go to a PhD, okay?
What specific area is their PhD in?
Somebody says, well, this is a world-renowned physicist.
Like, great, that's physics.
Like, we're talking about a different subject.
Like, I would hope that this person could apply some of their critical thinking and
data interpretation to other areas of science.
But I've just seen too many times that it just doesn't cross.
It just doesn't cross across.
And especially nutrition is very tricky because,
you know,
if,
if I,
I always tell people,
like,
I'm always like a little,
when people ask what I do,
if I'm like out of the social event or something, and I don't know people, because I'm like, if I tell them I'm a PhD in nutrition, I'm probably either going to get blitz with questions or people are going to tell me what they already, you know, their opinion.
And a lot of times I just have to kind of adopt the bobblehead if I don't feel like being in the debate for two hours, you know.
feel like being in the debate for two hours, you know? Or if you want to put yourself in a,
in a situation where you have to basically tell them everything that they believe is wrong,
which they don't want to hear. So my, my version of that is, uh, just, I, I usually just say I do health and fitness stuff, but I just, I just kind of leave it at that. Like, you know, I have some
books and some things and that's it. Anyway, let's move on for this exact reason, because I don't want to get into an hour of
Q&A or debate about things.
I'm just trying to sit here and have pleasant chit chat, okay?
Right.
So if I say, well, I'm a PhD in physics and I work on string theory, I mean, they're going to ask me a few questions, but I in physics in my you know i work on string theory i mean
they're not asking me a few questions but i doubt we're going to have a debate about string theory
you know what i mean but if i say i'm you know phd nutritional sciences uh we're probably going
to talk about food because everyone eats so everyone has formed some opinion of food based
on their own personal experience uh whether they realize it or not. But then we even growing up to
feel, okay, people say, okay, were you saying like, you know, PhD in this particular area?
You can't even necessarily trust that. Now I will tell you like, okay, if I see a PhD in my specific
field, who's making a claim that I don't necessarily agree with, I'm going to give them a
lot more leeway than I am some random Joe, right? Like,
I'm going to really hear them out and see, okay, where are they coming from with this? Am I missing something? Like, I am going to dig a little bit deeper before I'm like, okay, this person's an
idiot, right? But I think one thing to keep in mind is people who are very, I hear one of the,
one of the kind of themes I hear a lot as well, this person's so smart, they wouldn't believe in
bullshit. And I'm like, of course they would. Like, in fact, people who are smart are not less
prone to cognitive dissonance. They're actually more prone to it for that exact reason, because
they will justify to themselves based on their own intelligence that, well, I wouldn't believe
in bullshit. Of course you would. You still have stupid monkey brain back there somewhere
that's trying to keep you alive. And this becomes i think that kind of goes into the very tribal nature of a lot of this stuff
right where it's i always say like a person if i sit down and speak to a person one-on-one
usually that doesn't devolve into mudslinging or you know craziness but people in groups the collective iq just drops so much
i don't know how to fix that i think it's a really innate human behavior and i think it's
a survival mechanism that's a leftover remnant from eons ago where you we really it really was
like okay our tribe versus that tribe and i mean even the demonization
i was watching a uh a world war ii but you see like the dehumanization of both sides
but you also understand why they kind of had to do it because if you're in a war and you're thinking that person across from
me is another human being with a family and feelings and they're just doing what they think
is right like the mental total that is going to take on you to cure those people very like who
can recover from that right you have to believe that that's it that's not that's the lowest form of humanity if not inhuman right and
that's why they would um call the them by derogatory names and they would you know talk about
you know them as a collective they you know and create create a lot of propaganda about how evil
they are and all of the evil things that they're doing and both sides were doing evil things but you have to invent and exaggerate and it needs to take on mythic proportions like this
is evil personified right and which is why like now you see i mean not to go too far to the to
the other side but there's so much uh ptsd around this stuff because there's so much information
available i think most people know like if they go to war even if they feel like what they're doing
is justified that like if you kill someone you're killing another human being and they
may are probably not evil they probably think they're doing the right thing as well so you know
all about to say i think a lot of this is a survival mechanism remnant left over to just become very tribal
about stuff. And you see it with low carb, you see it with plant-based, you see it with fasting,
like all these groups just get into it with each other. And the other thing I want to point out is
again, like credentialing, again, it should just increase our our confidence but you can't turn your brain off
you really have to listen to the claim and i'll i'll get into who to trust but i'll never forget
something a friend of mine said who was a 12-year navy seal sniper veteran and this guy is jaco has
actually talked about this guy in his podcast as a basically one of the baddest dudes he ever knew
um it's funny too because if you met him he's just he's like super laid back like some kind of like california surfer dude but he was talking about
this story and he was referring to another navy seal and he's like yeah that's that shit bag you
know xyz and i was like what do you what do you mean he's like oh dude was lazy he sucked and i'm
like wait how did he get in the seals and i'll never forget what he said he's like dude some turds just won't flush and I'll never forget that but like I'll tell people like because well
this person's got a PhD well this person's a physician well I'm like well somebody had to
be last in their class I don't know you know that's not always the case because there again
there are really really smart people who say very dumb things. And so what I tell people is like, try to focus less on what the person is saying and more on how they are conveying their message.
experts, typically, if you ask them a question, may ask you several questions back to get appropriate context to things. They are going to add layers of nuance. It's probably not going to
be a black and white answer. They rarely are going to say best, worst, never, always. They're
just not going to use superlatives like that. And a lot of times they're going to give you the
devil's advocate argument. They're going to say, you know, this thing, but then there's this thing over here. I think that's
very important. I try to do that with my content in terms of, okay, maybe I'll debunk something,
but I still might go, well, if you did this, you might've seen results. And this is why,
you know, because I think it's important to just like give both sides of it.
One of my favorite quotes is, you know, there are no solutions.
There are only trade-offs.
And I think things to look for are people who add nuance, who, you know, do a devil's
advocate argument, who they're not a hammer and everything's a nail.
Like, you know, like I tell people, like, do you really believe there's one diet that's
best for everything?
Like, I think, you know, we know what an overall healthy lifestyle looks like. And that is, you know, there's a few different
iterations of that, but it's, you know, all similar stuff. But a great example of this,
I was looking at a paper on Parkinson's disease, right? Do you know what one of the most powerful
lifestyle factors to reduce your risk of Parkinson's is smirking and drinking alcohol.
Reduce the risk of Parkinson's by like 40%. But should we smoke and drink alcohol? No,
because we know like overall those things are, but like maybe there's something to that with
that disease specifically. So I hold open the idea that like the best diet for cardiovascular
disease might not be the best diet
for cognition and cognitive impairment or Parkinson's. I also hold open that they may
not be the best diet for cancer prevention or specific types of cancer. And I think that,
you know, when you look at some of these tribes, you know, whether it's low carb,
plant-based, like you look at some of these documentaries, like what the health or,
low-carb plant-based like you look at some of these documentaries like what the health or you know it's well this is the solution for literally everything if you look across just any problem
in the history of mankind very rarely is there like one solution for like a whole series of
problems so i i really try to get people to approach it from that perspective. But unfortunately, that sort of information does not spread as quickly as the very viral, quick content. I tell people it's tough because what you're looking for is you're actually looking for people who sound kind of unsure.
Like that, that is the great kind of juxtaposition is real experts will end up sounding unsure and will also tell you when like they're out.
Like I was, um, uh, somebody was interviewing me the other day and we got talking about
like pain management, whatever.
And like, I've done a lot of reading on this, uh, for my own personal stuff.
But first thing I said was like, listen, I'm not a pain expert.
Here's my understanding of things, you know, like that sort of thing so i'm like immediately i'm saying like hey i'm not an expert
on this but i'll i'll talk about it because i feel relatively comfortable talking about it but
then there'll be other things where people ask me stuff and i go no it's not i literally have no
idea you know and um i just think that's really tough for people to navigate the complications of social media.
And then as far as like you were saying, like, do they vet this information themselves?
It's like, how?
Right.
So for example, a lot of things I'll get is, well, I read this book and it had a lot of
citations.
I'm like, okay, did you, did you look up the citations?
Well, but, but but like who's got
time for that right like we're all really busy people and um i'll tell people like you know on
our website what we have like literally we make it as easy as possible when i write a blog post
or a big kind of like breakdown of stuff all our citations are clickable you can just one click
boom and you can go to the citation right so we we leave it out there for everybody i i've done the same since the beginning linked to the claim
so and if anybody wants to to spot check me there it is yeah and and um we know that less than one
percent of readers will click a single citation and um just to kind of wrap a bow on this you know it is like citing something
like this is where like people put on the veil of science without being science-based like it's
actually like the most unscience-based thing because i'll i'll read some of these citations
and i'm like you didn't even read the abstract you looked at the i'll never forget like somebody
posted um this study showed
that intermittent fasting was better than regular dieting. So in the title is intermittent dieting.
I forget the exact title, but it was the Matador study on diet breaks from 2019.
So they called it intermittent dieting. So this person just took the headline, didn't bother to
read that this was not intermittent fasting headline didn't bother to read that this
was not intermittent fasting they were referring to like using diet breaks as intermittent dieting
but then they're like there it out there goes out to 100 000 people right so i did a post actually
yesterday as the recording of this video uh yesterday i did a video where i was like i was
actually it started as a joke between myself and my friend uh dr joseph
zundel who's a cancer biologist we were joking around and i had said you know i bet i could
i bet i could like use the influencer template of science-based to get people to believe that
eating shit was healthy absolutely there are can't you already get your shit turned into pills that you then swallow
probably so i um i was like you know i'm actually going to try this so i looked up you know what are
some of the components of fecal matter and one of the most prevalent components of in terms of
volatile fatty acids is butyrate well butyrate has been shown in human studies to improve insulin sensitivity.
It's been shown to reduce body fat, to improve body composition, to improve metabolic health.
And so I'm giving all these citations about why you should eat your own poop.
And I get to the end, I'm like, okay, here's what I didn't tell you.
The human study I cited was in human cells it wasn't in humans like actual people
most of the studies were in rats and the amount of poop that you would need to consume to get
these benefits is about 50 to 100 pounds a day okay so but you can literally you can do that
argument to like fear monger like either prop up a food as a superfood or fear longer any food like i can literally take any food and find
an ingredient in it or a chemical compound you can see in animal studies or in vitro studies or
high dose studies of that isolated compound causing negative health effects but food isn't
like one compound it's thousands of compounds and so i'm like you know a lot of this stuff is you know kind
of the model is find this specific compound to scare people with then throw in some personal
throw in some anecdote from people and then maybe you can even find like some correlation data to
support whatever it is you want to say and you completely omit the actual studies to look directly
at the thing you're talking about so a great example of this, and I pick on him a lot, at least he's agreed to debate me, which is, I give him props for that, is Paul Saladino talking about why broccoli is bullshit. And his reasoning was...
Is that going to be in the debate? Why vegetables are...
are uh we agreed to debate on seed orange but i would like to debate vegetables as well but he you know he said well you know broccoli contains isocyanthanates and isocyanthanates can bind to
iodine and that means there's less iodine for your thyroid it's gonna you know cause you to
you know impair your thyroid that's gonna lower your metabolic rate and cause weight gain
and i'm like okay so if so if this, then this,
if this, then this, if this, then this. When I was a young biochemist, I used to do this all the time.
And then I read enough studies where they actually measure the thing we're worried about. And it
doesn't matter because what you realize is the human body is extremely redundant and knows how
to find homeostasis in most cases. And so what I'll always say is like, hey, it's fine to theorize this stuff,
but like, what if we actually have studies that directly look at this, right? So we have studies
that directly look at cruciferous vegetable intake and thyroid function and show no effect,
right? And what about weight gain or metabolic rate? You know, what they're basically doing,
what they do is it's like, you know i'm sure you're like
a financially savvy guy so when it like a lot of you know what we invest in is like mutual funds
and whatnot right like so you're you're you're basically being diversified by by proxy right
because a mutual fund is a bunch of little individual stocks all wrapped up into one fund
that you can purchase so if i went to you and was like, Mike, oh man, don't,
don't purchase this mutual fund. Look at these two stocks that are down by 50% this year,
but I completely don't tell you that the overall mutual fund is up 20%.
What do you care about more? Do you care about the couple of stocks that are down? Or do you
care about the fact that it's chilling it overall? Do you care about the fact that it's chilling it overall you care about the fact that it's killing it overall and so i realized i just had a very long-winded
explanation to your first question but um but it's just you know i feel bad for people honestly
like who don't have a background in this and who don't have the wherewithal to read research
it's a it's a very tough uh landscape to navigate and And just to follow up on some of these things that you
mentioned that are these red flags, that is the formula, just I want to point it out, which is
it's often using mechanistic research, it's using animal research, it's using in vitro research
to create a hypothesis. Nothing wrong with that so far, but then it's not presenting
it as a hypothesis that has either yet to be explored further or has already been explored
and disprove it. And so this point that, and this is something that you are often from the videos I've seen telling people,
which I think is a good message is let's look at human trials with healthy people and let's see
what happened. I want to follow up and ask about seed oils just because it's such a controversial
topic. And it's a good example of exactly this that you're explaining.
But okay, that's great.
We have some animal research.
We have some mechanistic data.
We have some in vitro data that suggests maybe this thing is true.
But is it true?
Well, let's look to human trials, well-designed, well-executed, with healthy people, and let's see.
Does it pan out or not?
And as you said, and I think CETOL is a great example, and then I'll give the mic back to you.
If in the end, in those human trials, if we're not seeing this hypothesis manifest,
it's time to move on. It's just time to move on.
You know, I say this all the time. I'm like, Hey, like these studies are difficult to find, you know, like, so there's one of two possibilities here. Either this person making
this claim is completely unaware of these studies or they are aware of them and they're just
purposely avoiding them because it doesn't fit their narrative, you know? And, and it also,
maybe it's making them money. Cause
let's, let's remember that, that most people are just mostly motivated by money. That's,
that's the baseline. You might say I'm cynical. I stand by that as just a, an unfortunate reality
of human nature. And so if someone's entire brand, it's, there's a, maybe an identity factor,
but there's a brand there that makes a lot of money.
If it is entirely dependent upon this ideological view, they're never going to change it.
They never will.
No matter how much data they're given or facts, it will not matter.
We agree.
I might just shift the emphasis of where i agree which i money absolutely matters and you
mentioned it like but i think actually identity matters more and and the reason i'll say that is
you have people who get crazy passionate about like politics who make zero dollars from politics
right um because they make an identity out of it um and this is the same thing with nutrition like
there's a reason like i you know i was kind of one of the hopefully i don't feel arrogant saying this but like
popularized like the concept of flexible dieting you don't see flexible dieting anywhere in my bio
like that's not the first thing i want people to like i don't want to tie myself to that
you know like i'm not a macro coach i'm not like, I don't want to make that my identity because
then one, I'm creating an echo chamber and two, I'm a hammer and everything's a nail,
you know? And I got this way for a little while when I first started doing it. I'm like, oh,
you know, cause flexible dieting for me, you know, I grew up in the era where it was eat clean,
you know, here's these 12 foods that you stick to for bodybuilding and you know i found that
i would stick to that for one two weeks and then i would you know blow out on pizza or ice cream
or whatever it was and like it was really hampering my progress and was like instantly very
like just you know felt like crap and i finally was like you know, what if I just had like some of this stuff, but just
tracked it and moderated it. And it got me compliant. It felt easy because I could still
have the foods I wanted. And I actually, honestly, I ended up eating less junk food,
uh, doing it that way compared to like, just trying to like force myself into like really,
really restrictive diet. Um, so it was easy for me and I just assumed, oh, this will be easy for everybody.
And then come to find out like, no, not everybody's like me.
Like I have a different psychological makeup
than a lot of people that clicked for me,
but it's not necessarily gonna click for other people.
Some people tracking is like very,
like very, very restrictive feeling.
And they do better with something like intermittent fasting
or like low carb or low fat or whatever it is, Right. And I've really come to the place of like, listen, I'll tell you what I do. You know, I don't have a problem with anybody who wants to do anything for them. Like, I really like do what you want, but just don't assume that that's going to be what works for everybody because that's not not a people to hear that they think it's like a physiology difference it's not really a physiology difference it's just whatever trips that compliance
algorithm for nutrition right and it also helps if you understand why it works if you're going to go
on the the keto diet and to not misunderstand why thereafter maybe you have some success losing
weight yeah and like there are some great evidence-based ketogenic people.
There's some great evidence-based intermittent fasting people, you know, like Dom D'Agostino
is a great evidence-based keto person.
Like, you know, Dom will be the first to tell you calories matter.
He likes, you know, keto for like a few different therapeutic benefits and whatnot, and just
enjoys that way of eating.
But he's never going to be like, yeah, vegetables are bad for you and don enjoys that way of eating but he's never going
to be like yeah vegetables are bad for you and don't do the like you're like he understands like
why it's working you know and same thing with i said there's some good intermittent fasting people
i can't think of anybody right off the top of my head but i'm sure they exist right who are like
hey like this just you know this felt easy for me um by restricting my food window i didn't feel
deprived and like it works for me you know
and there's nothing wrong with that but like when i i think what happens is people find something
that works for them or felt easy for them they make the improper conclusion that this will be
the same for everybody and then they also want to feel righteous they want to feel like what
they're doing is the best thing possible and so then they go you know to google or whatever why
is there no carb diet the best diet well it increases fat oxidation it does xyz right
that now you have barred it just gives you the quick summary you're like all right cool got it
this is confirmation bias right like you could you can do this the ai gone the ai said it i mean
come on right right by the way it finds out like the way you frame the question to ai very drastically
influences the answer and the data that it's trained on is actually what it's spitting back
to you it's not it's not tapping into uh the the consciousness of the universe that that
knows everything right so you know i think that confirmation bias is a real thing and then on the
other side of that you have selection bias which like i experienced that which is people would come
to me who weren't they'd heard the spieler about flexible dieting they were already sold on it
right or they've already been trying it had been working for them. And so they come to me telling me how great it is, right? Well, if somebody, for the most part,
people who weren't having success with it, they weren't coming to me for coaching or they weren't
coming to me telling me like that they didn't have success with it. And you see this with the
echo chambers of keto, of fasting, of carnivore, of plant-based you know except they go a step further where they create
this community that's very like they're showing all the things that people are having success with
but if you're not having success with it you're doing it wrong you're cheating and these people
kind of get bullied you know if they're not having if they're not having the same results
and so what happens is people go well look at all these you know people who are having great results. And it's like, yeah, but you're not seeing the people who are having great results
because they don't want to say anything. They're afraid of saying something.
Survivorship bias. I mean, you're seeing all those survivors and all the people who
got shot down, their planes, you don't get to see those ones.
This is kind of a great example. I forget who had the quote, but he was a
coach for Olympic athletes, Olympic track and field athletes, I believe. And he actually called
out, he said, I'm going to butcher the quote, so I apologize. And I can't remember who said it,
so I'm also going to apologize for that. But the essence of the quote was he hated that all these
coaches were like, well, look at all my star athletes. And he's like, what the biggest teams were by far the worst coaches
and would just put people
on these horrific diets
and exercise programs.
But then they would go,
we're looking at these
thrifty, amazing clients.
And it's like, yeah,
but you had 5,000
that went through that.
And most of them
like ended up broken, you know?
But sure, these 50,
like these thrifty,
the genetic elites,
they're going to get results no matter what they did. wasn't because you had some magical formula you know and so i think you know
people have really hard time separating that and quite frankly personal anecdote is much stronger
than data because it pulls on our emotions as well that's a that's another big component to it
and you can even bring in like the the other emotional side of it which is the the like all these groups they all use like the
conspiracy like they don't want you to know about this and they are trying to make you sick and i'm
like guys listen i'm not a fan of the government like i think government could screw up a wet dream
but i i really have a i don't think they're like purposefully trying to make us
sick i like the government's just made up of people you know they're dumb idiots like the rest
of us in many ways they have their own personal biases and agendas and i think that much like
many of us they have a difficult time identifying the right answer from the wrong answer and
experts from charlatans like that is as long as the one thing i said like when people you know two years ago when i was kind of
talking about all this bad coaching in the fitness industry people were coming like we need the
government to regulate this and i was like uh be careful what you wish for like because now you're
trusting that they know who an expert is and like i, I don't trust that they're going to be able to figure that out.
Because I mean, like I'm a PhD in nutrition.
Where do they tomorrow go?
Well, if you're not an RD, you can't give any nutrition advice.
Well, I'm not an RD, but I feel like very qualified to give nutrition advice could be, hey, you might want to like eat some some lean protein and some vegetables and some fruit and seeds and legumes and grains.
Like technically that's nutrition advice.
Well, like, honestly, like, again, I when I get the chance to pick on the government, I like doing it because I'm not a big fan.
But, you know, this whole, well, they told us to eat the food guide pyramid.
That's what made
everybody sick i'm like you talk about cherry picking okay so the food guide pyramid said uh
minimize added orange and sugars eat lots of fruits and vegetables eat uh six like what people
get focused on is the you know six to eleven servings a day of sugar grains um and starches right and uh you know
that well you know meat and dairy were kind of in the middle and they also said exercise they also
said uh control your calories and your portion sizes so you're all blaming the government because
people literally listen to one aspect of that which was They looked at all of it and they saw pasta like that.
That looks good.
I'm doing that.
By the way, they weren't eating pasta with like, like just dried whole wheat pasta, like
dumping oil on it and stuff like, come on guys.
Like, you know, there's all like the food guide pyramid made us sick.
It's like, no, we made us sick because we didn't like, this is just, I think these,
the government conspiracy stuff or the food industry conspiracy stuff feels nice to people's egos because it allows us to abdicate our own personal responsibility for what's happened. Right? We can, well, it isn't your fault. It's these evil food companies. Listen, do I think food companies lobbied to get with it? Of course they did. That's the system that's set up.
So it's not just not to say that they were all full of shit, but it's just something to be aware of that regulatory capture is a real thing. And this comes back to money. Many people are for sale. There is there is an amount of money, especially if they are facing financial pressures or problems then then there there is a number that can uh can get them to look the other way or say something that they don't really believe in or they know is not exactly true and so forth
yeah i mean i and but i think like what i go back to is like okay if people actually had followed
like the thermal food guide pyramid government recommendations we wouldn't be in this situation because they wouldn't be eating too many calories. They'd
be exercising more. Just start there, controlling calories. If that was the only advice and people
actually did it, we would be in a much better place. If it was really just eat whatever you
want, just control your calories. Here's how you do that. Is that optimal? No. But can we just do that? We would not have many of the healthcare
problems that we have. Big rocks, like I say, worry about picking up the big rocks before you
worry about picking up the pebbles. No. And I think that, unfortunately, I've thought a lot
about this. Why is this whole idea of calories in, calories out so unpalatable to people? It's because you are innately aware that there is personal responsibility tied to that.
It's the thing that you least want to hear.
I mean, I think to paraphrase Carl Jung had said something like this, that the solutions
to the biggest problems in your life are going to be in the places that you least want to
look. Again, paraphrasing probably the exact right, but that concept I think is true. to the biggest problems in your life are going to be in the places that you least want to look
again paraphrasing probably the exact right but but that concept i think is true yeah i mean i
one of the things i i when we talk about like the obesity crisis i used to be very much on the side
of like if you're obese um it's because you're lazy and all this kind of stuff and uh very like
i think young naive sort of black and white thinking lane
was there and then the more i worked with people the more i realized like this isn't like it's not
like every single meal they're sitting down making the conscious decision like oh i know that this
food is bad for me i'm eating it anyway because i want it no it's this stuff is so tied up in with
you know your upbringing your environment your environment, your behaviors,
so much of what we do is on autopilot, you know? And so I don't think obesity is necessarily
the fault of the individual, but regardless of whose fault it is, it is going to be the
responsibility of the individual to make different choices. And I think, you know, I know he's not popular right now, but Will Smith had a great quote, which was, you know,
people try to tie fault and responsibility together. Whoever's fair to it is we want them
to fix it. The reality is the only person who can fix our problems is us as individuals.
And, you know, when you talk to, whenever I've talked to people who were really overweight or obese,
who lost a lot of weight, Ethan Suplee comes to mind, or people who were addicts.
My brother was an addict for a while. I'll never forget what he actually said because I asked him,
he went to jail for a while. I was like, what was your rock bottom? Was that it? And he said,
no, I just woke up one day and I just realized I lose everything. I get a job and I lose it. I get a relationship and I lose it. I get,
you know, some money and I lose it. He's like, I just got sick and tired of losing.
And you almost without fail with people who make major changes in their life,
you hear some version of that. Like they just, I just got so fed up and sick about it that I just, you know, I decided that they're like no more. And I think unfortunately a lot of the rhetoric of, you know, it's, it's not your fault. It's the evil food industry. It's the government. that we don't have to look as inward as we might
as to our role and what we can do.
Because the reality is like,
you can't ruin and control the government
other than your one vote that you can cast.
You're not going to control the food industry.
Well, what can you control?
You can control you and that's about it, right?
And even the food company stuff, I'm like,
guys, okay, if i own a food company
it is a for-profit venture i have to make money i have to make money for my shareholders i have
to make money for so i can feed my so i can have my employees all that kind of stuff so if i tell
i'm telling you if people tomorrow still have like we're not buying potato chips and we're not
buying this we're not buying that and we're not buying that and we're going to buy everything. Guess what would happen?
Food companies would trip over themselves to provide healthy food options to give to you.
It's the same reason that all you see on the news is bad news. People are like,
why don't they show positive news? Because people don't watch it. If people, again,
they stood up tomorrow and they were like, you know what? We're not having this whole fear-mongering news stuff.
We're not going to watch it unless they put out some positive stories too. The news stations
would have to change because they would go broke. Well, they're already going broke, but that's
another story. And that would be true even if there were some ulterior motive, if there were
some agenda to want to sow fear,
which you can make, I think, a strong argument that that's part of the issue. But if there's
no demand for it, eventually it all comes to a head. A great example of this is sports teams
in the 60s, 70s, and 80s. Racism was still very much a real thing. And I'm was still very much a real thing and i'm sure still very much a real thing for
some owners or management people but you know it gets to the point you know in the 50s and 60s
like okay you're not willing to have black players and latino players on your teams
good luck being competitive right and so what had to happen was,
well, guess what people are caring more about
than their own personal biases and stuff?
Money.
About making money.
Right?
So it's not like these food companies sat down like,
how do we make people fat?
How do we make them sick?
No, they were like,
how do we get people to buy more of our stuff?
And it was by making food tastier and more palatable.
So, you know, it's,
they're just trying to sell more of their stuff,
quite frankly.
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You talked to me about seed walls earlier, and I do want to cover that real quickly.
So this is a very popular thing right now and very, man, you want to talk about people who get very passionate about something.
And I think it's a great example of everything you've been discussing.
That's why I wanted to come back to it in particular.
Look at a lot of comments on this video from this.
So the narrative around seed oils is, well, look at the increase in oil consumption.
Seed oils are basically polyunsaturated fats, plant-based oils.
Look at the increase in the consumption and look at the increase in rate of obesity and
type 2 diabetes.
Look at these in vitro studies, these animal studies.
Look at how this stuff is made.
It's made the same way as motor oil.
And I go, and I kind of
look at it and I go, well, I don't care about any of that. Like, okay, let's look at the randomized
control trials where they give this stuff to people. If what you're saying is true, if this
is going to increase inflammation, it's going to give people heart attacks. It's going to make
them, we should see this in the human studies. And in overfeeding studies,
you do see some of this. Like if you add oil on top of a diet, people will get fatter and sicker
because they're having energy toxicity. But the real question is like, if we compare apples to
apples, we have to do what's called substitution studies. We have to substitute it because if people are eating more of one thing, we have to feed them less of another to see if it is it just is it that particular food component or is it they're just eating too much and that's making them sick. across the board, inflammation, risk of cardiovascular disease. You look at metabolic
health, liver fat. If you substitute polyunsaturated fats in place of saturated fat,
you either have neutral or positive effects on all of those in the human randomized control trials.
Now, again, like Paul Saldino did like a rebuttal.
Which is that's blasphemous, that statement, according to some people.
Right, right, right.
And then they'll go, look at this.
That's epidemiology.
It's not.
You can't draw conclusions from that.
And then they'll go, well, look at how it's made.
I don't care.
Don't care.
Literally don't care how it's made.
My question, I don't care if it comes out of the elephant's butt.
I just don't care if it comes out of the elephant's butt. I just don't care. The question is, does it have negative or positive consequences on health? Paul Saldino, he sent studies like,
well, look at this showing substitution of seed oils for saturated fat increased lipid
proactivation. I'm like, okay, all right, maybe. But what do we see in the downstream effects? Like what is the actual outcome effect on metabolic health, obesity, and these other,
either nutrient positive?
Again, that's a good example of focusing on a mechanistic detail and then drawing conclusions
from that without following up on those conclusions.
So a great way to look at it is everything you eat
likely has positive and negative mechanistic effects and biochemical effects. The question
is not whether or not they have some negative effects or positive effects. The question is,
what is the overall summation of those in terms of the outcomes? I mean, I can do the opposite
thing, right? Like we kind of did this earlier with eating poop.
Like let's take a food that everybody would consider bad for you.
McDonald's French fries.
Well, McDonald's French fries contain TBHQ.
And TBHQ is an antioxidant that's actually been shown to improve body composition,
extend lifespan, and reduce the incidence of cancer.
There's a clip.
See?
Lane says eat as much
McDonald's french fries
as you can actually stomach.
So I can make that argument.
But the problem is I'm overlooking
the huge amount of data
showing that people eat more french fries
are more metabolically unhealthy
because they overconsume calories and whatnot.
You can literally use this template
to make any argument you want.
And so the question is, if we're looking at the direct evidence, the direct evidence just doesn't support that. Now, I don't want to say seed oils are innocuous because they are the largest source of added calories in the last 50 years.
I added like, you know, two tablespoons of oil on my salad. So I'm going to not have peanut butter or I'm going to not have that candy bar or I'm going to, you know, not have that steak. No, they're just means a diet full of highly processed foods.
That's really what it means.
They're not eating salads.
That's also correct.
There's another thing I'm like, okay, we really feel like it's like people are just adding too much olive oil or sorry, not olive oil, but canola oil.
No, they're eating like a bunch of refined garbage that has this stuff in it, you know, but also has a bunch of other stuff as well and highly calorically dense and hyper palatable. And so I just, I think people have a
real, real hard time holding two seemingly opposing ideas in both hands simultaneously,
which is foods can have positive and negative effects. Saturated fat, right?
Let's take saturated fat.
You know, saturated fat, there is some evidence it can raise testosterone.
That's great.
That's a benefit.
But then there's also some other, there's some negatives, like raises the risk, it raises
LDL, you know, at a one-to-one ratio, people talk about fructose on its effects on liver
fat in a straight up head-to-head match of an overfeeding study of fructose on its effects on liver fat in a straight up head to head match of an overfeeding study of
fructose or saturated fat where they accrued calories, overfeeding saturated fat increased
liver fat 70% more than fructose did. And by the way, fructose overfeeding liver fat in most studies
shows no, like no difference to glucose overfeeding. So, you know, again, it's one of those things of we need to, I think mechanisms
are sexy and it's important that we understand mechanisms so that when we see an outcome,
we can have an understanding of why we are seeing that outcome. That's important. I don't like when
I see outcome data, like you see this with a lot of like supplement data, like some of these
supplements, like, well, we gave it to people and they got stronger and more muscle and i'm like but how
like you know like how like what uh yeah i'm like sorry if there was outcome data but no proposed
mechanism then i kind of get a little bit you know sketched out by it but we can't just rely
on mechanistic data especially when there's always mechanisms that act in
opposition.
We have to look at the outcome data.
I mean, one more great example of this is aspirin.
People don't realize aspirin is an anti...
We know aspirin is an anticoagulant.
We know that.
Like, it's one of the reasons we tell people to take a baby aspirin, like if they have
high...
If they, you know, are prone to heart disease, that sort of thing.
But aspirin has actually some procoagulating
effects we know that as well like it activates some procoagulation mechanisms but if we look
at the overall effect it's an anticoagulant so again we have to understand that it can be both
things can be true for various foods and we need to understand that overall healthy lifestyle and diet is not just one thing.
It is a group of things that mostly boil down to don't eat too much overall, eat mostly
unprocessed foods, mostly because they're just higher in fiber, more satiating,
and it's hard to overeat them. And whatever that looks like, you see pretty well across the board,
whether it's plant-based or whether it's Mediterranean or whether it's even an animal-based
diet where they're still getting a low-carb diet that's still relatively low in saturated fat and gets enough you know vegetables in
like all those can still be healthy and very similar like levels of outcomes so i think people just have a really really really hard time dealing with like that level of nuance in the in
the the case of seed oils one one final question on that. So you have this human evidence controlled trials
and here are the results. What's the response to that? You have this debate coming up. I'm
assuming you're going to be relying heavily on trials like those. What is the counter argument?
What's the best counter argument, even if it's not a great one, but how does that discussion go from that to, yeah, but you still shouldn't eat seed oils?
A lot of times there's kind of, um, there was already the natural ones are like appealing to conspiracy theory or like honest landways.
What happens is, well, we got to check to see who funded those studies and.
Yeah.
Or, or maybe finding a little deficiency like yeah sure i mean
not that that the study's not perfect the authors even they even acknowledge that there are some
disadvantages that they you know to this research whatever but taking that and saying oh there you
can throw it all away now yeah so that's that's the next step is they'll try to like kind of just
say well you know we can't trust
any science because some studies have been shown to be fabricated and whatnot like no we're not
we're not doing that because you came into this citing study so we're not doing that so either
here here's the deal either we're including all studies unless you have some that have been
specifically retracted or we're not including any whatsoever and we're relying on anecdote
which I can find just as many anecdotes to an opposite
style diet as what you're saying
so like where do we go from here
and then they usually will try to like shift the guard post
and an example of this is they'll
acknowledge they'll cite some randomized
control trials but it'll be like
where saturated, like let's say saturated
fat, where saturated fat was
not any worse than
polyunsaturated fats, where polyunsaturated
fats were better than saturated fats, like
ah, see, it's not, you know
I'm like, no, but, no, no, no
that's not what you said, that like
you're moving the goalposts to, these
things are bad, to now,
because I said, like, neutral
or positive. I didn't just say positive.
Right? So,
usually there's all the goalposts shifting, and
once you've, like, painted them into kind of that
like, logical box,
that's where the whole, I mean, this
happened recently with
not seed orals, but
my video about broccoli, and like, my response video to Paul Salino's video saying broccoli is bullshit.
He came back and said, well, you know, so the first thing he said was, well, in my short form content, I'm like, okay, here we go.
Here come the excuses about why there wasn't enough nuance.
Like there wasn't enough nuance. I don't think we really need human randomized control trials because in my, you know, my clinical experience, I've seen XYZ and like all these comments on Instagram are popping up. Right. And I'm like, well, first off, I didn't know Instagram comments were a clinic, but okay. right or like confirmation bias like okay so eliminating broccoli for some people their gi
feels better there's probably a very easy explanation for that which is uh they have
ibs symptoms or um they overproduce gas in response to cruciferous vegetables a lot of
people have fodmap sensitivities are like that and so a carnivore diet is basically an elimination
diet right where uh a lot of people acutely, their symptoms will resolve and they feel better.
That doesn't mean that like those things are BS any more than it means that like somebody
has a food allergy to a certain thing, that that thing is BS for everyone.
And then we got to end it with saying, well, you know, I've always said like, if you're
thriving on what you're doing, you know, keep doing it.
I'm like, no, but that's not what you said.
Oh, that's not what you said. What you said was this is going to do this. It's going to lead to
this. It's going to cause you to gain really. And this is why it's bullshit. That's what you said.
Okay. You can blame it on the algorithm being 90 seconds or whatever it is, or rules being 90
seconds, but like, then just do a better job or do a series. You know, that's kind of how the thing shifts around where it's it's you know it
kind of goes from they kind of oscillate between conspiracy or trying to discredit the research or
you know um and even in that certain video he said we don't need human randomized control
but then he cited the study in pigs and i'm like okay so we said we are citing research or we
aren't citing research
like which which where are we going with this you know so i think um it's just it's really hard i
think that level of intellectual dishonesty is really hard to deal with because there was no
winning you're dealing with malevolence not incompetence and and i think that that trite saying should
actually be probably switched around is never assume incompetence where malevolence will do
yeah i mean i i think i tend to give people the benefit of the doubt i do think a lot of this
is just it's not even malevolence i think people are so strongly tied to those beliefs that they just they're not
they they literally because their identity is tied up in this they cannot accept that information
and that's why it has to go eventually to well let's just discredit also like when i bring this
up like usually people will be like well we can just describe disregard whatever what science says
because they gave us the vaccine.
It all falls down to that.
Or many other controversies, which are perfectly valid.
I acknowledge that. I think that blindly accepting science with capital S
doesn't exactly make sense either. I think you've said many times, you can't just turn your brain off, but that doesn't mean that science is bullshit.
Right. But I think the issue becomes when we throw the baby out with the bathwater, right?
Like are studies perfect? No. Are some studies very biased and constructed to
try to portray a certain outcome? Yes. Are some studies straight up fabricated? Yes.
Does that mean we throw the whole thing out? No. And that's why replication is the mother of all
science. And that's why, you know, I've said like, you know, a great example is, you know,
I kind of list supplements in my tier one, tier two, tier three, you know, like I have,
you know, the Mount Everest of supplements
is kind of like creatine, whey protein, caffeine. That's the Mount Everest, or not Mount Everest,
but the Mount Rushmore, right? Then when you go into tier two, I've got stuff like Rhodiola,
Rosea, Ashwagandha. And people say, why is it not tier one? And I'm like, I just want to see
more data. Data is really promising right now,
but what I want to see is over a longer period of time,
across more laboratories,
and more, you know, over different locations, right?
Because what happens is when you get repeatable results
over the course of time,
you just become much more confident in something.
Whereas, like, single studies now, I mean, like it depends, like the journal, the lab, you know, the protein study that did come out, I gave a lot of, I really looked at it hard because that's a really good lab. You know, I know it's a good lab. They publish really good data.
publish really good data. But if it's published in the Romanian Journal of Toxicology or something like that, and it stands in isolation, okay, wake me up when they have 10. And it's been done over
the course of years in various different labs. And so that's where I kind of come back to with
this stuff. It's like, okay, you're making X claim, right? Cedals are bad.
Okay. The data doesn't really back up what you're saying. Then you want to say, well,
the data is bought and paid for whatever it is. Okay. But what about the data on your side of
things? Like, you know, like it's kind of like these people tend to be pro saturated fat. Like
you don't think the meat industry lobbies for research to be pro saturated fat
because you're kidding yourself if that's true. Because like, I mean, and this is somebody I told
people, I'm like, I never did. I think I'd be in this position because my research was sponsored
by the national dairy council, the egg nutrition center and the national cattle and beef association.
Like if anybody has a bias towards animal protein, it's me, you know?
Never did I think I'd be defending the virtues of plants and oils, but here we are.
And so, again, it's one of those things where, you know,
I tell people if your only criticism of a study is the funding source,
it says more about your bias than it does the researchers.
funding source, it says more about your bias than it does the researchers. Because almost with few exceptions, like over the course of 20 years of reading this stuff,
if a study has a result where I go, man, that's really weird and seems to stand alone,
with very rare exceptions, I can go into the methodology, the design, the subjects, how they're conducted the
analysis, what they measured. And I can go, ah, that's why they found that. Right. And usually
what I'll come back with saying is like, hey, their data is fine for the way they constructed
it. Like it makes sense. Their conclusions based on that that data i think are way too strong or in some
cases just outright wrong based on their own data set right but the problem is it's just too easy to
kind of like well that was funded by this so we can just dismiss it and well i'll tell people like
yes money is a motivator but you know when people kind of you, you know, like in pop culture, scientists are so like demonized, like every movie starts with a scientist who fucked up and screwed us all over.
Right. Like every action or sci-fi movie, it's always some scientist who is out to make profit or pushed it a little bit too hard, you know.
And what I'll tell people, like, you know, just kind of extreme example is people that, think we have a cure for cancer, right. That we're like hiding and suppressing.
I mean, and what I'll say is like, I'm like, okay, so first off, cancer is not one disease.
It's a, it's a name for a group of diseases, uh, with, uh, various different causes. Um,
but you know, in the end result in uncontrolled cell growth.
But, okay, you think there's a,
you think we're hiding a cure.
Okay.
Do you think that, like,
literally every scientist is a piece of shit?
Because that's pretty much
what would have to happen, right?
Because you don't think that there's scientists out,
like, well, people can be bought.
Sure.
But, like, my friend Joe Zundel,
he got into cancer research
because his mom died of cancer you think there was any amount of money you could pay him to
suppress a cure for cancer like no like money is a strong motivator but it's not the only motivator
and again that's what like are some scientists for sale are some yes yes but that is why we look at the overall body of literature across the course
of time to come to a scientific consensus and i did i want to touch on one last thing because it
brings me to this uh conversation i had the other day i think covet really drastically reduced our
our people's confidence in the scientific community i mean that that that's a fact there
there's there's you can just look to many, many,
many surveys that have been conducted over the last couple of years.
And as this was happening, I knew this was going to happen. I saw the train wreck occurring
because, and I said this right at the beginning of this, I said, we're going to be able to look
back in 20 years and go, oh, we should have done this. We'll be able to Monday morning
quarterback it very easily. But the problem is the scientific consensus
takes decades
to come to to really
understand a problem
and how to deal with it
we didn't have decades
like people were demanding an answer
ASAP right
and so like I mean
I get it like people ask me I'm like I'm glad
I'm not in charge you know it'm glad I'm not in charge.
You know, it's like, I'm not in charge.
And, you know, so what happened is they got a real side seat to the scientific method unfolding in real time, which is we have this theory.
We have an opposing theory.
We're giving our data.
We're giving our data, which over time we're giving our data we're giving our data which over time we're seeing we're now having a
little bit more clear picture of things and what probably should have been done but we were trying
to build the ship while we were trying to sail it at the same time that was the issue we're trying
to build the plane while we're trying to fly it you know and it just was never it was there was
no scenario which it was going to go well.
Like there just wasn't, you know, I mean, at times, like there were times during the thing where, you know, I would say, Hey, listen, well, I remember when the first lockdowns
came, I was like, you know, we don't really know much about this thing.
We know almost nothing about it.
We don't have widespread testing.
I understood why they did lockdowns after four weeks when't have widespread testing. I understood why they did lockdowns. After four weeks,
when we had widespread testing, and then especially once the vaccine was wildly available,
I'm like, why are we still doing this? This doesn't make sense.
Even before the vaccine was available, there was enough data, because I remember explicitly, I was in Virginia at the time, there was enough data available to know who was truly at risk and
who was not. I remember talking about it on my podcast and
explaining, this was maybe six months into it, explaining why at that point, I personally was
not concerned for my health anymore. Because if I looked at the cohort that I was a part of,
and I even went through some actuarial data, let me put this into perspective, how minuscule
the risk is of me ever having to even go to the hospital from COVID.
And one of the conclusions looking at actuarial data was that driving my car on the highway for
30 to 45 minutes per day was a riskier endeavor than the risk posed by COVID. And so even that
type of explanation got some people riled up and it was
just ad hominem and emotion. They couldn't, I never got any kind of coherent, rational response,
but. Became very political. And you mentioned something that I think most people don't have
a fundamental understanding of, which is risk, right? Could you find healthy people that died
from COVID? Yes, you can. They were the exception, not the rule.
And when I talk about the vaccine, people ask me, and I'm like, listen, I wish I could tell you
that it was bad, that negative. But the research data says that if you took it, especially if you
were in a higher risk population, that it was going to drastically reduce your risk of
being hospitalized now if you'd had COVID in the past six six to twelve months do i think you needed
it no you'd had it you have those antibodies right well remember at there was a time when
saying that could it could have gotten you banned off of social media right and so that they have
that now that's it that was a very miavellian sort of, well, we want people
to get vaccinated. So we don't, even though this is true, we're not going to let them say it because
we're afraid less people will get vaccinated. That will make the overall population more unhealthy.
Right. So that's kind of how it was justified. But again, risk, like, okay, people hear that.
They're like, no, but look at all these people who died after they had the jab or, you know, who got myocarditis. I'm like, listen, yeah, like some people took the vaccine
and got really, really sick. Okay. Then if you look at the dingo on balance, if you hadn't had
COVID and especially for the high risk population, but even if you were, the research suggested that you were at a lower risk of getting you know those side effects from
the vaccine by far than you were from the actual virus itself and so you know i told people like
yeah i like i got vaccinated the first round um i didn't get a booster or anything like that because
after that i'd i'd been exposed had the antibodies and then i've been around like now it's you know now COVID is going to be like the flu but you know the problem is people so the comparison would be again I'm going to use my
brother as an example my brother was in a car accident uh in 2005 and he was not wearing his
seat belt if he'd been wearing his seat belt he would have died um the he was in the back seat of
us of an SUV and the the floorboard after this wreck the floorboard of the he was in the back seat of us of an suv and the the floorboard after this wreck the
floorboard of the suv was touching the roof like he would have been crushed to death he got thrown
from the car and he was seriously injured but he survived with that anecdote should i tell people
like don't wear your seatbelt no because the data like even though there are exceptions and even
though airbags kill some people if you're playing the numbers you're gonna wear your seatbelt and have an airbag because everything is a risk analysis
there is nothing that is black and white always will happen i mean there are risks associated
with getting out of bed every morning exactly and like a great example of smoking, everybody knows somebody who smoked like every day and lived till 80, 85. Okay, what does that mean that we should tell people, hey, you can go smoke? No, it's a very risky behavior, but it doesn't. One, high risk doesn't mean it's going to always happen. And low risk doesn't mean it's going to never happen and so i think if people could understand
just a little bit more clearly how risk works there would not quite be as much politicization
of politicization of this and uh but i think you know people just you know they take the most
extreme version of the argument and then they argue against that and then it becomes this like
round and around where we can't really have an open honest conversation about it and it goes
for both sides like you know there was the there was the kind of the left-wing side saying well
the vaccine has absolutely no side effects and everybody needs to be double-vaxxed to
mask up and all this kind of stuff and then you have the other extreme side of it, which is, you know, if you
take the jab, you're going to get sick and die. And, you know, you're, you're a puppet for the
government and all this kind of stuff. And it's like, you know, those, that's just so there's no,
it's just, it's just not helpful. I know that we're, we're coming up on,
on time. And so I wanted to come back to one thing that you said, and then we can wrap up.
And that is just, if we think about people listening who they've learned a lot and they're
going to go out and try to be better informed or try to be harder to mislead.
And this point of identity, you've mentioned this several times, and I do think it's
a big part of it. At least I can speak personally, and I'm curious to hear your thoughts. Something
that I've always tried, well, for a long time, at least, I've tried to inculcate the mindset of
is trying to get at the truth, maintaining that as whatever,
however that might impact my identity,
I think is a safer concept to latch on to
rather than if we're going to keep it in health and fitness,
or I mean, even politics,
rather than just quote unquote,
identifying as a right wing guy or a center guy
or a left wing guy,
but in health and fitness, identifying saying as a seed oil demonizer or as a saturated fat enjoyer or some of these other brands that, you know, it's these constellation of lifestyle things that then is sold as an identity. And that's been helpful to me just in mitigating
some of these biases that you mentioned, confirmation, disconfirmation, which I'd
recommend that people go and learn about. Even just understanding concepts of common logical
fallacies and biases can help you at least be aware of them. And maybe if you're willing to look at yourself to
see, oh, yeah, I do kind of do that. Maybe I should be better with that. But again, for me,
it's been helpful to just regularly remind myself that what I want to do is get at the truth
and or try to get closer to the truth. i'm willing to to go wherever that takes me
and if that means that i have to abandon previous ideas or beliefs or maybe even parts of my
identity that can be painful psychologically but i think the reward of getting closer to the truth
and and and that can that can come with many many benefits it's worth the pain
what are your thoughts on that yeah i think um being right and the truth are often incongruent
you know like you have to be willing to be wrong about stuff and a lot of people will
say to me oh you never admit or you're you're like you know you're like the
worst without like not really like if you look at my history i've changed my mind on quite a few
things now to be fair the things i've changed my mind on i didn't have super strong beliefs about
most of them but you know i do tell people i'm like listen i usually don't plant my flag super
strong so when i do you actually should
probably pay attention you know because it takes a lot to convince me of something i'm a very
skeptical person by nature when it comes to like research and science and um just what you said
like just having some basic background and logic like just go look up logical fallacies and very
quickly you realize how many people most people use all the time.
Like it's a vulnerable discourse.
And that can help you with vetting claims.
If you understand these things, you'll start to see it quite a bit, especially on social media with with the short form content.
And that is that's there to game the algorithms.
Absolutely.
it's there to game the algorithms. Absolutely. So I tell people, one, I got very lucky because I had a great PhD advisor who, in a very kind way, was able to crush a lot of the things I believed
and then remind me that that is okay because we are looking for the truth. And I tell people,
I like being right.
Not going to pretend like I don't.
I'll do card rules in my living room if I'm right about something.
But I care the most about getting the right answer.
Because if I'm already right about everything, then I'm already maxed out.
There is nothing that I can improve on.
One of the things I'll tell people is like, hey, listen, I'm a competitive athlete. Like, and I don't want to like die young.
And I don't want to like perform suboptimally.
Like I'll change, like, again,
the coolest part of my PhD
was based on my own research,
I changed the way I ate.
Not like a huge, in a huge way,
but just like suddenly.
And so like being wrong
is actually kind of beautiful
because you get to improve if you're already right about everything then guess what this is as good
as it gets and and i would say if if you're already right about everything you'd better be getting all
of the results that you could ever want if there's a mismatch you might not be right about everything.
Well, that's, you know, I don't like ad hominems,
but they open it up when, you know, like,
I saw like all the, a lot of these low carb guys who come at me and they're like, you know, they don't want to,
they'll kind of do the progression we talked about,
which is eventually trying to dismiss research
and going to anecdote and all that kind of stuff.
And then I go, okay, well well why am i leaner than you yeah if we're if we're throwing
out a rational discourse then let's let's just have some fun i mean you're opening this door
right you're opening this door like why am i bigger and stronger than you and better looking? Just kidding. No, it's, you know, that, and again, people will, like, I did that on Twitter one day
and put up a picture of me from my bodybuilding days.
And I'm like, listen, I have been leaner doing the stuff I talk about than you have ever
been in your entire life and ever will be.
Explain, right?
People got real mad at me.
They're like, you're doing the exact
same i like yes that's the point like that is the point i'm doing the exact same that and my point
is anecdote is not reliable because of all the things that you guys are so astutely pointing
out now that it's going against your bias you know it's very tough because i think most people
care more about being right
than they care about getting the right answer. I think that's just hardwired into all of us.
And all we can do is try to grapple with it and try to not let it run and ruin our lives.
And I think my experience in grad school grad school again was really great in that
I learned to be okay with being wrong and it didn't feel like a personal attack on my
own like character.
And I think most people ask questions not to get, not for the actual answer.
I think they ask questions to have people affirm what they already believe to
be true.
You know,
like this,
this applies to me too,
because like,
even though I'm so rigorous with science,
like I've had a lot of stuff pop up in personal relationships and then working
through therapy and stuff with me that I'm like,
damn,
I did,
I,
I'm doing,
I did so much of the stuff that i rail against over here
in science but for whatever reason couldn't apply it over here you know in these personal relationships
that again just goes to show you that like those sorts of skills don't always translate across
disciplines especially with more emotionally charged relationships or situations right but i'm hearing people make some of this stuff with
nutrition and we get very emotionally charged you know so yeah that's that's adding a little
empathy that i didn't have before um but again it's it's kind of um you really you have to
always keep in mind that you are a human being who is flawed.
And that one of the things I'll tell people when they like, well, science is this.
I'm like, no, science is perfect.
Science is perfect.
Science is what is.
It's human beings who screw it up.
Okay.
Because we are flawed.
Science is not.
And just to point that up, it's the scientific method.
I mean, maybe perfect
is a superlative term
that eventually
it gets to the answer,
but it's minimally,
it's a very high functioning way
of getting at the truth.
Perfect, probably the wrong word,
but it is the best thing.
It was the...
Yeah, the best method that we currently have for,
that we currently understand for finding truth.
Yeah.
Well, we could probably go on and on.
We're already over an hour, but it was a great discussion.
Is there anything else before we wrap up that is still flicking around in your head that you want to let everybody know or any
last thoughts before we get to where people can find you and your work and anything in particular
you want them to know about? I think we covered a lot of it. Again, I would just say a few phrases
to keep in mind would be, there are no solutions, only trade-offs. Now follow that up. At what cost, right?
Whenever a solution is presented.
Where's your hard evidence?
These are Thomas Sowell phrases.
Where's your hard evidence?
At what cost?
What's the trade-off?
And that, where's your hard evidence,
actually reminds me of something I wanted to follow up with you on,
not to drag this on, but that
also is a simple step that many people don't take when they are getting advice from somebody
who maybe has altitude above them because of credentials or authority.
It's just asking that question, whether you can actually ask it one-to-one or if you're consuming content somewhere, but asking, okay, according to what evidence,
what evidence do you have for that?
And often just asking that question, especially if you can ask it to a person, you quickly
realize, oh, that doesn't make any sense.
Like, really?
Really?
That's it?
That's the evidence?
Exactly.
And then I think the other two phrases would be extraordinary claims require extraordinary
evidence.
And that which can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence.
And those two would be a hitching his razor.
And I think those are important things to keep in mind as well.
Yeah, great tips.
And I'll throw one more in there and then we'll wrap up.
If you're speaking with somebody who purports to be an expert on something and they have a lot of claims, if they can't give you any counter arguments to their claims, they don't
know what they're talking about. And just
giving any counter arguments, in my opinion, isn't enough. If they can't give you the best
counter arguments and explain to you why they're not convinced by those counter arguments,
you should be very skeptical about anything they say.
Exactly. That is very well put.
Well, again, great discussion. and let's wrap up quickly with where
people can find you and your work anything in particular you want them to know about
yeah so um you know i'm by or late on pretty much all social media and my website's biolane.com
i have a nutrition coaching app called Carbon Diet Coach that basically does nutrition coaching
in your pocket for 10 bucks a month.
And I also have a nutritional coaching team with Team BioLane.
So people need more one-on-one support.
I've got my research review, which I think a lot of people listening to this might be
interested in because every month we take studies and kind of break them down in a way
that's easy to understand and palatable. And that's called reps, which is research explained
with practical summaries. Uh, that's on my website. And then I also have, um, some court,
I have a course called physique coaching Academy with Dr. Bill Campbell. Our goal was to create
like a university level education on the science of coaching people to build muscle and lose fat.
And it's an excellent course. We've had really great feedback from students
and it's something I'm very, very proud of. So.
That's great. I didn't know that you guys do it.
Yeah, no, it's excellent. We just launched it last year and we've had our first cohort
of students graduate and the feedback's been really, really great.
Awesome.
Well, thanks again, Lane.
I really appreciate you taking the time and going a bit over time for us.
No problem.
Thanks for having me, Mike.
Well, I hope you liked this episode.
I hope you found it helpful.
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