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  by Barbara Minton
 December 1, 2014
 
			from 
			
			NaturalSociety Website 
			  
			  
			  
			  
			 
			  
			  
			  
			Whether you call it soybeans 
			or edamame, the bottom line is the same:  
				
				soy 
				should not be eaten by anyone pursuing good health.
				 
			By now, it's well known in the 
			natural health community that almost all soy is 
			
			genetically 
			modified, but what is not so well known is that instead of 
			contributing to nutrition, 
			
			soybeans and most of the products made from them may actually rob 
			the body of nutrients, destroy thyroid function, and cause 
			developmental problems in infants and children.   
			In the late 1990's, the FDA allowed the 
			soybean industry to make a
			
			health claim about soybeans, and marketers jumped at the chance 
			to capitalize on the event. Since then, sales of soybeans have 
			skyrocketed, and an amazing array of products made with soy has 
			proliferated store shelves.   
			But contrary to popular belief, soy is 
			not a health food, and now is the time to get off the soy bandwagon. In their natural form, soybeans contain 
			phytochemicals
			
			that have negative effects on the human body.  
			  
			Three major 
			anti-nutrients found in soy are, 
				
			 
			All plants have some 
			anti-nutrient properties, but the soybean is especially rich in 
			these chemicals.    
			If they aren't removed by extensive 
			preparation such as fermentation or soaking in the Chinese way of 
			making natto, tempeh or miso, soybeans are one of the worst foods a 
			person can eat.   
			While Americans have been consuming soy 
			products at record levels, research has linked a whole host of 
			health problems to soy consumption, including: 
				
			 
			Unfermented soy consumption has
			
			also been linked to: 
				
			 
			In addition to the health conscious who 
			have been buying up soy products, the groups most at risk of 
			experiencing negative effects from soy appear to be infants fed soy 
			based formulas, vegetarians eating a high soy diet, and mid-life 
			women going heavy on the soy foods thinking they will help with 
			symptoms of menopause.  
				
				1. 
				Phytates from Soy Rob the Body of Essential Minerals  
				All legumes contain phytate (also 
				known as phytic acid) to some extent, but the soybean 
				is loaded with it.    
				Phytate
				
				from unfermented soy products works in the gastrointestinal 
				tract to tightly bind minerals such as zinc, copper, iron, 
				magnesium, and calcium - one of the main reasons soy has
				
				been linked to osteoporosis.    
				Pytate has a particularly strong 
				affinity for zinc,
				
				a mineral that is critical in avoiding breast cancer while 
				supporting wound healing, protein synthesis, reproductive 
				health, nerve function, and brain development.   
				In most legumes such as other 
				varieties of beans, soaking is enough to break down most of the 
				phytate content. However, the soybean requires enzymes released 
				in the fermentation process to reduce its phytate content to the 
				point where it becomes fit for consumption. 
					
						
						
						Soybeans
						
						Edamame
						
						Soy milk
						
						Soy 
				chips
						
						Soy protein bars
						
						Soy flour
						
						Soy protein isolates, 
						 
				...and 
				all the other products made from soybeans and advertised as 
				health foods are not fermented and contain
				
				astronomical 
				levels of phytate.    
				These products are simply junk, and 
				not fit for human consumption.       
				2. 
				Enzyme Inhibitors in Soy Cause Digestive Distress  
				When food is eaten, digestive 
				enzymes such as amylase, lipase, and 
				protease are secreted into the digestive tract to help 
				break it down and free nutrients for assimilation into the 
				body.    
				The high content of enzyme 
				inhibitors
				
				in 
				unfermented soybeans interferes with this process and makes 
				carbohydrates and proteins from soybeans impossible to 
				completely digest.    
				When foods are not completely 
				digested because of enzyme inhibitiors, bacteria in the large 
				intestine try to do the job, and this can cause discomfort, 
				bloating, and embarrassment. 
				  
				  
				  
				3. 
				Soybeans can Block Production of Thyroid Hormone  
				Soybeans have a high content of 
				goitrogens, substances that can block the production of 
				thyroid hormone as well as
				
				cause goiter formation.    
				This is important because low 
				thyroid activity plagues women in America, particularly 
				middle-aged women. 
				Thyroid hormone stokes the cellular 
				furnaces known as mitochrondria. So
				
				when thyroid production is low, energy levels as well as 
				body heat are also low. Low thyroid level is one cause of 
				elderly people moving so slowly. Low thyroid also means the 
				action of the heart is reduced, resulting in lack of oxygen to 
				the cells.   
				Genistein, 
				an isoflavone found in soybeans,
				
				can 
				block thyroid production, too. Phytate accentuates these 
				effects because it binds up zinc and copper, leaving little of 
				these critical minerals available to make thyroid hormone.   
				A transport protein called GLUT1 
				is shut down by genistein. This protein sends glucose into the 
				cells where it is used to generate energy. Slowing the transport 
				of glucose means less energy production for every other action 
				in the body.   
				Another way in which soy isoflavones 
				reduce energy is by inhibiting tyrosine kinases, 
				enzymes involved in the transfer of energy from one molecule to 
				another.    
				These enzymes drive cellular 
				division, memory consolidation, tissue repair, and blood vessel 
				maintenance and regeneration.       
				4. 
				The Benefits of Genistein Come at a High Cost  
				Women have been encouraged to use 
				high genistein soy products to alleviate symptoms of menopause 
				and as a guard against bone loss and breast cancer.    
				But given the full range of effects 
				genistein has in the body, this is a bad idea. Commercial 
				soybean products offer genistein levels as high as 20 to 60 mg 
				per serving. Asians are presented as an example of the benefits 
				of eating soybeans, and their incidence of breast cancer and 
				osteoporosis is low.    
				However, the
				
				Asian diet of fermented 
				soybean products such as miso and tempeh includes only around 5 
				mg of genistein a day. Unfermented soy is not usually consumed.   
				Genistein slows the growth of 
				blood vessels to tumors, another action that makes it popular as 
				a cancer fighter. However, it has the same effect on blood 
				vessels serving normsal cells.    
				
				Eating a regular diet high in genistein can 
				result in the starvation of healthy blood cells, and a 
				reduction in their oxygen supply.   
				In the late 1990's
				
				a study of 8,000 Asian men showed that those consuming the 
				highest amounts of tofu had smaller brain size and nearly three 
				times the rate of senile dementia as those who ate the lowest 
				amounts.       
			Fermentation Releases 
			Soy Nutrients  
			With fermented soy foods, a little goes 
			a long way.    
			The nutrients found in fermented soy 
			products such as, 
				
			 
			...can be beneficial in the 
			moderate amounts found in the typical Asian diet, but have the 
			potential to do harm in higher amounts.   
			In China and Japan, only about one ounce 
			of fermented soy food is eaten on a daily basis.   
			When fermented soy foods are used in 
			small amounts they help build the inner ecosystem, providing a 
			wealth of friendly microflora to the intestinal tract that can help 
			with digestion and assimilation of nutrients, and boost immunity.   
			Dr. John Lee, famed professor 
			from the Harvard Medical School and author of several books on 
			women's health, recommended that people wishing to
			
			consume soy eat only miso, tempeh and natto.    
			Small amounts of tofu can also be eaten 
			but only in the Asian manner of accompanying it with high protein 
			and high mineral foods. 
			
 
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