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Perhaps you could repeat the experiment with a nut oil like nutmeg oil. It too should be more difficult to wash out
...I should presumably (according to the sort of logic shown before) avoid all foreign food.
What is this ""Mostly all the cooking oil are partially hydrogenated soy. "Well, if that's true then since, as you say, hydrogenated oils are often high in trans fatty acids (which seems not to be a good thing) it would be better to use some other oilCanola oil would fit the bill. It's used as-is rather than hydrogenated." Why you do think companies are now proclaiming "NO TRANS-FAT" in their commercial labels? "Because there is evidence that trans fats are a bad thing.So what?Canola oil isn't a good sourse of trans fats."Because people are investigating, they know that trans-fat is a man-made fat that the body doesn't know how to dissolved."Well, it's more complex than that but it's fair to say that trans fats are a by product of fat processing and there's evidence they are bad for you.WTF does this have to do with canola? Wild type rapeseed oil has a relatively high trans fatty acid content. But Canola has been bred specifically not to. Did you read the wiki article? It explains the name "The word "canola" was derived from "Canadian oil, low acid"""If you want to read about warning google it. Go to "google.com" and write Canola Oil. Read for yourself. "I did. That's how I found the wiki article I cited earlier. That wiki article in turn features a report saying canola is full of trans fatty acids. The organisation that produced the report also says (on their website) that "It contains "the infamous chemical warfare agent mustard gas" which simply isn't true.Now I obviously can't vouch for all the world's oil, but I have seen analyses of biodiesel made from rapeseed oil that had very low levels of erucic acid (the alledged source of the problems). So, even industrial oil hasn't got the stuff in it. Why would it be in the food chain?
This is another Moon Landing thread. You won't win, despite the sense of your arguments.
You stir the stinky one over and time again.
Every time I've heard of genetically modified anything, it always follows the same formula: At first, it's a miracle product, then some scientists do some studies on it, and later, it's proven to be bad for you in one way or another. I remember back in the early 80's when everyone was so hip on NutraSweet. And we all know how that turned out.