341consecutive daily blogs — and 500 comments from readers

While cleaning out my spam folder yesterday, I noticed that there have been a total of 500 comments on this blog since February of last year. And that seemed like a good reason to stop and recognize the thousands of readers out there who are helping to spread the good word.

As I approach the one-year mark with this blog, I am gratified by the community around the world that has participated in its success. Right now, I am sitting in the same chair at the Mystic Starbucks where I nervously hit the old “Publish” button for the very first time.

A candid shot of Sal, as he ponders the extensive and exceptionally healthy menu at the Candle Cafe

So far, I have only met two of my “followers” in person. And most of you are familiar with one of them — Sal Liggieri of New York City, who has been following and commenting since Day One. Sal and I met for lunch last month at my favorite restaurant in New York, the Candle Cafe at 75th and Third Avenue.

There are some classic comments that Sal has made since last February; I always love hearing from him. But until I met him in person, I didn’t realize what a warm, caring and positive person he is. He’s definitely not a negative person, as some of his blogs might imply. He’s just a realist about the snail’s pace that plant-based nutrition is being embraced by the mainstream. Take a look at all of his comments by clicking here.

In addition to thanking my readers, I also wish to thank Gary Vaynerchuk who wrote the book, Crush It, and my publisher, Glenn Yeffeth, for suggesting that I read it. Gary’s message in that book is all about leveraging the power of the internet and social media to build your own brand around your passion.

As I read it, it seemed as if  his message were written directly for me. With a published book, great passion for my topic, a fair amount of web management experience, some steadily improving writing skills — and most importantly, the time required to devote a large portion of every day to my passion — I simply realized that I was in an ideal position to execute the strategy he so clearly laid out in his book.

If you want to brand yourself and figure out a way to make a living doing what you love, I suggest that you order Crush It today. It changed my life — it just might change yours. Now on Amazon: Crush It!: Why NOW Is the Time to Cash In on Your Passion

Gary’s goal is to own the New York Jets. Our goal with our book and this blog is to change the world. I have no doubt that if twenty million people read our book that it would indeed change the world. Speaking of which, I remember what Steve Jobs had to say about the crazy ones:

The people who are crazy enough to believe that they can change the world…are the ones who do.

And with your help, we can. Finally, a bit of thanks for Steve’s contributions to our world. After reading his biography, I probably would not have enjoyed working for him; but I do acknowledge that he changed the world as much as anyone ever has. He certainly made my blogging, writing and speaking world much easier from a technology standpoint, and for that I am grateful.

One more thing. I just looked back to my first post last February, it featured Barbara Walters and her TV special on heart disease. Like Dr. Sanjay Gupta on his “Last Heart Attack,” she also featured Bill Clinton in her special. But unlike Sanjay, Barbara came up way short in terms of telling people how to easily reverse their heart disease with a plant-based diet.

Barbara Walters. Says she ate a lot of baloney sandwiches after her surgery to gain weight.

Barbara Walters…A Missed Opportunity

Posted on 02/10/2011

‘Barbara Walters Special: A Matter of Life and Death’ A Review by J. Morris Hicks of this ABC special that aired on 2-4-11 Expecting so much more, I was very disappointed with the Barbara Walters’ special that aired on Friday night. … Continue reading →

About seven months later, I posted a similar blog on Sanjay’s outstanding special. In both of the blogs, I took a look at who was paying for the show — the companies who advertised. Very interesting. $$ Dollars and Sense of “The Last Heart Attack”.

If you’d like to order our book on Amazon,  visit our BookStore now.

J. Morris Hicks, author and activist. Working daily to promote health, hope and harmony on planet Earth.

Want to receive some occasional special news from us? You may wish to join our periodic mailing list. Also, for help in your own quest to take charge of your health, you might find some useful information at our 4-Leaf page.

And if you like what 4-Leaf eating is doing for you and your family, you might enjoy visiting our new “4-Leaf Gear” store. From the seaside village of Stonington, Connecticut – Be well and have a great day.

—J. Morris Hicks…blogging daily at HealthyEatingHealthyWorld.com

SHARE and rate this post below…One more thing, occasionally an unauthorized ad may appear beneath a blog post. It is controlled by WordPress (a totally free hosting service). I do not approve or personally benefit whatsoever from any ad that might ever appear on this site. I apologize and urge you to please disregard.

Posted in Activism & Leadership, Celebrities | 2 Comments

Americans are eating less meat — New York Times

Mark Bittman -- New York Times

Mark Bittman of the New York Times brought us plant-based 4Leaf-ers some good news this week; (See link to article below my signature) he reported that Americans are definitely beginning to eat less meat.

After declining for several years, the Department of Agriculture projects that our meat and poultry consumption will fall again this year, to about 12.2 percent less in 2012 than it was in 2007

Beef consumption has been in decline for about 20 years; the drop in chicken is even more dramatic, over the last five years or so; pork also has been steadily slipping for about five years.

While it may be hard for most of us to detect, given the vast array of meat choices everywhere we go, the numbers don’t lie. But they beg the question, “Why is our meat consumption dropping?” The meat people are blaming the decline on anything and everything — and especially the government. They actually claim that the Feds have been “waging war on meat protein for the past thirty or forty years.” Waging war? Mark took exception to that one and provided the following list of the battle plan of that alleged war on animal protein by our nation’s government:

The raising of beef; one of the most wasteful and harmful practices in the history of the world. This picture appeared in another Mark Bittman article a few years ago about "the meat guzzler."

  • a history of subsidies for the corn and soy that’s fed to livestock
  • a nearly free pass on environmental degradation and animal abuse
  • an unwillingness to meaningfully limit the use of antibiotics in animal feed
  • a failure to curb the stifling power that corporate meatpackers wield over smaller ranchers
  • and what amounts to a refusal — despite the advice of real, disinterested experts, true scientists in fact —  to unequivocally tell American consumers that they should be eating less meat

Actually, Mark, they should be eating no meat, but thank you for your noble effort to shed some light on this miserable topic. Not only is our government definitely not waging war on the meat industry, they are also not telling us that well over 90% of heart disease and type 2 diabetes could be easily, and swiftly, reversed with a whole foods, plant-based diet. They also fail to tell us that most cancers can either be prevented, slowed or even reversed with that same diet.

Mark mentions that “Nowhere does it (the report) mention that we’re eating less meat because we want to eat less meat.” Yes, the word is beginning to creep out ever so slowly that meat is simply not good for us. But since most people consider meat to be beef or pork, they naturally assume that seafood or even chicken is okay. Actually, I was surprised to see that chicken consumption is declining.

Incomparable! Everyone should own a copy of this world-changing book.

So what is driving the decline? It’s great to see that in spite of all that our government is doing to protect our meat and dairy industries, people are beginning to make up their own minds about what is best for them and their families. I would like to think that some of those better food choices have been driven by many concurrent activities:

My top ten list

  1. The fact that almost one million Americans have read The China Study by Dr. T. Colin Campbell — a truly eye-opening book that should be in everyone’s home.
  2. Bill Clinton’s choice in 2010 to switch to an almost vegan diet after reading that book and also the books by Dr. Esselstyn and Dr. Ornish on reversing heart disease.
  3. The publicity for plant-based eating provided by celebrities like Ellen DeGeneres, Oprah, Chelsea Clinton and a host of others.
  4. The well-publicized successes of a handful of pioneering MD’s that have been curing patients with broccoli and oatmeal for decades: McDougall, Furhman, Ornish, Esselstyn and others.
  5. The tireless efforts of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine headed by Dr. Neal Barnard in Washington, D.C.
  6. The explosive growth of Dr. Campbell’s plant-based nutrition course at Cornell. Actually it’s only administered by eCornell but is managed by his own foundation at tcolincampbell.org. It was dropped from the Cornell curriculum because of pressure from the meat and dairy industries from which they receive enormous sums of money.
  7. The recent success of the 2010 movie, Forks Over Knives, starring Dr. Campbell and Dr. Esselstyn.
  8. The Last Heart Attack special with Dr. Sanjay Gupta that aired several times on CNN in late 2011.
  9. Thousands of great vegan restaurants springing up across the land — like the Elephant Walk in Boston or the Candle Cafe in New York, where the super cool people are beginning to frequent on a regular basis.
  10. The tireless efforts by many great organizations like VegSource and authors like John Robbins who have been spreading the good word about plant-based foods for decades.

The bottom line. Things are beginning to move in the right direction. But not nearly fast enough in my opinion. Yesterday, I spoke to a fairly sophisticated group of Rotarians at a club in coastal CT. No one in the room had heard about Bill Clinton changing his diet, The China Study, or the Sanjay Gupta special. No one had ever heard of Dr. Dean Ornish, who is arguably America’s most famous “real doctor,” appearing on the cover of Newsweek in 1999.

After my 20-minute talk, one of the Rotarians led off with the old protein question, for which I thanked him. He is the President of Madison Chrysler in Madison, CT and is now the proud owner of two copies of our book. He also has a 2005 Bentley for sale in his showroom — a cream puff with only 10,000 miles. Ask for Tom, the asking price is only $70,000.

J. Morris Hicks, author and activist. Working daily to promote health, hope and harmony on planet Earth.

One more thing; you really should take a look at the Bittman article; it’s really quite good. See bold link below.

If you’d like to order our book on Amazon,  visit our BookStore now.

Want to receive some occasional special news from us? You may wish to join our periodic mailing list. Also, for help in your own quest to take charge of your health, you might find some useful information at our 4-Leaf page.

And if you like what 4-Leaf eating is doing for you and your family, you might enjoy visiting our new “4-Leaf Gear” store. From the seaside village of Stonington, Connecticut – Be well and have a great day.

—J. Morris Hicks…blogging daily at HealthyEatingHealthyWorld.com

We’re Eating Less Meat. Why? – NYTimes.com.

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Posted in Health in General | 2 Comments

The hostile and divisive health care debate

So much energy wasted — yet our health continues to worsen

Relax, I am not going to waste much time debating health care reform, but I would like to tell you about a recent experience. Last month, I met Dr. John McDonough of the Harvard Department of Public Health. He served seven terms in the Massachusetts House of Representatives and was appointed by his good friend, Ted Kennedy,  to work on the original bipartisan health care bill (that ended up partisan) in the U.S. Senate long before Barack Obama took office.

This is the certificate in plant-based nutrition that John and I earned two years ago. 

A distinguished expert on public health policy and a regular blogger for the Boston Globe, Dr. Mcdonough also holds a certificate in plant-based nutrition from the T. Colin Campbell Foundation and Cornell. And, like me, he is 100% certain that we’ll never “fix” health care until we “fix” what’s driving most of our bad health — the food we eat.”

Also like me, he is pretty much disgusted with the ineffective political football that health care has become; blogging recently on the Globe website:

While a large proportion of Americans say they don’t like “ObamaCare (Affordable Care Act or ACA), they also say they like many of the law’s provisions. But Mitt and his competitors for the Republican presidential nomination never get asked about those individual provisions the public likes. And the press corps has been thoroughly complicit in letting them get away with this.

He then goes on to list a total of fifty provisions that most people like and implores the media to start asking questions about those popular provisions, which are probably completely unknown to the general public. All they know is that if they vote Republican; then they don’t like ObamaCare. Period. He wants the media to start asking Romney, Gingrich and others if they are committed to repealing provisions such as this one:

The ACA (ObamaCare) Requires health insurances to cover proven clinical preventive services without co-pays or deductibles.

He also listed 49 other provisions that most Americans would like if they even knew about them. At the bottom of his post, I scanned the four or five comments that were there and it seemed that most were disagreeing vehemently with what he had to say. A registered independent myself, I decided to post a comment, complimenting the clear, understandable manner that my friend presented the facts. Here is my post:

Hey John, I love the way you present the facts. I wasn’t aware of all of those provisions of “ObamaCare” and I would guess that less than one percent of our voters are. And the candidates trying to beat Obama are certainly not going to tell them.

As we discussed over lunch recently, we’re never going to “fix health care” until we FIX what’s driving the vast majority of our health problems — THE FOOD. I look forward to working with you in the future to do just that. Regards, J. Morris Hicks, author, “Healthy Eating, Healthy World.”

After sharing the above interchange with a few friends, I heard back from a few of them — some Republicans, some Democrats. But the best comment that I heard came from a British friend of mine — now an American citizen living in Atlanta.

See comment about the “Sisyphean task” in Nigel’s comments below.

Nigel and I visited Dr. T. Colin Campbell last month in Ithaca, NY. Next month, he will begin the plant-based nutrition course and will soon join me, John McDonough and hundreds of physicians each year who are now earning CME (continuing medical education) credits by completing that course. Also not wanting to debate the issue, Nigel offered the following comment. I love it.

We could get into protracted discussions about ObamaCare, but I doubt that either of us would change our position or be one whit better off. Frankly, I am doubtful that a political “solution” is possible given the poisoned state of US politics at the moment.

The solution might come from a groundswell of popular affront at the ever increasing health care tax that is foisted on us all. As you say, we should focus on more important issues, which you, Jim and others attack with unflaggging energy and enthusiasm.

Sometimes it does feel like a Sisyphean task…except the stone is a pile of BS. With kindest regards, Nigel.

Not only did I love his comment, I also learned a new word, Sisyphean. From Greek and Roman mythology. Sisyphus, a king, was punished by being compelled roll an immense boulder up a hill — only to have it roll back down; and to repeat this task throughout eternity. Want to learn more about Nigel Richardson? Check out page 45 in our book.

The bottom line for me. My focus continues to be 100% on the FOOD solution to the health care mess that we’re in. I have no time or interest in the constant, and pretty much futile, never-ending debate regarding the CARE portion of the mess. Hey, we’ve got a planet to save here. We can’t waste ANY time rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic.

Click here for my earlier post on Dr. John McDonough. By the way, he loved our book. If you’d like to order our book on Amazon,  visit our BookStore now.

J. Morris Hicks, author and activist. Working daily to promote health, hope and harmony on planet Earth.

Want to receive some occasional special news from us? You may wish to join our periodic mailing list. Also, for help in your own quest to take charge of your health, you might find some useful information at our 4-Leaf page.

And if you like what 4-Leaf eating is doing for you and your family, you might enjoy visiting our new “4-Leaf Gear” store. From the seaside village of Stonington, Connecticut – Be well and have a great day.

—J. Morris Hicks…blogging daily at HealthyEatingHealthyWorld.com

SHARE and rate this post below…One more thing, occasionally an unauthorized ad may appear beneath a blog post. It is controlled by WordPress (a totally free hosting service). I do not approve or personally benefit whatsoever from any ad that might ever appear on this site. I apologize and urge you to please disregard.

Posted in Activism & Leadership, Food Policy | 2 Comments