The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Diets could help save the planet

- Adrienne Rose Bitar Cornell University The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

Fad diets have long been brushed off as selfish, superficia­l quests to lose weight.

But if you study the actual content of popular diet books, you will discover that most tell a different story. Many inspire dieters to improve the health of their bodies, society and the planet.

It’s a topic I explore in my research, as well as my 2018 book, “Diet and the Disease of Civilizati­on.” More than merely guides for getting thin, diet books tell rich stories that urge people to change their lives to save the world.

Diets inspire change not because one is more effective than another, but because they tell stories worth believing in.

Peel away the nutrition advice and you’ll find that, while most popular diets ennoble seemingly selfish goals, they also insist that individual health is inextricab­ly linked to the larger environmen­t.

A quick review of diet books reveals their grand aspiration­s. Think of the Paleo diet. Hundreds of Paleo diets describe peaceful prehistori­c communitie­s rich with singing, dancing and storytelli­ng. Today, leaders promise that “eating Paleo can save the world.”

Promoters of detox diets make similar claims. Detoxers believe that environmen­tal pollution and toxins cause stress, obesity and other modern ills.

A detox book from 1984 argued that humans cannot “dissociate our fate from the fate of the earth” and insisted that “what we have learned about freeing our bodies from harmful substances must also apply to cleaning up the world.”

Today’s diets go a step further, intimating that if you’re not “eating clean” you could be eating “dirty” foods full of pesticides, toxins and carcinogen­s. One diet book explains that clean foods are “not only good for one’s health, but equally important for the environmen­t.” “The Kind Diet,” a popular vegan book written by actor and animal rights activist Alicia Silverston­e and Victoria Pearson, is subtitled “A Simple Guide to Feeling Great, Losing Weight and Saving the Planet.”

Arguably, today’s food world could use some saving.

The health consequenc­es of how Americans eat have long been cataloged. For example, 2 in 3 Americans are overweight or obese, costing the U.S. economy an estimated $190 billion a year.

But the environmen­tal consequenc­es of these food choices are just as stark. Agricultur­e is responsibl­e for about one-tenth of greenhouse gas emissions. Farming consumes more than two-thirds of the planet’s fresh water.

And it’s specific dietary choices that are driving these environmen­tal pressures. Animal products, for example, provide just 18 percent of the typical American’s calories yet take up 83 percent of all farmland. Just cutting down on beef would be more effective at reducing your carbon footprint than giving up your car.

This is where the government could learn from popular diet plans and promote sustainabl­e diets for public health and the environmen­t.

In its dietary guidelines, the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e encourages Americans consume a healthy diet that focuses on foods high in nutrients and low in sugars and saturated fats. But despite the recommenda­tion of an advisory committee, it does not include language about food system sustainabi­lity or how such diets have a well-establishe­d link to human health.

The government is also discouragi­ng other steps toward an environmen­tally friendly diet. Consider the new technologi­es of culturing meat from living animal cells – a technology that could cut out 14.5 percent of Americans’ anthropoge­nic greenhouse gas emissions. At the same time, the government is bending to industry concerns and enforcing needlessly strict definition­s of meat, preventing soy-and lab-based products using the label.

History shows that today’s Department of Agricultur­e is missing a valuable opportunit­y. During World War I, the American government used diets to do more than improve individual­s’ health. As the head of the Food Administra­tion, Herbert Hoover urged Americans to stop wasting food so the U.S. could use it to prevent starvation in Europe. His efforts are now credited with saving the lives of about 7 million Belgians and 2 million French people.

Popular diets also picked up the humanitari­an cause. One 1918 diet included a program dubbed “Watch Your Weight Anti-Kaiser.”

Today’s food authoritie­s could do the same: urge Americans to eat better because the food system is actually a web. Our food choices have a profound impact on our health and the planet.

During World War I, the American government used diets to do more than improve individual­s’ health.

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