Well, here goes, Sqad! Hope you don't mind if I take you up on your challenge!
First of all there are references to medical studies on the site and Dr Eenfeldt is a respected physician. But, if you don't consider him so, there are many others - Dr Mary Vernon (specialist in treatment of obesity - you can see her interview on Youtube) Dr Peter Attia (his website is
http://waroninsulin.com/ ) Dr Lustig (recently featured on "Sixty Minutes" in the US, also available on Youtube). I could go on ... but hopefully you can start with those. The proof about lc/hf is out there for anyone willing to do the research which you hopefully seem to be!
To start with, the "99%" figure I gave didn't refer to diabetes alone.The far end of the overweight spectrum is type 2 diabetes, but there are many stages along the way - insulin resistance being one. And the fact is, if a person is overweight, they are overweight because they carry too much fat. Insulin is primary hormone regulating the disposition of fat. The only way that most (99%) of humans become fat is if they have a problem with their insulin system whether to a greater or lesser degree.
To take your second point, I'm talking about about a low carbohydrate/high fat diet which is has been proven NOT to increase risk of heart disease. Study after study has shown that your risk of heart disease is directly related to your weight and your triglyceride levels. Both of these are proven to reduce when following lc/hf.
Also, your contention that ketosis is the same as ketoacidocis (not hyperglycaemia, as you stated) is simply wrong. They are not the same thing metabolically. Ketosis is the normal, functional state of the body when eating a low carb diet - the diet our ancestors ate for millions of years before farming made carbs more freely available than nature ever had. Your body will happily run on ketones (i.e. fat) forever - we all do this to a certain extent each night as we fast from dinner to breakfast. The idea that it is dangerous for the long term is also incorrect. I have followed a lc/hf diet for years and, having a very low carb tolerance, live in a state of permanent ketosis. As a direct result I'm slimmer, fitter and healthier according to all the tests my GP has done (blood sugar, cholesterol, triglycerides etc). Just my personal story? Means nothing? Well, there are thousands of people like me and we're not all keeling over. Unlike those poor souls who try to starve themselves and do more exercise - like I used to - on "low-calorie" diets. I did lose weight on some of my diets - for a while - but like most people, always regained, usually more, as soon as I began to "eat normally". How can that be tolerable in the long term? No one can starve themselves forever.
Finally, you say that this diet is the "new school" but it's not. This was the diet that was generally advised for losing weight more than 100 yrs ago when far fewer people were overweight than today. It used to be understood that carbs made you fat. To cite just one example, as long ago as 1863 a chap named Banting wrote a pamplet giving the low-carb/high fat advice (advice his doctor had given him) in his "Letter on Corpulence". And it was nothing new then. The "low-calorie/low fat" advice is on the contrary the one that is recent. It was brought in around 40 years ago - in the US - and many people now believe it is directly responsible for the epidemic of obesity we face today.
Please check out the science I've pointed you to and see what you think. There are also some very good books on the topic you could read - Gary Taubes' "The Diet Delusion" does a really good job on covering the history, science and causes of the current problem.
And thanks for giving me the opportunity to change your mind if I can!