I know it's about CARBS and how you say excess are utilized and how I say they are. That study plays into what I said. You keep talking about protein...I'm not. The arguement is over excess carbs yet staying under your daily caloric intake. I say they are stored as fat and I don't know what you say about it. You're all over the place and won't answer anything directly.
I'm calling you out on your theory and you bounce all over the place and provide no proof and say you're too "lazy" 
Can you please link me to Doctors, scientists or nutritionist that prescribe your practices? Or should I just believe some guy on an internet bodybuilding board...Nothing personal but it is what it is.
SHOW PROOF...Bottom line. PROOF that you can eat whatever you want as you say or whatever your hypothesis is. And the proof that the excess is not stored as fat.
If you are in a caloric deficit, you
must lose weight. That's the
definition of a deficit, I think we can agree upon that. In order to gain fat in a deficit, you would have to lose more muscle than you gain fat, otherwise you wouldn't lose total weight, correct?
So you are saying if you shift your intake from fats to carbs
while staying in a deficit (= adjusting total intake to still achieve the same rate of weight loss), and also still eating enough protein and performing strength training that all of a sudden you will not lose fat anymore and preserve most of your muscle mass but instead gain fat and lose
more muscle than you gain fat?
As for me not providing any proof, neither did you. But as I said, I'll dig up some studies on body composition comparing low and high carb diets, because that's what we are talking about.