Is Fruit Bad For You?
Have you heard the latest nonsense from the diet grift industrial complex?
Apparently, fruit is now dangerous. Yes—fruit. The stuff that grows on trees and ends up in your kid’s lunchbox is being blamed for everything from diabetes to “metabolic collapse.”
The same influencers who once screamed about seed oils are now coming for your bananas, blueberries, and yes, even your smoothies.
It would be laughable if it weren’t so successful.
I’ve Seen Real Diets That Work—They Include Fruit
My father had a massive heart attack at 55. The kind that forces lifestyle change.
But here’s the thing—he lived. He didn’t just live; he thrived.
He made it to 98, living independently until the very end.
And every single morning, he started his day with fruit: grapefruit, berries, and cantaloupe. He didn’t fear fructose. He just ate a balanced diet, and it worked.
The Anti-Fruit Grift: A Modern Wellness Scam
On social media, fruit is now the villain of the week. According to the keto-carnivore crowd, fruit will spike your insulin, make you fat, and destroy your health.
But right after shaming your banana, they usually offer a discount code for their liver pills or collagen powder.
Even Paul Saladino—the original shirtless prophet of beef liver supplements—is eating fruit now. Apparently, scurvy isn’t a great look.
Here’s the Truth: Fruit Is One of the Healthiest Things You Can Eat
Let’s stick to actual science. Fruit is one of the nine essential components of the Mediterranean Diet—a dietary pattern backed by decades of research, including landmark studies like PREDIMED and EPIC.
The Mediterranean Diet recommends 250 grams of fruit per day. People who follow it experience lower rates of:
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Cardiovascular disease
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Type 2 diabetes
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Cognitive decline
And guess what? Even people with diabetes do well when they eat whole fruit.
According to large observational studies, such as the BMJ study by Muraki et al. (2013) and Li et al. (2016) in The Journal of Nutrition, higher intake of whole fruits—especially berries, apples, and citrus—is associated with a reduced risk of type 2 diabetes, not an increased one.
Smoothies: Not Soda. Let’s Stop the Nonsense.
Yes, when you blend fruit, it digests faster. That’s true. But a smoothie made from whole fruit, with the fiber intact, is nothing like drinking a sugary soda.
Want to improve it even more? Add protein, oats, chia, or yogurt. You’ve got a perfectly fine breakfast that’s far better than most boxed cereals.
So drink your smoothie. Enjoy it. You’re not ruining your health. You’re nourishing your body.
Cultures That Live Long… Eat Fruit
All the world’s longest-lived populations eat fruit—daily.
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Okinawans enjoy papaya, guava, and sweet potatoes.
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Sardinians love figs, grapes, and citrus.
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Loma Linda Adventists consume berries and stone fruits, and live some of the longest lives in America.
None of these groups fear fruit. And spoiler alert: none of them are blending bacon into their coffee.
Beware of Magical Thinking (and Tallow)
The real problem isn’t fruit—it’s the carnival of carnivore influencers selling meat-based miracles. These aren’t scientists. They’re entertainers with no credentials who demonize fruit while pushing “ancestral eating” and supplements derived from animals that… ate fruit.
If your diet says yes to beef tallow but no to blueberries, it’s time to reevaluate who you’re listening to.
Final Thoughts: Let’s Use Our Brains (and Eat the Peach)
Fruit isn’t the enemy. It’s not a metabolic poison. It’s one of the most nutrient-rich foods you can eat—and it’s associated with better health outcomes across every major population study.
So next time someone tells you to skip the apple, ask them to show you a peer-reviewed study—not a coupon code.
References:
- Guan J, Liu T, Yang K, Chen H. Dried fruit intake and lower risk of type 2 diabetes: a two-sample mendelian randomization study. Nutr Metab (Lond). 2024 Jul 10;21(1):46. doi: 10.1186/s12986-024-00813-z. PMID: 38987806; PMCID: PMC11234600.
- Martínez-González MÁ, Hernández Hernández A. Effect of the Mediterranean diet in cardiovascular prevention. Rev Esp Cardiol (Engl Ed). 2024 Jul;77(7):574-582. English, Spanish. doi: 10.1016/j.rec.2024.01.006. Epub 2024 Feb 7. PMID: 38336153. – (click for reference)