The "I'm a carnivore" people are always who you expect. People who try really hard to appear badass while at the same time are triggered by vegetarians and vegans
I know a couple of people who went from vegan to a raw meat diets. The common thread is lifelong digestive issues leading to an obsession with what they put in their bodies and a constant stream of different dietary 'cures' that never quite work.
A diet which literally no humans have ever followed voluntarily before the 21st century (absolutely all people who lived where edible plants grew ate plants).
Yes, you can survive off animal products alone. If you eat all the icky parts, too.
No one knows what that does to your life expectancy, though. That was pretty irrelevant for stone age arctic cave dwellers, as long as they managed to reproduce when they were 16.
And no, that's not in any way a sensible diet for the time we live in right now.
Avoid pretty much any fad diet. Stick with current best practices, in conjunction with your physician.
Best practices do change, and there's still going to be manipulation of it all by people with an axe to grind, but it's still going to average out as better as long as you actually pay attention to current best practices.
Yeah, that also means your have to pay attention to the reliability of education and certification of doctors, but you should also be doing that anyway.
Wow, even the LSD guy was in on it. Talk about not getting high on your own supply.
Owsley Stanley ate a carnivorous diet for over fifty years, until he died in 2011.
From at least the mid-1960s until his death, Stanley practiced and advocated an all-meat diet, believing that humans are naturally carnivorous. He argued that rare red meat was a complete food and that a diet of such is optimal for human health and longevity. He held many radical opinions on biology and nutrition. He argued that the body could not store protein or fat as adipose tissue, but would instead be simply excreted if consumed in excess, and that only consumption of carbohydrates and sugars could make someone obese. He also theorized that diabetes was not technically a disease but actually the term for the damage wrought by insulin, and that adopting a zero carb diet would treat this so-called disease.