While I never went through a period of teenage infatuation with Atlas Shrugged, one element of that bloated novel/tract instantly won my affection: its scorn for soybeans. The villainous bureaucrat Wesley Mouch advocates making soy the main constituent of the public’s diet. Thwarting his plans is one of John Galt’s many achievements (along with repealing the Second Law of Thermodynamics). Having from a young age been conscious of the odor of soybeans processing plants in rural Illinois, I regarded anti-soy sentiment as the most attractive feature of Objectivism.
Now comes news that medical science confirms my youthful prejudice:
At the very least, the journal of the American Heart Association reports, there is neither an indication that soy significantly lowers cholesterol, nor is there evidence that it mitigates the effects of osteoporosis or reduces hot flashes.
At the very worst, soy may do things like increase “toxicity in estrogen-sensitive tissues and in the thyroid,” according to FDA scientists Daniel Doerge and Daniel Sheehan. It could bind zinc and other minerals crucial to the body’s immune and autoimmune function, and increase inflammation and the risk of autoimmune diseases, according to NewsMax’s Dr. Russell Blaylock, author of the Blaylock Wellness Report.
In fact, the Royal Society report on Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals in 2002 stated that soy milk should not be given to infants, even when they had cow’s milk allergies, except on strict medical advice, according to the Guardian UK newspaper.
Dr. Mike Fitzpatrick, a New Zealand toxicologist estimated that babies fed a strict diet of soy milk “ingested the estrogenic equivalent, based on body weight, of five birth control pills a day.”
U.S. infants are at particular risk since 30 percent to 40 percent of them are sustained by soy, partially due to the fact that it is provided by welfare programs.
In the interests of honest reporting, I should note that NewsMax, whose e-mail newsletter is the source of this information, is vastly more reliable on politics than medicine. I’m not going to start a campaign against soy for infants on its say-so. Still, I hope that the Mouches of the world are a little less happy this evening.
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