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Soy Can Cause Allergic Reactions for Years – and Infertility for Generations! Read How Soy Replaced Coconut Oil through Clever Marketing

by Dr. Mercola [1]

[1]Soy can be found in almost every product on your grocery store shelves — corn chips, ice cream, canned tuna and every packaged food you can think of. It goes under names like yeast extract, soy protein, soybean oil, soy lecithin and soy flour.

But soy is one of the top eight allergens that cause immediate reactions such as coughing, sneezing, runny nose, hives, diarrhea, difficulty swallowing and anaphylactic shock.

Delayed allergic responses can also occur several hours to several days after the food is eaten.

According to Mannie Barling and Ashley F. Brooks-Simon on the Blogger News Network:

“To make soy more appetizing, the manufacturers added sugar, synthetic sweeteners, genetically modified high fructose corn sugar, refined salt, artificial flavorings, colors and MSG. So the soy isn’t really soy. It is a Frankenfood created for the sole purpose of making a profit from health conscious people trying to live a healthier life.”

Sources:
Blogger News Network November 30, 2010

Dr. Mercola’s Comments:

The fact that unfermented soy is widely regarded as a health food in the United States is a perfect example of how a brilliant marketing strategy can fool millions.

It all started when the food industry, presented with a quandary over what to do with the byproducts of their ever-growing soybean oil industry, had an idea.

With some processing, and some added flavorings, preservatives, sweeteners, emulsifiers and synthetic nutrients, they turned soy protein isolate (the key ingredient in most soy foods that imitate meat and dairy products), “the food processors’ ugly duckling,” as Sally Fallon put it [2], “into a New Age Cinderella.”

How Did Soy Become so Popular?

Years ago, tropical oils, such as palm and coconut oil, were commonly used in American food production. Spurred by financial incentives, the industry devised a plan to shift the market from these “exotic” tropical oils to something more “homegrown.” As a result, a movement was created to demonize and vilify tropical oils in order to replace them with domestically grown oils such as corn and, primarily, soy.

For the most part, they’ve been very successful in their campaign to paint soy in a healthy light, and this belief was further propagated by the FDA’s 1999 approval of this health claim for soy foods:

“Diets low in saturated fat and cholesterol that include 25 grams of soy protein a day may reduce the risk of heart disease.”

Unfortunately, according to the survey Consumer Attitudes About Nutrition 2008 (by the United Soybean Board):

Soy’s glowing healthy image is not based on science, however, but rather shrewd marketing and outright lies that have taken root among the masses. The end result is enormous profits for the soy industry and impaired health for most who have been deceived into using unfermented soy long-term.

What You Need to Know About Unfermented Soy

First and foremost, unfermented soy — the type found in soymilk, soy burgers, soy ice cream and even tofu — is not a health food.

If you were to carefully review the thousands of studies published on soy, I strongly believe you would reach the same conclusion as I have — which is, the risks of consuming unfermented soy products [3] FAR outweigh any possible benefits.

Dr. Kaayla Daniel, author of The Whole Soy Story [4], points out thousands of studies linking soy to malnutrition, digestive distress, immune-system breakdown, thyroid dysfunction [5], cognitive decline, reproductive disorders and infertility — even cancer and heart disease.

Here is just a sampling of the health effects that have been linked to soy consumption:

8 Top Reasons to Avoid Unfermented Soy

If you’re eating soy because you believe it is healthy, please do yourself and your family a favor and click on some of the links above as well as read through the list that follows. You’ll quickly see that soy, in its processed form, is not a food you want in your body.

You can also keep this list of soy foods to AVOID handy:

Is There a Healthy Way to Eat Soy?

Yes, and that’s by choosing fermented soy [13].

After a long fermentation process, the phytate (which blocks your body’s uptake of essential minerals) and anti-nutrient levels of soybeans are reduced, and their beneficial properties become available to your digestive system.

Traditionally fermented soy is the form that has been very popular in many Asian cultures for centuries, and numerous studies suggest it aids in preventing and reducing a variety of diseases including certain forms of heart disease and cancers.

One of the main benefits of fermented soy, especially natto, is that it is the best food source of vitamin K2 [14]. Vitamin K2 is essential to preventing osteoporosis, cardiovascular disease, and diseases of the brain such as dementia, and protecting you from various cancers including prostate, lung, liver cancer and leukemia.

For these reasons, I strongly recommend adding fermented soy to your diet, in varieties such as the following:

These are the soy varieties that will actually support and nourish your health — unlike the vast majority of processed soy products on the market, which will do nothing but detract from it.\

Copyright Dr. Joseph Mercola, 2011. All Rights Reserved.

Read the Full Article Here: http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2011/03/14/is-the-hidden-soy-in-your-foods-contributing-to-illness.aspx [1]

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