This points to excess fat and carbs as being the initial cause of the disease with protein metabolism being a secondary cause, but in no way does that mean that the secondary cause is of any less importance that the original cause
Um, no. This points to problems with protein digestion being a RESULT of the disease, not the cause. The links provided previously on the treatment of liver disease instead of the cause of liver disease show the same confusion about the difference between cause and effect. Do you understand what fatty liver disease is? It's a fat buildup in the liver caused by fats coming in faster than the liver can process them. That's what it says in the Hepatic Lipidosis section of the Liver chapter of Clinical Avian Medicine.
http://avianmedicine.net/publication_ca ... -medicine/ Excessive fat and carbohydrates are listed as causes and their relationship to triglyceride levels is explained. Dietary protein is not mentioned except to say that amino acid deficiency can cause FLD. Websites on human nonalcoholic fatty liver disease agree that this is a fat-processing issue, and add the information that the fat accumulation is inside the liver cells, as opposed to being a separate lump of fat within the liver. This accumulation can cause inflammation and swelling in the liver, which can lead to liver damage and inability to function correctly. The only time protein is ever mentioned as a cause of FLD is when they're talking about methionine deficiency. There are a lot of good human articles on the subject and here's one of them:
http://www.medicinenet.com/fatty_liver/article.htmIn any case, your post basically says that excess fat and carbs are the biggest problem but protein is also the biggest problem. It looks like preconceived notions are going to rule the day not the evidence, so there's no point talking about it any more. I think you believe that you interpreted your sources correctly, but I can't share your optimism since no one else agrees with your viewpoint. An open-minded person would be questioning their beliefs at this point but I don't see it happening.
For anyone else who still may be reading: due to the difficulty of getting enough complete protein in the diet, the risk of underfeeding protein is higher than the risk of overfeeding it, and the consequences of underfeeding are more certain and severe. So don't try to lowball the protein content in the diet, and don't go crazy with high-protein foods either. It doesn't look like it's possible to feed dangerously high amounts of protein using a sensible variety of ordinary plant foods. But the highest-protein seeds are also very high in fat, and you need to limit the quantity to keep the calorie count from getting out of hand.