Soy:
The Poison Seed
By:
Dr. William Wong, ND, PhD.
This piece will be short and very much to the point. As
Americas largest cash crop soy is being touted as having a
myriad of health benefits. Far from! Soy is poison, period!
All paid for opinion to the contrary.
What's
bad about soy?
Contains Isoflavones (Genistein and Daidzein). In soy the
isoflavones are built in insecticides. If they kill bugs are
they good for humans?
Isoflavones are estrogen like substances which have the same
effect as the bodies estrogen. Cancer comes from having too
much estrogen. Irritability and mood swings, fat gain from the
waist down, fibrocystic breast disease uterine fibromas are all
associated with estrogen dominance. Instead of helping prevent
the bad effects of environmental or natural estrogen dominance
soy isoflavones are now known to increase the bad effect of
estradiol and estrone the two major bad guys of the estrogen
family. (1,2,3).
Kills testicular tissue. In men it permanently reduces
testicular function and lowers Lutinizing Hormone production. LH
is what signals your testicles to work. This increases the
probability of estrogen dominance in men with its hair loss,
swollen and cancerous prostates. (4,5). Male children fed soy
formulas and soy products may not ever get to like girls. Dorris
Rapp MD, the worlds leading pediatric allergist, asserts that
environmental and food estrogens are responsible for the
increase in male homosexuality and the worldwide reduction in
male fertility. (6)
Isoflavones decrease thyroid hormone production. This can stunt
children's growth and make the rest of us tired and fat.
(7,8,9).
Female children fed the estrogens in soy formula and products
hit puberty very very early sometimes as young as age 6 to 8!
(10).
Pregnant women eating soy products may effect the sexual
differentiation of their children. Studies show malformations
of the reproductive tract or offspring born with both male and
female sexual organs. (11).
Isoflavones decrease GOOD cholesterol (HDL). (12,13).
Soy contains Phytin, which takes essential minerals such as
iron, zinc, magnesium etc. out of the body before they can be
absorbed. Also soy contains Trypsin inhibitors block this vital
anti cancer enzyme, anti fibrosis enzyme. (14).
A 7000 man 30 year epidemiological study done in Hawaii shows
soy is connected with a higher rate of Vascular Dementia
(Alzheimer's disease). (15,16).
Any opinions to contradict the facts noted above have been paid
for by the Agribusiness giants Monsanto and Archer Daniels
Midland. Once public knowledge of their manipulation of public
opinion and of the FDA becomes widely known, expect monster
class action lawsuits against these folks. They'll deserve it
in spades!
References:
-
Casanova, M., et al.; Developmental effects of dietary
phytoestrogens in Sprague –Dawley rats and interactions of
genistein and daidzein with rat estrogen receptors alpha and
beta in vitro. Toxicol Sci 1999, Oct.; 51 (2): 236-44.
-
Santell, L., et al.: Dietary genistein exerts estrogenic
effects upon the uterus, mammary gland and the hypothalamic
/ pituitary axis in rats. J. Nutr 1997 Feb.;127 (2): 263-9.
-
Harrison, R.M., et al.; Effect of genistein on steroid
hormone production in the pregnant rhesus monkey. Proc Soc
Exp Biol Med 1999 Oct.; 222(1): 78-84.
-
Nagata, C., et al.; Inverse association of soy product
intake with serum androgen and estrogen in Japanese men.
Nut Cancer 2000; 36(1): 14-8.
-
Zhong, et al.; Effects of dietary supplement of soy protein
isolate and low fat diet on prostate cancer. FASEB J 2000;
14(4): a531.11.
-
Rapp, Dorris J., Is This Your Child’s World. Bantam Books
1996. Page 501.
-
Divi, R. L., Chang, H.C. and Doerge, D.R.; Identification,
characterization and mechanisms of anti-thyroid activity of
isoflavones from soybeans. Biochem Pharmacol 54:1087-1096,
1997.
-
Fort, P., Moses, N., Fasano, M. Goldberg, T. and Lifshitz,
F.; Breast and soy formula feedings in early infancy and the
prevalence of autoimmune disease in children. J Am Coll
Nutr 9:164-165, 1990.
-
Setchell, K. D. R., Zimmer-Nechemias, L., Cai, J. and Heubi,
J.E.; Exposure of infants to phytoestrogens from soy based
infant formula. Lancet 350:23-27, 1997.
-
Irvine, C.H.G., Fitzpatrick, M.G. and Alexander, S.L.;
Phytoestrogens in soy based infant foods: Concentrations,
daily intake and possible biological effects. Proc Soc Exp
Biol Med 217:247-253, 1998.
-
Levy, J.R., Faber, F.A., Ayyash, L. and Hughes, C.L.; The
effect of prenatal exposure to phytoestrogens genistein on
sexual differentiation in rats. Proc Soc Exp Biol Med
208:60-66, 1995.
-
Ashton, E., Ball, M.; Effects of soy as tofu vs. meat on
lipoprotein concentrations. Eur J Clin Nutr 200 Jan;
54(1):14-9.
-
Madani, S., et al.: Dietary protein level and origin (casein
and highly purified soybean protein) affect hepatic storage,
plasma lipid transport, and antioxidative defense status in
the rat. Nutrition 2000 May;16(5):368-375.
-
Leiner, I.; The Intraperiotoneal toxicity of concentrations
of the soybean trypsin inhibitor. J Biol Chem 193:183
(1951).
-
White, L., Petrovitch, H., Ross, G.W. and Masaki, K.H.:
Association of mid life consumption of tofu with late life
cognitive impairment and dementia: The Honolulu-Asia Anti
Aging Study, The Neurobiol of Aging 17 (suppl. 4):S121,
1996a.
-
White, L, Petrovitch, H., Ross, G.W., Masaki, K.H., Abbot,
R.D., Teng, E.L., Rodriguez, B.L., Blanchette, P.L., Havlik,
R.J., Wergowske, G., Chiu, D., Foley, D.J., Murdaugh, C. and
Curb, J.D.; Prevalence of dementia in older
Japanese-American men in Hawaii. JAMA 276:955-960, 1996b.
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