The link between consumption of saturated fat and cholesterol with cardiovascular disease is extremely well established so I don't think it's a coincidence that I feel this much better after cutting them out of my diet.
The vast majority of the studies mentioned in those videos are old, where most researchers could get away with hacking the P values [0]. A lot of studies done in the last decade contradict the older ones (the article I linked earlier is full of sources). Also correlation is not causation. In how many of those studies controlled the amount of carbs? Because the combination is very important [1]
Edit: Looking at the last link of your first video, it acknowledges low carb diets are beneficial short and medium term, but there's very little literature for long term. It concludes low carbs are bad long term... but you must see the table on page 13 to see how they reached that conclusion. The "low carb score" group still had a crazily high 37-42% of carbs (compared to LCHF diets which are usually 5% carbs), it had more smokers and all of them had trans fats (very dangerous but can be easily avoided altogether).
There are plenty of studies from the last few years that back all this up in detail. If you go to nutritionfacts.org you'll find more references than you can handle.
Did you search enough within those sources to refute the ones of the article I linked? I barely find any in nutritionfacts made in the last 10-15 years, and of those I can't find even a single one that points to fat and cholesterol as the main cause of heart disease.
I'm fairly sure that "diets" are not scientifically proven in any way. I just said I disagreed with you on your conclusions (which are anecdotal). I was suggesting that over-consumption of anything (but especially things that are harder to digest, process, store) MAY cause your body to feel like shit.
https://lifeforbusypeople.com/2016/08/24/why-anti-fat-is-com...
Industrial meat is not exactly good, though, it has all kinds of issues but the fat and cholesterol aren't a problem.