He definitely has discussed it with the media; he talked about it in his Joe Rogan interview among others. But after a quick search, it does appear I was probably mistaken about him advocating it for others, so I'm sorry for falsely stating he has.
I'd like to hear a credible doctor talk about what kind of autoimmune condition could possibly be only triggered by everything besides beef. It reminds me of the character Chuck in Better Call Saul, who experiences severe psychosomatic pain when he's aware of electrical devices around himself and believes he's allergic to electricity. Of course, not all strange never-before-seen medical problems are psychosomatic.
I'm skeptical that Mikhaila had severe physical illness that went away entirely with her all-beef diet. People making money selling medical miracles that don't mesh with any known science should not be easily trusted. Especially people who'd have their benzodiazepine-dependent family members go through cold turkey "emergency benziodiazepine detox"--the facts around that are extremely clear on it being detrimental in pretty much every way and life-threateningly dangerous.
Benzodiazepine withdrawal can last months or even years, and it tends to wax and wane over day/week timescales. I hope the other people around him are willing to advocate against Mikhaila for him to get treatment if his withdrawal symptoms become severe again.
1) I have a problem, 2) the cause is rare and unusual, 3) the solution is something ill-advised and out-there that just happens to work for me.
I've noticed that this way of thinking is very common among those with dependency/addiction issues, and whether this way of thinking is a cause or result of said addiction, it often spills out into other areas of life.
My personal experience is that I've had a number of friends where this was true, and while things never got as bad for me as for them or Peterson, I've also noticed how my own thinking got warped in periods where I struggled with dependency issues.
Pothead friends who advocated weed as a cure for cancer and argued it is actually good for the lungs. Also their depression cannot be cured through therapy because therapists wouldn't be able to deal with the specific nature of their problems.
Alcoholic friends who argued they "weren't so bad" comparatively, and in fact their lifestyle was better than the poor sober suckers who work 9-5, their life structurally falling apart obviously being a result of very unusual circumstances that they had no control over.
If you bothered to make even a small effort to educate yourself on the circumstances and timeline of events instead of make up wild speculation and then condemn someone for it, you’d know how absurd this comment is.
She was literally crippled as a child and had to get hip and ankle replacement surgery before she was 18. Yes, it must be completely psychosomatic (even afflicting multiple independent doctors and surgeons involved in the diagnoses and treatment!), and an elimination diet just happened to trick her into thinking she was cured.
I'd like to hear a credible doctor talk about what kind of autoimmune condition could possibly be only triggered by everything besides beef. It reminds me of the character Chuck in Better Call Saul, who experiences severe psychosomatic pain when he's aware of electrical devices around himself and believes he's allergic to electricity. Of course, not all strange never-before-seen medical problems are psychosomatic.
I'm skeptical that Mikhaila had severe physical illness that went away entirely with her all-beef diet. People making money selling medical miracles that don't mesh with any known science should not be easily trusted. Especially people who'd have their benzodiazepine-dependent family members go through cold turkey "emergency benziodiazepine detox"--the facts around that are extremely clear on it being detrimental in pretty much every way and life-threateningly dangerous.
Benzodiazepine withdrawal can last months or even years, and it tends to wax and wane over day/week timescales. I hope the other people around him are willing to advocate against Mikhaila for him to get treatment if his withdrawal symptoms become severe again.