http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/26/us/26fats.html?em&ex=1217131200&en=177d2d602bc884b7&ei=5087%0A
7/25/2008 5:29:07 PM
Good. I hope high fructose corn syrup is next.
7/25/2008 5:56:49 PM
Silliness, they should ban High Fructose Corn Syrup instead. It probably causes far more damage to peoples health than transfats. Or maybe, they should let people make their own decisions on what to eat. nah, that would never work.
7/25/2008 5:58:15 PM
Do you think they should allow the sale of foods laced with cyanide? I hear it tastes like cinnamon.
7/25/2008 6:02:14 PM
^ Like almonds actually.
7/25/2008 6:13:13 PM
7/25/2008 6:54:54 PM
PURE SUGAR CANE SODA FTMFW
7/25/2008 7:00:52 PM
7/25/2008 7:10:45 PM
We have huge tariffs on Brazilian can sugar and ethanol. Both of which are better than what we have. Ethanol is cleaner and cheaper. The only biofuel that has proven to be cost effective and clean. So we end up with the shit we have now. The industry thats in debt despite massive subsidies, and oh yeah, food prices are up because of it. Not to mentioned, I cant get that good sugar in my food. Also, I think this is all fucking bullshit. People know that when they suck down mcdonalds its bad for them. Its not a question of information. Its just what we choose to do. Cigarettes are bad. Alcohol is bad. Sat fat is bad. Simple carbs arent really good. Etc. I dont think you should be putting limits on these things unless they have harmful effects on those around you.
7/25/2008 7:12:19 PM
^^O RLY? You clearly did not read my post.Transfat is used because of a drive for profit. Corn syrup is used because of the same drive, but is directly propped up by gov. intervention. I'm merely wanting to remove the gov. intervention, in the hopes companies do the right thing and stop using as much corn syrup.
7/25/2008 7:19:57 PM
^ YA RLY
7/25/2008 7:59:45 PM
^ because government intervention is always bad right? Do you always see the world as black and white?
7/25/2008 8:05:02 PM
Wonder if they could get a STEROID ban passed in California
7/25/2008 8:27:28 PM
hopefully we can get a ban on pointy objects as well[Edited on July 25, 2008 at 9:08 PM. Reason : think of the children]
7/25/2008 9:07:16 PM
^^^ Not all, just most of it.[Edited on July 25, 2008 at 9:07 PM. Reason : asdfadsfa]
7/25/2008 9:07:22 PM
Now this is a half-way decent idea from California.There's really no reason to have trans fats in food.
7/25/2008 9:30:55 PM
I would be opposed to this in NC...But not in California. They chose to live in that liberal cesspool. Let them do the experiment and it'll have positive benefits for us if anything.
7/25/2008 9:43:26 PM
^ my main motivation is reducing the amount of fat people. It's starting to get ridiculous.
7/25/2008 9:49:34 PM
If you think the gov't is being pushy and judgemental about your health now...just wait until it has control of health-care. "I'm sorry Mr. Citizen but your federal exercise records show that you haven't been doing your assigned mandated number of push-ups each day. No heart surgery for you. NEXT!"
7/25/2008 10:44:21 PM
^^ People might laugh at this, but it really is true that people are in general more attractive in California than here.NC has a serious shortage of the resource of attractive people. What's amazing is that almost our entire complex of appeal and attractiveness is becoming like 95% just a matter of how fat people are. It's gotten so horrendously out of hand that almost all physically healthy people look attractive to us, as we live in a sea of people who's bodies look like what a cartoon character should and are completely unsustainable. Not only that, but IMO, it makes all women bitches too. Fat chicks are ostracized, but fat men feel like there's nothing wrong with themselves, consequence is that remaining skinny chicks are badgered.On a federal level, yeah intervention is crap, but on a simple interpersonal level, we need to get on this. It is SPREADING LIKE THE PLAGUE.
7/26/2008 12:50:44 AM
^ Then you've never been to UNC. Look, fuck the Tarholes--but their chicks are hot and plentiful. I have witnessed this. PS: And, yes, I realize that many of the girls at UNC are not from North Carolina, but some of them are mating and even reproducing (GASP!) with guys from North Carolina. In addition, there are a lot of good-looking girls at State, too--just not as many.
7/26/2008 5:05:51 AM
7/26/2008 5:29:10 AM
^ Hear, hear! And. . .
7/26/2008 6:26:12 AM
Anyways, back to the topic...
7/26/2008 10:07:33 AM
7/26/2008 10:32:00 AM
^^ I completely agree, but I must also add that diet and activity are not disconnected. I don't have any scientific studies to support this, but at least for myself, when I'm very physically active my diet completely changes. When you are actually getting out and being active, your tastes will literally change. Fruits start looking more appealing, and fattening crap tends to get cut out.Systematically, I don't know which front is the best to attack first. For an individual at least, they should try to change both at the same time (methinks). There's a good chance that if everyone started walking 20 minutes a day, McDonald's would see it in their bottom line. Still, eating out has a large social element to it, so maybe they would just sell more salads...
7/26/2008 10:46:26 AM
7/26/2008 12:48:08 PM
7/26/2008 1:33:44 PM
^I never said it was a conspiracy, just a bad policy decision. It's not fair or honest to reduce the question of banning trans fat to a simplistic discussion of whether the fats are bad or not.The question is whether the stated benefits of doing so -- improved 'public health' -- outweigh the costs. That's the starting point for a reasonable discussion of a ban.In reality there isn't a magical "turn off trans fat" switch:
7/26/2008 2:35:53 PM
^ the use of transfat has nothing to do with taste.And I don't see how the argument "some people will cheat so it's not worth it" is valid. And if restaurant A raises prices, and restaurant B does not, people will just go to restaurant B. $2.75 for fries is ridiculous.Really the only question is "will this make a difference" and it may not at all. But at the least, it can't really hurt anyone.
7/26/2008 2:49:22 PM
^Bullshit.
7/26/2008 2:59:11 PM
^ A "change" of taste doesn't mean better/worse taste. Also, I was referring to the original reason transfat started to get used in the first place, it wasn't picked because of its taste qualities. You can make the same arguments about corn syrup, people may be use to the taste now and might find actual sugar to taste "worse" but that doesn't mean the corn syrup is still used because it tastes better.And secondly, the price of non-trans-fat might be higher in the beginning, but it should quickly drop due to economies of scale that have made transfat cheaper since everyone else is using it. That's actually the second concern though is that someone might come out with something as bad or worse than transfat, that's legally not the same thing, but still allowable to be used, similar to what's happened with solder and the RoHS mandates in europe.
7/26/2008 3:03:09 PM
^Well, as I said -- it's fat, not arsenic. I am not expressing my personal preference for whether trans fat tastes better. What I said was -- if someone likes its taste, why shouldn't they be allowed to eat it? I can't think of a good reason. I don't buy the public health arguments for banning trans fat across the board. Why not just simple disclosure on menus and then people can make a choice? That seems easier.As to economy of scale reducing price -- well, maybe. I don't see any logical reason people should have to pay more now or in whatever interim until prices equalize, just because the 'food police' in Sacramento want to push their preferences on everyone.
7/26/2008 3:16:34 PM
No, it isn't arsenic, but it IS, effectively, poisonous.
7/26/2008 3:51:57 PM
Moron--- your idea of economic rational is clearly wrong. Rational, in an economic sense, does not mean that there is perfect information and people make the best choice
7/26/2008 3:54:59 PM
^^Foods that cause (are correlated to!) coronary heart disease are "poisonous" now? You have an odd concept of the word "effectively." By your logic salt is poisonous.Of course "excessive" salt intake is also correlated to various risk factors in one's life. Why not regulate that? Oh, wait -- mother government is looking at that too. Soon all our food will be bland "for our own good."We can all see where this is going. Homogeneous, over-regulated food service. I used to complain that restaurants are over-reliant on Sysco and other providers. Now I see it as a simple matter of compliance (in the Sarb-ox sense, as applied to ingredients). That's just sad.People have a right to know they are consuming trans fat and a responsibility to read the label thoroughly. That's it. There's no sense in this ban other than to regulate everybody to death.
7/26/2008 4:56:11 PM
Or you might say... to regulate everybody to life
7/26/2008 4:57:08 PM
^One World, One Dream
7/26/2008 5:00:22 PM
7/26/2008 5:06:29 PM
That's the dark nature of capitalism!
7/26/2008 5:08:42 PM
^^OK, I get that, I can read. I still don't see any argument about "if someone wants to consume trans fat, why shouldn't they be allowed to" -- as long as they know it's there.As for salt -- the reality is that it's generally added in "excess" quantities for processed and prepared food so the effect is analogous. I don't see any reason to be so literal in comparisons, except that this is TWW and literal thinking rules the day here.[Edited on July 26, 2008 at 5:10 PM. Reason : foo]
7/26/2008 5:09:53 PM
Are people allowed to eat cyanide if they want to?Serious question I don't know if there is a law about this
7/26/2008 5:22:38 PM
7/26/2008 5:31:14 PM
^ I'm surprised you typed all that out, and you still didn't realize how stupid it was.
7/26/2008 5:46:27 PM
^^^Who cares?^It's a valid point. Freedom ain't always safe. People can be responsible consumers of trans fat if they so choose just as they can be responsible about oral sex.
7/26/2008 5:57:26 PM
^^
7/26/2008 5:58:06 PM
7/26/2008 6:24:06 PM
^ As if oral sex needed "advocating or encouraging," actualmoron.
7/26/2008 6:28:45 PM
^ yeah, that's my point. we wouldn't have been using transfat if someone wasn't pushing it. It's one thing to try and stop people from doing things they do naturally, but another to try and stop someone from using something UNnatural for the simple purpose of making more profit.
7/26/2008 6:38:11 PM
7/26/2008 6:48:03 PM