If you are visiting this page, you may have been directed here from one of our other sites. We have a firm and continuing commitment to the privacy of personal information provided by those visiting and interacting with any website controlled by High Intensity Business and have created this policy to apply across our various websites and apps.
We hold the privacy of your personal information in the highest regard and this privacy notice provides you with details of how we collect and process your personal data through your use of our sites to enable you to make informed decisions about your personal information.
By providing us with your data, you warrant to us that you are over 13 years of age
When we talk about ‘us’ ‘we’ or ‘our’, we mean High Intensity Business or Corporate Warrior Ltd, 11 Ingleby Road, Ilford, Essex, UK, IG1 4RX and we are the operator of the website from which you accessed this privacy policy and any other websites or apps controlled by High Intensity Business (collectively ‘website’). We are the data controller and we are responsible for your personal data.
When we talk about ‘you’, we mean you as a participant or user of this website or services of this website.
‘Personal information’ is information that directly identifies you, such as your name and email address, or data that could be used, on its own or in combination with other data, to identify you.
It is very important that the information we hold about you is accurate and up to date. Please let us know if at any time your personal information changes by issuing a ticket at support [email protected]
1. Staying Anonymous
You can browse our online services anonymously. However, if you request information, sign up for our communications or podcast or purchase any of our products or services, you will need to identify yourself and at that point we will collect your personal information. If you do not give personal information to us, it will affect our ability to provide you with requested information or to deliver our products or services.
2. Collecting personal information
At all times we aim to only collect the minimum information we need for the services we are providing and to only use the information for the purpose it has been provided. For example, if you sign up to our newsletter, we will collect and use your email address to send our newsletter. As you would expect, the more involved you are with us, the more information about you we will collect.
There are some unusual terms in new legislation that affect how we tell you about the way we manage your personal information. One is letting you know the ‘lawful ground’ for what we do. This just means we are letting you know that there is a provision in the legislation that says it is alright for us to collect or use your information for a purpose that is considered a ‘legitimate interest’ of our business.
The main way we collect information about you is when you give it to us and this can happen in a variety of ways. We may process the following categories of personal information about you:
- Communication data: which includes any communication that you send to us. This might be when you join our mailing list or when you contact us through the contact form on our website, through email, text, social media messaging, social media posting or any other communication that you send us. Communication data may also include geographical data if you enable this within our app so that we can send you communications relevant to your geographical location. We process this data for the purposes of communicating with you, for record keeping and for the establishment, pursuance or defence of legal claims. Our lawful ground for this processing is our legitimate interest in replying to communications sent to us, keeping appropriate records and to establish, pursue or defend legal claims.
- Customer Data: which includes data you give to us when you purchase goods and/or services from us including any of our business training programs or events. This will include basic information about you and the information we require for billing purposes such as your name, title, billing address, delivery address email address, phone number, contact details, purchase details and your card details (last digits only). We use third party services for processing payments such as PayPal, EWay and Stripe and we do not receive or store your full card payment information. We process this data to supply the goods and/or services you have expressed an interest in or purchased and to keep records of such transactions. Our lawful ground for this processing is the performance of a contract between you and us and/or taking steps at your request to enter into that contract and our legitimate business interest of keeping records for accounting purposes.
- User Data: which includes data about how you use our website and any online services together with any data that you post for publication on our website or through other online services. We process this data to operate our website and ensure relevant content is provided to you, to ensure the security of our website, to maintain back-ups of our website and/or databases and to enable publication and administration of our website, other online services and business. Our lawful ground for this processing is our legitimate interest in properly administering our website and our business.
- Technical Data: which includes data about your use of our website and online services such as your IP address, your login data, details about your browser, length of visit to pages on our website, page views and navigation paths, details about the number of times you use our website, time zone settings and other technology on the devices you use to access our website. The source of this data is from our analytics tracking system. We process this data to analyse your use of our website and other online services, to administer and protect our business and website, to deliver relevant website content and advertisements to you and to understand the effectiveness of our advertising. Our lawful ground for this processing is our legitimate interest in properly administering our website and our business and to grow our business and to decide our marketing strategy.
- Marketing Data: which includes data about your preferences in receiving marketing from us and our third parties and your communication preferences. We process this data to enable you to partake in our online services, to deliver relevant website content and advertisements to you and measure or understand the effectiveness of this advertising. We may use surveys or contests to request information and you are not required to enter or use these services. Our lawful ground for this processing is our legitimate interest in studying how customers use our products/services, developing our products, growing our business and to decide our marketing strategy.
- We may use Customer Data, User Data, Technical Data and Marketing Data to deliver relevant website content and advertisements to you (including Facebook adverts, YouTube advertising or other display advertisements) and to measure or understand the effectiveness of the advertising we serve you. We may use pixels for retargeting to do this. Our lawful ground for this processing is legitimate interest in growing our business. We may also use such data to send other marketing communications to you. Our lawful ground for this processing is either consent or legitimate interests (namely to grow our business).
3. Collecting information from third parties
As discussed above, we collect personal information about you when you give it to us and when it is collected by our website however we may also collect personal information that is given to us or available to us by a third party (for example, information that is on a publicly maintained record or that you have made available on a public platform).
We may automatically collect certain data from you as you use our website by using cookies and similar technologies.
We may receive data from third parties such as analytics providers like Google, advertising networks such as Facebook, information providers such as Google, providers of technical, payment and delivery services, such as data brokers or aggregators. These third parties may be within the EU or outside of the EU.
This information forms part of the personal information described in this policy. We will not intentionally collect personal information that is unintentionally disclosed.
4. Collecting sensitive information
We do not intend to collect sensitive information about you and request you never disclose information about your health, racial or ethnic origin, political opinions, religious beliefs or sexual orientation on our website or any blog or social media account associated with our website or business. If you include your photograph in our online forum please be aware that other forum users may make assumptions about your racial or ethnic background.
5. Children’s privacy
Our services are not designed to be used by minors under the age of 13 and we do not intend to collect information about such minors. We will make reasonable endeavours to delete any details of users under the age of 13 years where a parent or guardian has notified us that any such details have been obtained. By providing us with your data, you warrant to us you are over the age of 13. If you are over 13 but under 18 you may be able to use our services however only with permission and guidance from your parents or guardian and we request that their personal information be used not yours.
6. Testimonials
If you provide us with a testimonial, you give us your consent for the use of your name, likeness and the date of service delivery to be displayed on our website or in our other marketing material, together with the content of the testimonial that you provide. We may edit your testimonial but will only do so where possible without changing the meaning of what you have said. We may store and/or use your testimonial for a period of up to 7 years from the date it is given. We process this information based on your consent which you may withdraw.
7. Marketing Communications
Our lawful ground of processing your personal data to send you marketing communications is either your consent or our legitimate interests (namely to grow our business). Sometimes we may recommend sharing your information with a third party for their marketing purposes. Before we share your personal data with any third party for their own marketing purposes we will get your express consent.
You can ask us or third parties to stop sending you marketing messages at any time by following the opt-out links on any marketing message sent to you or by emailing us.
If you opt out of receiving marketing communications, this opt-out does not apply to personal data provided for other transactions such as purchases.
8. Social Networking Services and links to other websites
You can connect with us via our social media pages on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, Twitter and LinkedIn.
We may provide links to other websites or use social networking services to communicate with the public about our work. When you communicate with us using these services we may collect your personal information. The social networking service will also handle your personal information for its own purposes and have their own privacy policies. You should become familiar with the privacy policies of any service you use.
9. How we use Cookies and other identifiers
We use a range of tools provided by third parties including our website host, third party service providers and search engine browsers to collect or view access and traffic information for statistical, reporting and maintenance purposes. Third party providers have their own privacy policies. We also may also use tracking pixels, cookies and session tools to improve your experience when accessing our online services.
The data collected by cookies does not usually identify you but may be combined with other information to identify you. If we identify you using information from cookies, we may use that information to track how you use our online services and send you information more specific to your needs, or to invite you to purchase our services.
The kind of information that can be collected includes:
- device specific information such as mobile network information
- server logs including your IP address, the times you use our services and system activity
- location information including IP address, GPS, and Wi-Fi access points
- local storage availability
We use the information to help to track your use of our online services to improve your user experience and the quality of our services.
10. Use and disclosure of personal information
In summary, as a legitimate business interest, the personal information we collect about you is used:
- to verify your identity
- to enable you to use our services
- to process orders, registrations and enquiries
- to provide you with information about events, products and services that may interest you
- to provide you with personalised service or special opportunities
- to allow you to participate in interactive features of our online services
- to run competitions, prize draws, and promotions (if any)
- to facilitate our internal business operations
- to improve our products or services and in planning new products or services
- to conducting market research surveys
- to monitor compliance with our Terms and Conditions.
With your consent or at your request we may:
- share your contact information with third party organisations who offer products or services that may be of interest to you (if you agree to receive such information)
We never sell, lend or lease your identifiable personal information.
We may also disclose your information to:
- Other companies in our group who provide services to us.
- Third party suppliers we engage to provide services which involve processing data on our behalf, for example IT and system administration services. In this case, we will require them to use that information only for the purpose of providing the services we have requested, and in compliance with the provisions of this privacy policy.
- Payment third parties if there is a dispute over a payment. For example if PayPal contacts us regarding a dispute over a payment, we will provide PayPal with user activity information such as IP address and activity linked to the IP address, billing details on our system etc to allow the payment dispute to be resolved.
- Professional advisers including accountants, lawyers, bankers, auditors and insurers.
- Government bodies that require us to report processing activities.
- Third parties where we are required to in accordance with the law and reserve the right to fully co-operate with any law enforcement authorities or court order requiring or requesting us to disclose the identity or other usage details of any user of our online services, or in accordance with a properly executed court order, or as otherwise required to do so by law.
11. Security and overseas recipients
We are committed to ensuring that your information is secure to industry standards however no system can be 100% secure and, provided we have acted in accordance with this policy, we are not responsible for loss you may suffer should your personal information be unlawfully accessed. Using the Internet to collect and process personal data necessarily involves the transmission of data on an international basis.
Not all countries have the same level of privacy protection as the country within which you reside. You acknowledge and agree to our processing of personal data across international borders in this way. We will do our best to ensure your data is protected to a similar standard as set out in this policy by using third party providers with similar privacy protections.
We will also take reasonable steps to protect all personal information within our direct control from misuse, interference, loss, unauthorised access, unlawful or accidental destruction, modification or disclosure. To prevent unauthorised access or disclosure we use respected hosting services, firewall and other electronic security procedures and managerial procedures to safeguard and secure the information we collect from you.
We have procedures in place to deal with any suspected personal data breach and will notify you and any applicable regulator of a breach if we are legally required to.
12. Opt-out/ unsubscribe
If we provide you with the opportunity to receive information about products or services from other carefully selected organisations (our business partners) about the products or services they offer, and you elect to do so, you can change your preferences at any time using the unsubscribe function within their emails.
Similarly, our marketing emails/newsletters will also have an unsubscribe option if you would like to opt-out. You can also update your subscription settings if you are a subscriber.
If you continue to receive communications you have unsubscribed from, please contact us by issuing a ticket at support [email protected] and we will remedy the problem.
13. Data retention
We will only retain your personal data for as long as necessary to fulfil the purposes we collected it for, including for the purposes of satisfying any legal, accounting, or reporting requirements.
When deciding what the correct time is to keep the data for we look at its amount, nature and sensitivity, potential risk of harm from unauthorised use or disclosure, the processing purposes, if these can be achieved by other means and legal requirements.
For tax purposes the law requires us to keep basic information about our customers (including Contact, Identity, Financial and Transaction Data) for five years after they stop being customers.
In some circumstances we may anonymise your personal data for research or statistical purposes in which case we may use this information indefinitely without further notice to you.
14. Third Party Links
This website may include links to third-party websites, plug-ins, applications and advertisements. Clicking on those links or enabling those connections may allow third parties to collect or share data about you. We do not control these third-party websites and are not responsible for their privacy statements or content. When you leave our website, we encourage you to read the privacy notice of every website you visit.
15. Updates
We regularly review and may update our privacy policy from time to time. The updated provisions will apply from the date they are posted on our website, so we recommend that you re-visit this privacy policy when you use our online services.
16. Accessing and correcting your personal information – Your legal rights
Under data protection laws you have rights in relation to your personal data that include the right to request access, correction, erasure, restriction, transfer, to object to processing, to portability of data and (where the lawful ground of processing is consent) to withdraw consent (note: some of these rights only attach to individuals located within the EU).
You can see more about these rights at: https://ico.org.uk/for-organisations/guide-to-the-general-data-protection-regulation-gdpr/individual-rights/
If you wish to exercise any of the rights set out above, please contact us by issuing a ticket at support [email protected]
You will not have to pay a fee to access your personal data (or to exercise any of the other rights). However, we may charge a reasonable fee if your request is clearly unfounded, repetitive or excessive or refuse to comply with your request in these circumstances.
We may need to request specific information from you to help us confirm your identity and ensure your right to access your personal data (or to exercise any of your other rights). This is a security measure to ensure that personal data is not disclosed to any person who has no right to receive it. We may also contact you to ask you for further information in relation to your request to speed up our response. For record keeping purposes, we will record and store all information exchanged during an exercise of your rights under this clause. These records will be stored securely and separate from our main active business systems.
We try to respond to all legitimate requests within one month. Occasionally it may take us longer than a month if your request is particularly complex or you have made a number of requests. In this case, we will notify you.
If you request to have your information erased (also known as the right to be forgotten), we will, if appropriate, delete your personal information from our active business operating system. Your personal information will however continue to be stored within our backup(s) as we are unable to delete specific items from our backup. It will be deleted at the next scheduled backup deletion. We will keep a log of your request to be forgotten so that, should our backup be used to restore our operating system while your personal information is still stored, your personal information will again be removed from our active system upon restoration.
If you are not happy with any aspect of how we collect and use your data, you have the right to complain to the Information Commissioner’s Office in your country. For instance, in the UK contact the Information Commissioner Office at www.ico.org.uk. We would be grateful if you would contact us first if you do have a complaint so that we can try to resolve it for you.
Very nice interview! Ann-Marrie is a very knowledgeable and well respected HIT trainer with tons of exerience. I’ve personally talked with several of the top HIT trainers out there and Ann-Marrie and Greg always seemed to come up as the best in the business. I clearly remember the shock when Greg passed; He was a big loss. I wish Ann-Marrie the best with her training certification efforts.
Thank you Thomas.
Interesting interview, especially the path she took getting to her current situation. She has an obvious passion for helping people get healthier via strength training, and I’m sure she delivers good results for her clients, as evidenced by having some very long term clients. In the details, there were a few points that I want to comment on:
— While discussing exercise protocol, she suggested that her clients almost always make progress at every training session. Yet she has a decent number of clients who have been with her for 20+ years. Does she really have a lot of clients have made progress after almost every session, for 20 years straight? That would be amazing.
— She stated that “draining your glycogen stores once a week with 3 to 4 exercises” is all you need to maintain insulin sensitivity. I have doubts about this. I don’t think you can burn enough calories to significantly dent your glycogen stores with only 10 minutes of exercise, even if quite intense. What you likely will do is deplete glycogen stores that are local to the muscles that were worked hard. Lots of glycogen will be available elsewhere (like in the liver). That exercise session will improve insulin sensitivity for some period after the workout. But it seems unlikely that the protective effect would last 7 to 10 days, since the local stores of glycogen should be replenished long before that (assuming adequate protein and carbohydrate intake).
— Regarding the comments about cancer and heart disease: to the extent that strength training is part of a healthy lifestyle, it should reduce the risk of either disease. But I think HIT advocates need to be cautious about overselling the extent of the protection that is provided, and should be cautious about using N=1 anecdotes to sell the disease prevention benefits of HIT.
— Specifically on the matter of heart disease: she says she has many clients that have perfect cardiovascular health. How does she know this? Even if it is true, how much is due to the mode of exercise and how much is due to other factors, like genetics, diet, etc. If I understood her explanation of Greg Anderson’s death, it was from coronary artery disease. That is anecdotal evidence that exercise alone, even HIT, does not ensure cardiovascular health.
— Specifically with regard to cancer: There are studies which have concluded that up to two-thirds of cancers are the result of randomly occurring mutations. Since you tend to accumulate mutations over the course of your life, your cancer risk rises with age. Cancer thus tends to be a disease of older people (though you can be unlucky and get it earlier). To the extent that her clientele is getting older, she is going to see more cases. Has greater environmental exposure to toxins increased the rate of mutations, and thus the rate of cancer? It seems a reasonable hypothesis, but probably hard to prove it.
I didn’t hear Anne-Marie say that exercise alone prevents illness and other factors clearly come into play . Mr Anderson’s death simply proves that he was human and afflictions can affect anyone HIT or not . It also takes quite a bit longer to fully restore muscle & liver glycogen then people think and the liver can apparently hold a very significant amount of glycogen , so it would take some time to refill it . If anything has been oversold to the public it’s the notion that frequent bouts of low intensity/steady state movement has many health benefits . It may have some benefits but those can be attained with intense exercise without the wear & tear of steady state exercise .
That’s basically exactly the comment I wanted to leave myself…perfectly put.
I’d really like to know more about glycogen in particular. Lawrence, I’d love to hear from an expert in the field, spelling out the hard facts and dispelling myths. Please make it happen!
Ann-Marie seems like a wonderful person may I add. Great interview.
Thank you Andrew. Would you like to hear from Ben Bickman PhD?
There’s a lot I’d like to ask Ben yes!
Great comment Greg. Very thought provoking, thank you.
Really enjoyed this one ! Ann-Marie was great , very jovial and knowledgeable at the same time . And yet again we hear more proof that short High effort bouts of exercise provide the body with many benefits along with cardio benefits despite what some may think .
Cheers Enlite
It’s also interesting with regard to the issue of calcium formation in the body and one of the main criticisms with the Paleo/Primal diet , is that high protein/high fat consumption can make the body very acidic . The body as a defense mechanism against this will pull calcium out of the bones to buffer the acid that’s being produced . As for all the aerobics/cardio that many advocate and do you’ve got to take into account and many don’t , the cumulative stress/wear & tear that such activities will produce . Especially when all the benefits of exercise can be achieved without incurring the damage that steady-state activities will produce .
No diet causes the body to become “very acidic” you keep repeating this nonsense. Diabetic ketoacidosis is a real condition that is often conflated with the effects of a ketogenic diet, maybe that’s where your confusion is coming from?
I’m not repeating nonsense . High protein & fat consumption tends to create ( maybe not with all but many ) an over-acidic environment in the body . The example that i gave about the body pulling calcium from the bones which can cause osteoporosis . It’s long been known that eating in this way can lead to health problems and if you doubt that go look into it for yourself . There are many resources you can read on this .
Yes I’m familiar with that hypothesis, let’s see what an expert has to say on the matter: https://m.facebook.com/SMPPh.D/posts/879553312067619 unfortunately FB doesn’t seem to want me to quote its content from my mobile, suffice to say Stu Phillips disagrees with your views. Look at it this way, if I were to be walking around with my blood at the wrong PH I would get very sick very quickly, metabolic acidosis is dangerous. Of all the angles you could attack high protein consumption from the “ash acid” angle is the weakest.
I think that relying on the opinions/views of ” experts ” may be mistaken as they’re at the end of the day human , and therefore susceptible to biases/preconceived notions just like us all . As i’ve said before i find it mind boggling that people would think that consuming the flesh of other creatures and the byproducts of them would be healthy !? It just seems logical/sensible to me that consuming starch/veg/fruit would be the healthiest option .
Are you actually irony proof? I literally can not believe you typed that first point in earnest.
As for your opinions on meat consumption you are very much in the miniority. Why is it logical to assume that eschewing foodstuffs that we have consumed for literally tens of thousands of years is the healthiest option? Just eat a balanced whole foods diet and exercise, you don’t need to rationalise your personal opinions or present them as “facts”.
Irony proof ?! I’m simply saying that people ( even so called experts ) are human beings and as such have biases & preconceived notions that’s all . My ” opinions ” as you call them about meat are far from in the minority and even if they were that wouldn’t make them wrong . Truth isn’t a popularity contest ! And proffering a theory such as evolution to justify consuming meat in my view is a little silly . Again you can eat whatever you want and i’m not telling you nor anyone else what they should eat .
You’ve considered that you might be a biased human with preconceived notions too, right? Experts aren’t always right, and the current scientific consensus is subject to change but that doesn’t make you correct. Your opinion is wrong, meat doesn’t “acidify” the body. The over consumption of animal products correlate to certain negative health outcomes yes that is true but that’s not what you are arguing. I’m not taking necessarily about evolution, just saying that we’ve been eating animals for at least 100,000 years and almost zero population groups eschew this supposed “poison”.
I don’t mean to poison the well so to speak but are you a Seventh Day Adventist?
I know for a fact that when i consume a lot of meat and or consume high levels of protein i get highly acidic . As evidenced by heartburn & stomach issues even joint pain ! People i personally know have experienced these things along with other effects as well . And when they eliminated or reduced their meat/diary intake they all felt better & myself as well . Scientific consensus doesn’t make for truth and ” science ” isn’t the bastion of truth either . You say we’ve been eating animals for hundreds of thousands of years , are you certain of that ?! And lets for arguments sake say you’re right , does that justify/rationalize the consumption of other creatures ?! You say my opinion is wrong ! Really ?! What makes my ” opinions ” wrong and yours correct ?! An opinion is simply a baseless assertion so no one’s opinion can be right . And no i’m not a Seventh Day Adventist nor do i have any religious affiliation .
Science is the tool that allows humans to find out the truth, your personal interpretation of the world may have little relation to reality. I’m not saying my opinion is correct, I’m weighing up the evidence presented by the scientific community and I find it convincing, you are telling us that your own inexpert opinion trumps that somehow. Yes, it appears that hominids have been eating meat for 2.6 MILLION YEARS https://www.nature.com/scitable/knowledge/library/evidence-for-meat-eating-by-early-humans-103874273 that does indeed make it part of human nature. I’m not talking about ethics or the environmental arguments before you go moving the goal posts.
As for your personal experience and that of “others”, these are just ANECDOTES you need to understand how to think critically. The fact that you sometimes suffer from heartburn and “joint issues” doesn’t support your claim at all. Heartburn and “joint pain” do not equal “meat acidifies the body” I really don’t know where to start unpacking that statement. You need to understand all the factors that contribute to the supposed conditions, you need to understand things like the nocebo effect, regression to the mean, desirable outcome bias, confirmation bias, post hoc reasoning. You need to understand interindividual variation. You need to wonder why so many people claim exactly the same alleviating effects of radically different dietary interventions: carnivore, raw vegan, high fibre, low carb, fruitarian and so on. What makes you right and them all wrong? Can you all be right? Why? Figure all that out, and then come back and tell me you are right.
Well if my not being an ” expert ” is grounds for nothing that i say being valid/true then nobody ( including yourself ) on that basis is qualified to say anything about anything except for ” experts ” i suppose ! As i already stated ” science ” isn’t the bastion of truth despite many thinking otherwise . That doesn’t mean that there’s no truth within the realm of science but to assume that science/truth are joined at the hip is absurd . The scientific establishment is subject to corruption/evil just like anything else so one must be cautious/vigilant about the information that is being disseminated . Science simply means knowledge and knowledge is only acquired one way through experience/practical application . Study is one thing but practical knowledge through application is another .
Just because something is ” anecdotal ” doesn’t make it untrue and just because something is ” scientific ” doesn’t make it true . The validity of a thing is what makes it true . Is authority the truth or truth the authority ?! What you seem to be suggesting is that knowledge acquired through personal observation/experience isn’t valid/true . I think it sets a very dangerous precedent if we say that only ” authorities ” are capable of telling us what is true or untrue , as that affords a very small minority of people tremendous power over the rest of us . Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely ! I’ll end with a quote ” Science is simply common sense at it’s best , that is rigidly accurate in observation and merciless to fallacy in logic . “
No, that’s a strawman. I didn’t say you were wrong because you weren’t an expert I said you were wrong because the weight of archeological and medical evidence says you are wrong. Of course you can be a layman and still correct but that doesn’t make you personally correct. It’s utterly absurd that you don’t understand this.
Who do you go to for your information? Just people that you agree with or do you only trust your own experience? I wouldn’t be surprised to find that you generally accept everything presented to you about the world by science and experts….except the things that don’t confirm your biases.
Science isn’t truth but the scientific method allows us to find out as close to the truth as possible. Science is sometimes wrong, yes but it’s always open to correction given new data. You have no idea what you are talking about. Please read up on how scientific consensus are reached, how they can change over time and how the scientific method actually works, not how you imagine it works. Please read up on why anecdotal evidence and self reporting is so unreliable and why combining that with a study size of one makes a individual’s opinion meaningless.
While you’re doing that, find me a credible source for meat “acidifying” the body and define what that actually means. Find me a credible source that says meat was not consumed by humans over many many thousands of years. Maybe also tell me my increase in relative risk of all cause mortality by eating meat as opposed to a vegan diet, don’t cherry pick remember!
Spirited and somewhat productive, just keep it civil gents and don’t get personal. Thanks
Your totally contradicting yourself . First you say that you didn’t say i was wrong because i wasn’t an expert but because the weight of archeological & medical evidence says i’m wrong . Who exactly makes up this weight of evidence your referring to ? EXPERTS . And you did insinuate in your previous comment that why should anyone take me as a layman and what i say to be true/valid . Then you say that i as a layman can be correct but not ” personally ” correct ! That’s pure claptrap & doublespeak ! As to whether i rely on personal experience or the information of others it’s not an either or proposition . Of course one should listen to read and consider what others say but ultimately one must decide for one’s self ! You say that self reporting and ” anecdotal ” evidence is meaningless because people will be deceptive on what they’re reporting which is true in some cases . But guess what , the scientific establishment is also capable of deception/lies as well .
I’m well aware of the scientific method and how it’s supposed to work but would it surprise you that science in many instances actually defies the so called scientific methodology ?! There have been many critiques of the scientific establishment and the corruption that exists within it and if you doubt that then go and look into it for yourself . An article that i read on the subject a few years back stated that science/scientists can reach pretty much any conclusion you want ! There’s been much criticism of the scientific establishment and how science is for sale and will reach the conclusions that suite whomever is footing the bill ! What does this tell you about science ? It tells you at the very least that one should be skeptical of science & scientists . As far as finding you a ” credible ” source about meat consumption and the various problems it can cause , what’s the point ? Your obvious biases towards meat consumption will cause you to process information deferentially anyway and will prevent you from considering you may be wrong .
One must ultimately decide how one is going to eat or train or anything else for that matter . logic/reason/common sense is how i go about deciding what course of action is the best based on facts/truth , but be aware that facts & truth aren’t the same thing . Facts tell you what but they don’t tell you why ! And i’ve found that those who possess the most facts possess the least truth .
Clearly I could be explaining my perspective better here to aid your reading comprehension. That said I find it hard to believe that you’re not being deliberately obtuse. You’ve gone to great lengths to try to dismantle my points on semantics alone without actually addressing the points directly. Coupled this with the fact that we seem to have a different understanding of the words “facts, truth, science” and “opinion” unfortunately leads me to believe you might not ever understand my point of view.
Not knowing that you are wrong is one thing, not knowing why you are wrong is quite another.
Just to surmise, meat doesn’t “acidify” the body, you don’t even seem to be able to define that concept let alone explain it. That’s where this ridiculous conversation started just to remind you.
I read your comments very carefully and responded to them in kind . It’s interesting that you accuse me of being deliberately obtuse when in fact it’s you who come across as very rude/obtuse . I’m not arrogant and i do consider that i could be mistaken however you don’t seem to do the same . You constantly condescend & talk down to me telling me i don’t understand this & don’t comprehend that as if i’m stupid or something . I know how to read & comprehend however you want to insult me because i don’t agree with your stance on nutrition for example . You did in fact contradict yourself in your previous comments to me and i did rebut your points or at the very least call them into question . And if what i’m saying is so ridiculous to you why keep engaging with me ?!
A fantastic interview Lawrence, Ann-Marie certainly has a wealth of knowledge and experience combined with such a wonderful personality. I’m sure Greg would be extremely proud of her efforts since in untimely passing.
Yes Lawrence as you mentioned in the podcast, I have been following a ketogenic ‘diet’ for just on 3 years now as I have prostate cancer.
I also do a BBS type workout once a week. Was doing it twice per week but found once per week worked absolutely fine for me. I also keep very active and still work full time in a hands on supervisory role.
Has the exercise and diet regime worked for me? Absolutely! I have an abundance of energy, have maintained both muscle mass and bone density and I’m not on any ‘mood enhancing’ medication to help me through some of the tough periods I have faced over the last 5 1/2 years.
For anyone who is going through a similar battle remember that motion helps control emotion a lot of the time. Sitting on ones butt feeling sorry for yourself is not at all helpful. Plan the action, then action the plan and get moving
There is also a current line of thinking that cancer is not a result of gene mutations or the like, but is actually a metabolic disease, pure speculation at this stage, but there are clinical trials taking place.
My oncologist would argue that the medication I’m on is keeping the beast at bay, and to a point i would agree its helping. But within 3 months of starting the keto protocol my PSA dropped like a stone and has remained pretty much undectable ever since. At my last visit he told me he didn’t actually care what I was doing, just keep doing it as your results are amazing and you look fantastic, I’m more than happy with that, a far better scenario than the one I was facing at the very beginning that’s for sure.
Diagnosed at 57, no family history and no symptoms. Be proactive guys! Get regular checups
Thank you Malcolm. Really appreciate the kind words. It was an honour and a privilege to have Ann-Marie on to talk about such things.
Thank you for sharing your story publicly in the comments. You’re an inspirations and I’m incredibly happy to see you doing so well. I’ve also read claims about cancer, or most cancers, being a metabolic disease, and it seems likely based on the mechanisms that I understand cause most cancers.
Keep it up sir!
This is the interview that I have wanted to hear for years.
I think Greg’s verbal techniques were influenced by Bradley J. Steiner (according to the Dave Durell interview that I listened to 5-10 times).
Thanks. I added the link to Dave’s interview with Greg to the show notes and here: http://traffic.libsyn.com/corpwarrior/High_Intensity_Interview_of_the_Month_Greg_Anderson_-.mp3
Glad you enjoyed it Brian 😀