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Seed oils are chemically extracted using hexane and high heat, resulting in oxidized, rancid fats. The process includes deodorizing and bleaching with additional chemicals. Because they are GMO, seed oils contain traces of glyphosate, a toxic herbicide. Healthier alternatives for cooking include butter, ghee, tallow, coconut oil, and olive oil.

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Seed oils use hexane, which is a solvent, to chemically extract their oils using high heats, additional chemicals to deodorize, bleach, and create this oxidated rancid fat. They're GMO, which means they have traces of glyphosate, which is an herbicide, which is really toxic. And you say they're safe? I don't think so. Instead, cook with butter, ghee, tallow, coconut oil, and olive oil.

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Speaker 0: I thought it'd be great to just kind of look at some of these items because parents are encountering these food items in grocery stores everywhere. Maybe we could just start right here with seed oils. We're hearing a lot about seed oils. Why should people be worried about these kind of products? Speaker 1: "Seed oils are one of the most unhealthy ingredients that we have in foods. Seed oils, The reason they're in the foods is because they're heavily subsidized. They're very very cheap but they are associated with all kinds of very very serious illnesses including body wide inflammation Right. Which affects all of our health. It's one of the worst things you can eat, and it's almost impossible to avoid. If you eat any processed food, you're gonna be eating seed oil."

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On location in a rapeseed field, the speaker explains that rapeseed is a common UK crop used to make canola oil for cooking. Canola oil has a high smoke point and is helpful for cooking. It is low in saturated fat and full of unsaturated fat, the kind to consume for calories. The speaker notes the oil is very high in inflammatory omega-6 oils, so we should avoid inflammatory things in our body and tilt the balance toward omega-3, found in oily fish such as salmon, mackerel, anchovies, sardines, taylics and kippers. While rapeseed oil is very colorful and has useful properties as a cooking oil, it's not something we should be having too much of in our diets.

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"rapeseed oil, what we now call canola oil, was never meant to be eaten." "It was first recorded in ancient India, not as food, as fuel." "During World War II, it found a new use lubricating steam engines and war machines." "traditional rapeseed oil is high in erucic acid, a compound linked to heart damage in animal studies, toxic in large amounts, banned in some countries for human consumption." "In the 1970s, Canadian scientists stepped in. They bred a new version, low in erucic acid, and gave it a fresh name, canola, short for Canadian oil low acid." "We're talking hexane solvent extraction, bleaching, deodorising, refining, all to make it look clean, taste neutral, seem safe." "This isn't food history, it's food marketing, and the real story is hidden in plain sight."

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"Seed oils are called polyunsaturated fatty acids." "Poly meaning many." "Unsaturated mean a type of oil that it's very very fragile and unstable." "Now the first thing you need to know is that when they talk about vegetable oils they're really talking about seed oils." "It comes from corn, soy, canola, things like that." "They're considered one part of the ultra processed food category which they use industrial processing where they're heating, adding hexane, which is a solvent that's in gasoline." "And so they go through this incredible refining process where you end up with this very refined empty oil." "And one of the reasons they do this is so it can sit on the shelf for a long period of time." "We consume like 25 to 30% of our calories with this right here."

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Vegetable oil is described as highly toxic and not real food, belonging in car engines instead. Manufacturing requires heat, chemicals, and high pressure, which oxidizes delicate seed oils. Consumption of oxidized oils like soy, canola, corn, safflower, and sunflower creates free radicals, causing inflammation, heart disease, and cancer. Restaurants use these oils in a carcinogenic way by repeatedly heating and reusing them. A University of Minnesota researcher found toxic aldehydes in fast food french fries, which are known to cause gene mutation, alter RNA and DNA, and trigger massive inflammation. The recommendation is to avoid industrial seed oils as much as possible.

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The speaker makes a series of claims about peanuts, vaccines, and Pfizer. First, they assert that in the 1960s vaccines contained peanut oil, and that this was done so that when injected, people would become allergic. They state, “in the nineteen sixties they put peanut oil into the vaccines. Yes, that was Pfizer.” They further claim that Pfizer owns the EpiPen for peanut allergies, and that “not only did they inject the people to make them allergic, then they also own the solution that all the schools need to carry and all the things that need to go with that.” The speaker then discusses possible reasons for peanut allergies beyond oil in vaccines. They say that if someone isn’t allergic due to the peanut oil, it could be because the peanut has been processed with pesticides or sprayed with pesticides, since peanuts are in the ground when they grow. They add, “you might be allergic to the pesticides.” They suggest another factor is the processing of the peanut, noting that most peanut butters have been boiled and roasted, meaning they have been cooked twice before consumption, so they are not in their raw form. They offer guidance that if one desires raw peanuts, Virginia grows all the raw peanuts in the shell and claims they are “absolutely beautiful.” Additionally, the speaker asserts health benefits of peanuts, stating that the peanut “is really good for the prostate, ovaries, for the brain, for your testosterone, for your estrogen. It’s great for you pushing food through your stomach because you’ve got too much build up inside your stomach.” They then mention cancer contexts, claiming that peanuts can help with “the big C” and specify prostate cancer, breast cancer, and “intestinal cancers.” In summary, the speaker presents a narrative connecting vaccine peanut oil to peanut allergies and Pfizer’s ownership of the EpiPen, discusses potential allergy causes including pesticides and processing, promotes Virginia raw peanuts as an option, and asserts broad health benefits of peanuts for various organs and several cancers.

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Vegetable oils used in food products are not real food. They are manufactured using heat, chemicals, and high pressure, which oxidizes the delicate seed oils. Fast food restaurants often use these oils in a carcinogenic way, repeatedly heating and reusing them. A researcher found toxic aldehydes in French fries from various fast food places. Advising people to consume vegetable oils is misinformation. It is recommended to avoid industrial seed oils as much as possible. Refined vegetable oils are commonly found in processed and packaged foods, from crackers to baby formula.

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Seed oils like canola, sunflower, safflower, grapeseed, and palm oil are harmful due to processing methods. Canola oil production involves hexane, a neurotoxin, heating to 405 degrees, deodorization with sodium hydroxide (a carcinogen), and sometimes bleaching. The consistent color of vegetable oils on grocery store shelves is chemically induced. These oils are pro-inflammatory. Five oils to use are grass-fed butter, ghee butter, grass-fed tallow, coconut oil, and olive oil.

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In this Wide Awake Media podcast conversation, host Didi Denslow and guest Ivor Cummins—a biochemical engineer, nutrition expert known as the Fat Emperor—discuss health paradigms, seed oils, geopolitics, and emerging technologies, with a recurring emphasis on waking up to structured power dynamics. Seeds oils and the “devil’s triad” - Cummins presents a framework he calls the “devil’s triad” to explain modern obesity and diabetes trends: sugars, refined grains or refined tweeds, and seed oils. He cites American data indicating 64% of adults over 45 are prediabetic or diabetic, suggesting the triad drives these conditions. Cutting out sugars, refined carbohydrates, and seed oils is portrayed as a path to reversing obesity and diabetes epidemics. - Seed oils are described as being extracted with hexane and solvents under high heat/pressure. They include sunflower, safflower, rapeseed (and other seed-derived oils). He states they are high in omega-6 fats, used as signaling molecules in inflammatory processes, and should be kept to very low dietary levels (current US intake around 15% of calories versus a recommended under 0.5%). He notes issues in processing: hydrogenation and molecular damage, plus deodorizing, bleaching, and color adjustments that mask natural signals to avoid consumption. - He contrasts seed oils with natural fats from real foods: olives (olive oil), animal fats like lard and tallow, and butter, which are deemed acceptable. He references historical and industry context: seed oils originated from lubricants used in engines (and later hydrogenated for food), with Crisco marking their rise; he attributes a shift in public health trends to decisions in the mid- to late-20th century, including influential thoughts by Ancel Keys on saturated fats. - The discussion also touches the economics and incentives: seed oils are cheap, shelf-stable, and favored by global supply chains and processed foods; this is linked to industry strategies and ties between food, pharma, and academic funding. Some guests’ positions align on seed oils as a major driver of chronic disease, though Cummins also acknowledges the role of refined carbohydrates and sugars. Diet, personal change, and practical guidance - The host shares personal experience: eliminating seed oils improved health, including belly fat reduction. - Repertoire of alternative fats suggested includes high-quality olive oil, coconut oil, tallow, lard from well-raised pigs (with caveats about omega-6 content), and avocado oil as a more expensive option. Geopolitics, digital identity, and cultural shifts - Digital ID and civil liberties: Ireland’s progress toward digital ID is discussed, illustrating a “boiling frog” dynamic: government IDs exist but may become mandatory over time. Cummins underscores civil disobedience, awareness, and lobbying as means to resist, arguing that politicians report to higher, unelected networks. He asserts EU structures (EU Commission, European Parliament) mimic Soviet-era governance, creating a centralized power apparatus. - Hate speech law in Ireland: Cummins describes an earlier hate speech framework (1986 incitement to hatred) as effective, and a proposed newer framework with broad, protected classes as a potential threat to civil rights, warning that the pre-crime model resembles Minority Report, 1984, and Brave New World. He suggests public scrutiny of whom politicians report to. - Global networks and governance: The conversation invokes a historical view of global power networks (Rhodes, Milner, Rothschilds, Rockefellers) and institutions like the Council on Foreign Relations, Bilderberg, Trilateral Commission, and the CIA. Cummins sees these organizations as orchestrating global policy and economy, with a current sense of tension due to BRICS dynamics, shifting American leadership, and challenges to the old oligarchies. - Immigration and demographic strategy: He cites Denmark, Hungary, Poland, and Switzerland as examples with restrictive immigration policies and self-sufficiency requirements. Denmark, for instance, is highlighted for its stringent residency rules and crime data transparency on migrants. He contrasts Ireland’s relatively permissive approach to immigration with these models, discussing the Kalergi Plan as a shorthand for a demographic strategy, and argues there has been a deliberate, years-long push to alter European demographics, partly framed by climate discourse and social narratives. - Climate narrative and AI: Cummins notes perceived weaknesses in the climate-change narrative, acknowledging growing awareness and industry signals that climate policies may be economically unsustainable. He predicts data centers and AI infrastructure will continue to drive energy demand, while asserting AI is a tool with significant rote-task capability but no true sentience. He argues the public is increasingly skeptical about climate catastrophism, while acknowledging the real-world shift toward data-driven, centralized control. Solutions and events - Awareness and education are repeatedly stressed as essential first steps. Cummins envisions a non-conspiratorial, docudrama-style approach to explain power politics and history, aiming to reach a mass audience with credible, non-fringe framing. - Concrete steps discussed include focusing on Denmark-like models for immigration policy, local and national political engagement (email campaigns to MPs, peaceful in-person events like Ireland’s IRL forum), and media reform initiatives to counterbalance globalist influence. - He promotes practical financial preparedness (physical gold and silver) as protective measures amid expected market volatility and potential fiat-currency depreciation. Closing note - The interview ends with a reiteration to avoid seed oils, stay awake, and engage in informed civic action. The speakers emphasize a broad, systemic view of health, governance, and technology, urging proactive public discourse and engagement to influence policy directions.

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The extraction of oil from the heart disease, hard seed, damages the oils. And now people are reading damaged oils, and it gets into the artery, and it damages the arterial walls. So if there is a fat that contributes to heart disease, it would have to be those oils. You see them in the supermarket. They're in clear plastic bottles. It's called corn oil, soy oil, canola oil, safflower oil. Don't touch them. Yes. They're in clear plastic bottles. It doesn't really matter because they're so totally destroyed anyway. Margarine, it's a toxic fat. Body can't handle it.

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Seed or vegetable oils, including canola, safflower, and soybean oil, are now in the mainstream spotlight due to concerns about ultra-processed foods. These oils are used in 90% of supermarket foods and in most restaurants for cooking, flavoring, and texturing. Canola oil was originally an engine lubricant, and cottonseed oil was used to make soap. The refining process involves washing with chemical solvents like hexane, heating to high temperatures causing oxidation, and then bleaching and deodorizing to mask rancidity. The bottled oil continues to break down on the shelf and oxidizes further during cooking, resulting in an unstable, inflammatory substance that is claimed to be heart healthy.

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The speaker claims that a regular grocery store makes it nearly impossible to find non-processed healthy food. They state that 75% of the store contains processed sugar and seed oils. The speaker points out fried banana chips, vegetable oil, canola oils, corn, soybeans, and sunflower oil as examples. They claim that even tortillas, shortening, local fried corn treats, and roasted nuts are full of seed oils. The speaker asserts that all yogurts and flavored milks contain processed sugar, as do energy drinks. They highlight the abundance of seed oils on display and question the absence of animal fats. The speaker suggests that the meat counter is the only place in the store where one can easily avoid processed sugars and seed oils, and concludes that this prevalence of unhealthy ingredients is why so many people are sick and unhealthy.

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The transcript discusses seed oils as a major health risk and part of a so-called “devil’s triad” contributing to obesity and diabetes. It asserts that a large share of U.S. adults over 45 are prediabetic or diabetic—64% by some data, rising to 75–78% if insulin use were measured—and claims that removing three factors—sugars, refined grains or refined tweeds, and seed oils—would eliminate the obesity and diabetes epidemics; pharmaceutical companies would suffer as a result. Seed oils are described as being extracted with hexane and solvents under very high temperature and pressure in chemical plants. What are marketed as heart-healthy golden vegetable oils (sunflower, safflower, and other seed oils) are said to be processed with high temperature and pressure, resulting in oils that are very high in omega-6 fats, which are suggested to be inflammatory signal molecules and should only be eaten in tiny amounts as calories. The speaker claims Americans get about 15% of their calories from seed oils, versus a recommended less than 0.5%; this is described as 30 times the evolutionary level and very damaging. Further, the process is criticized for hydrogenation, damage to molecular structures, deodorization, bleaching, and coloring to give a desirable appearance and scent, after which the oils are sold. The speaker asserts that hydrogenation and processing produce “rank grey rancid muck,” and that people would be repulsed by the initial oil before deodorization. The transcript asserts that seed oils are extremely damaging in quantity, especially in processed foods, while refined carbohydrates are also highly damaging. It cites studies from the late 1990s on rat models comparing seed oils with beef tallow and lard, finding major increases in tumorigenesis and tumor growth when seed oils were included at 3–4% of the diet. It claims that from around 1993 to 1999, studies increasingly showed that seed oils drive cancer if consumed above three to four percent, but that around 1998–1999 the system stopped these findings after calls were made. The speaker concludes: “All the evidence is there. That's the tip of the iceberg. Don't touch them.”

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Oils should be in car engines, not in our food. Many so-called food products are factory-made, requiring heat and chemicals to extract oils. This process oxidizes vegetable oils like soy and canola, creating free radicals that lead to inflammation, heart disease, and cancer. Restaurants often misuse these oils by repeatedly heating them, increasing their toxicity. Research shows that fast food, like French fries, contains harmful aldehydes that can cause gene mutations and inflammation. It's crucial to avoid industrial seed oils, as they are prevalent in processed foods and fast food items, including snacks, dressings, and even baby formula.

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Many heavily processed, unhealthy foods contain sugars, artificial additives, and are low in fiber and high in salt. Seed oils are often consumed through these unhealthy foods in both the UK and the US, which is a cause for concern. While it's true that many foods containing seed oils are unhealthy, the speaker disagrees with the idea that the seed oil itself is the primary cause of the unhealthiness. It's important to distinguish between the seed oil and the overall health impact of the processed foods in which they are found.

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A customer with food allergies inquired about the oils used in food preparation. The stir fry is made with canola and olive oil. The flat top uses soy oil. Ham is cooked in canola oil, which is changed every two days. The grill is sprayed with canola oil and salted for flavor. The customer expressed dismay at the widespread use of canola oil.

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The most typical food sources of omega-six fatty acids are seed oils, which have become controversial. The speaker believes not all seed oils are bad or inflammatory, nor are they the major cause of metabolic dysfunction. However, people are consuming more oil generally, including oils with omega-six fatty acids, many of which are seed oils. The relevant omega-six fatty acid for the discussion is linoleic acid, common in many seed oils. The speaker reiterates that they are not claiming seed oils are inherently bad.

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Speaker 0 raises concern about seed oils. "Seed oils are one of the most unhealthy ingredients that we have in foods." "Seed oils, The reason they're in the foods is because they're heavily subsidized. They're very very cheap but they are associated with all kinds of very very serious illnesses including body wide inflammation Right. Which affects all of our health. It's one of the worst things you can eat, and it's almost impossible to avoid." "If you eat any processed food, you're gonna be eating seed oil." The speaker emphasizes the prevalence of seed oils in processed foods today.

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Seed oils, extracted from seeds like soybeans, corn, and sunflowers, are now staples in cooking and processed foods. Concerns have arisen about their impact on health, with claims that they cause inflammation, weight gain, and heart disease. Unlike olive oil, which comes from fruit and contains monounsaturated fats, seed oils generally have higher levels of polyunsaturated omega-6 fats, such as linoleic acid. Omega-6 is essential and must be obtained from foods like nuts, seeds, meat, and eggs. The central question is whether the increased consumption of seed oils is detrimental to health.

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"Anything with high amounts of fructose is really bad for your liver because it creates all sorts of problems with insulin. It creates a fatty liver." "These are unsaturated oils like corn oil, like soy oil, cottonseed, canola, safflower, too much sunflower, too much peanut oil are all high on something called omega-six, which are inflammatory, especially if they're heated as in fried foods." "I see this a lot when you go to restaurants." "They have these appetizers, which you eat to stimulate your appetite." "Then you have these veggie rolls, which are deep fried, and then you dip them in some type of sugary sauce." "All these wonderful appetizers are just terrible for the liver."

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Grocery store middle aisles contain products with processed inflammatory oils like sunflower and canola oil. Organic tortilla chips, veggie straws, and oat milk often contain these oils because they function as cheap emulsifiers. Instead of adding more oats to oat milk for thickness, manufacturers use rapeseed oil (canola oil). Ranch and French dressing also commonly use sunflower and canola oil due to their low cost. Sunflower, safflower, grapeseed, and canola oils are highly processed with heat and pressure, creating free radicals and inflammation. Healthier alternatives include virgin olive oil, avocado oil, virgin coconut oil, and ghee.

No Lab Coat Required

Avoid these oils! Eat these 8 instead.
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Three core priorities anchor the stream: Source, composition, and quality. The host frames fats as a unique category and aims to boost consumer confidence in everyday choices, clarifying what to buy at the store, what to look for on labels, and what to avoid when dining out. The discussion introduces a binary of fat origins—animal and plant sources—and sets out to differentiate each oil by its source, how it’s made, and how its composition affects the body. Seed oils dominate the grocery aisles but are described as an ever-present pitfall. The host names soybean, canola, palm, and other vegetable oils as common additives in baked goods and fast food. He distinguishes seed oils from fruit oils, stresses the seven-step refinement process that yields uniform, bland products, and argues that the 'source' and the processing steps determine quality. Cold pressing, expeller pressing, and solvent extraction (hexane) are explained as escalating levels of processing that degrade nutritional quality. The eight fats proposed for regular use are coconut oil, butter (including clarified butter), beef tallow, lard, chicken fat, olive oil, avocado oil, and the two animal fats duck and goose are noted as similar in composition though not highlighted as primary eight. Butter is traced to cow milk fat, saturated fat, and the concept of cell membranes shaped by the fatty acid profile. Olive oil is described as highly adulterated, with extra virgin labels and third-party labeling emphasized, and brands like California Olive Ranch highlighted. Label literacy and trusted certifications are urged, with Cornucopia.org and realmilk.com offered as resources to verify organic or grass-fed claims. Avocado oil is flagged as a newer, often adulterated oil; UC Davis studies show only two brands with integrity. The host advocates a simple household pantry of two to three core oils and a mindful eye toward third-party seals on dairy products. The stream concludes with a Patreon pitch and a plan to post future streams as replay-only on Patreon.

The Dhru Purohit Show

The Worst Ingredient Lurking In Your Food Causing Disease, Alzheimer's & Obesity? | Dr. Cate
Guests: Cate Shanahan, Gary Vitti, Simon Hill
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Cate Shanahan discusses the detrimental health effects of vegetable oils, which she refers to as the "hateful eight": corn, canola, cottonseed, soy, sunflower, safflower, rice bran, and grapeseed oil. These oils are prevalent in processed foods and restaurant dishes, often replacing healthier fats like butter and olive oil. Shanahan highlights that these oils undergo harsh processing, leading to toxic lipid oxidation products that contribute to various health issues, particularly in children. She cites a toxicologist's claim that consuming fries cooked in vegetable oil can be as harmful as smoking 20 cigarettes, emphasizing the oxidative stress these oils cause in the body. Shanahan explains that oxidative stress is a root cause of many chronic diseases, including Alzheimer's, cancer, and diabetes. She argues that the American Heart Association's promotion of these oils has led to widespread health problems, as they are often found in common foods like mayonnaise, dressings, and fried items. Shanahan stresses the importance of avoiding these oils and suggests that most of the harmful effects come from processed foods rather than home cooking. She encourages individuals to read ingredient labels and be cautious when dining out, as many restaurants use these oils to cut costs. She believes that the majority of health issues stem from oxidative stress caused by these oils, which deplete the body’s antioxidants and lead to cellular damage. In her book, *Dark Calories*, she argues that even those warning about seed oils may underestimate their dangers. She calls for a return to whole foods and traditional cooking methods, advocating for a diet rich in healthy fats and nutrients while minimizing processed foods. Shanahan concludes that understanding the impact of vegetable oils on health is crucial for improving overall well-being.
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