Today is the first day of January and is also the first day of World Carnivore Month. To that end, let's challenge ourselves to eat a carnivore diet for the entire month of January. The type of carnivore diet and the level of strictness you choose to do is entirely up to you. Examples of carnivore diets include the following...
1) The Lion Diet. A person eating the Lion Diet only consumes the flesh of ruminant animals, water, and salt.
2) The BBBE Diet. BBBE is an acronym for Beef, Butter, Bacon, and Eggs.
3) The Carnivore Diet. This allows for the consumption of any and all animals and animal by-products, including dairy.
In any of the above examples, the object of course is to not consume any plants as part of your diet. Of course, we're not going to micromanage hoe you prepare your food, so your use of seasonings is entirely your own personal choice.
IF your circumstances don't allow you to go full on carnivore in January, then you can participate in this topic by challenge yourself to do better, above and beyond what you have been doing. For example, if you have still been eating grains, seed oils, refined sugar, or drinking alcohol, challenge yourself to avoid these items and just eat a clean, single ingredient whole foods diet such as clean keto, ketovore, or animal based.
We encourage you to check in daily, and share what you have eaten, perhaps a weigh-in if you're willing, and enjoy in some small talk. Participants in this topic will be entered into a drawing for a prize at the end of the month.
From Seed Oil Scout
What stevia is doing to your hormones
Brought to you by animal., starring Dr. Ken Berry, Dr. Eric Berg, and Dr. Anthony Chaffee
Stevia is everywhere—from electrolyte powders to protein bars to toothpaste.
It’s sold as a plant-based, zero-calorie sweetener, and for many people, it feels like a safe, natural alternative to sugar. But the research tells a more complicated story, especially when you look beyond short-term human trials. We’re breaking it down, and explaining why stevia doesn’t get the SOS stamp of approval.
@reallytanman
What the studies show
Although stevia is generally considered safe by regulatory bodies, a growing body of evidence—particularly from animal and in vitro studies—raises questions about its long-term biological effects.
A 2016 in vitro study found that steviol glycosides disrupted human progesterone receptor function and reduced sperm fertilization capacity (PubMed).
A 2010 study in male rats reported reduced testosterone levels, decreased testicular weight, and structural changes in reproductive tissues following chronic exposure to stevia extract (PubMed).
Additional studies observed decreased fertility and smaller litters in female rats after prolonged stevia intake. (PubMed, PubMed)
While these outcomes haven’t been observed in short-term human trials, most clinical studies to date are limited in duration and often exclude reproductive endpoints altogether.
The takeaway: Stevia appears to have pharmacologic activity. And repeated exposure—not just one-time use—is where the concern lies.
Stevia as birth control
Before it was a fixture in wellness products, stevia was studied for its effect on fertility.
In the 1960s and ’70s, researchers in Paraguay and Brazil reported that female rats given daily doses of stevia extract over several weeks experienced a drop in fertility. Litter sizes shrank. Conception rates fell. When the extract was removed, normal fertility resumed—suggesting the effect was hormonal, not toxic (PubMed).
These were early, well-documented findings. But they’ve rarely resurfaced in the decades since—at least not in ways most consumers would notice.
@jessicagenetics
What you’re eating isn’t the stevia plant
The version used in most products is a purified compound—usually rebaudioside A—processed with solvents or resins. It’s typically blended with erythritol, monk fruit, or sucralose to mask bitterness.
Why that matters: these ingredients are consumed together, often several times a day, across supplements, drinks, and snacks. A 2025 mouse study found that erythritol impaired memory and learning, possibly by disrupting synaptic plasticity. (Journal of Applied Physiology)
Stevia was never fully approved by the FDA
The FDA has never approved whole-leaf stevia or crude stevia extracts for use in food. Instead, it granted GRAS (generally recognized as safe) status to isolated compounds like rebaudioside A, based on short-term studies in healthy adults.
Despite this narrow approval, stevia gained popularity because it was marketed as natural, plant-based, and calorie-free.
Why we don’t approve stevia at SOS
Brands that partner with Seed Oil Scout can earn the Seed Oil Safe stamp to use on their packaging and be listed in our marketplace. But stevia-containing products don’t qualify.
This decision comes from our guiding philosophy: we apply scrutiny to ingredients with questionable safety data, regulatory ambiguity, or a track record of underreported risks—especially when they’re used daily under the assumption of safety.
We built the SOS Grocery Scanner around this principle.
Stevia doesn’t meet our standard. Here’s why:
Hormonal and reproductive effects have been documented in multiple animal studies
Long-term safety data in humans is limited
It’s rarely consumed alone and typically paired with other additives like erythritol or sucralose.
It’s marketed as natural, but chemically refined and far from a whole food
This isn’t about trends—it’s about applying consistent standards to ingredients that haven’t earned our confidence.
Try the SOS Grocery Scanner. It flags more than just seed oils.
Bottomline
Stevia demonstrates biological effects in animal models.
Long-term safety in humans has not been established.
The version used in products is highly processed.
It’s not Seed-Oil Safe. 🫡
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Featuring nutrition experts like Dr. Ken Berry, Dr. Shawn Baker, Dr. Anthony Chaffee, Dr. Eric Berg, Judy Cho, Eddie Abbew, and more, animal. uncovers the truth behind our diets - and how to reclaim our health.
You are what you eat. And you've been eating a lie.