This is a long, but an amazing read:http://www.themonthly.com.au/issue/2013/march/1361848247/karen-hitchcock/fat-cityThe effects of obesity are more gruesome than what you have probably imagined. The cause is not genetic, nor is it due to our level of activity. We're getting fat because of what we're eating. We're eating like this because of culture, but it comes down to corporations working the hardest to promote the worst foods. This stuck out at me.
6/2/2013 4:08:33 PM
i dont have a problem with this.but id rather the fat just eat themselves to death.on the other hand i dont want to pay for their medical care either.maybe we can devise a way to burn them as fuel?
6/2/2013 4:14:57 PM
^ not far from this proposal
6/2/2013 4:16:02 PM
even better.harvest this shit and repackage it as something like the "McFatty" and deliver them to starving folks worldwide.quit giving them money to buy booze weapons.
6/2/2013 4:19:46 PM
one thing we could also do would be to stop subsidizing the corn industry (and by extension, the corn syrup industry). that would help a lot.
6/2/2013 4:50:31 PM
yep.fucking corn motherfuckers.
6/2/2013 5:05:05 PM
hucking corn motherfuckers.
6/2/2013 5:33:27 PM
6/2/2013 5:52:00 PM
i mean, i know you were making a point and all, but did you really have to call me bitch?
6/2/2013 6:13:50 PM
Do you really think I'd be intentionally inflammatory to rustle some tdub jimmies like that?
6/2/2013 6:15:36 PM
6/2/2013 6:23:34 PM
A couple of things:- first realize that a significant amount of corn production ends up as animal feed. You know, what all those high protein "nutritionists" recommend as an alternative to the usual high carb/corn diets most Americans have. If we are talking about ending how much corn we eat we are talking about making meat more expensive, which might push people toward corn/corn syrup regardless -is there really any evidence that high"fat" foods are directly related to obesity? Carbs, sugar, stress, saturated fat (but not so called "healthy fats") and even changes in the gut biome have all been implicated with obesity. The point I'm making here is that obesity may have multiple causes. Is the link between fatty foods and obesity as strong as the link between cigarettes and cancer (or other closely related diseases). I'm thinking that the current science may still leave some substantial questions, possibly more than what we can condemn food manufacturers for.All of this being said, I'm still for the responsible labeling of foods, etc. I'm just not sure we are there yet on what types of foods are DIRECTLY linked to obesity. Obviously some foods are unquestionably ready to be labelled (soda, some candies, most fast food, etc). While others are probably really borderline or may even have other effects that are both helpful and harmful.
6/2/2013 6:31:32 PM
6/2/2013 6:38:57 PM
Food is already responsibly labeled. Putting nutritional info and ingredients on there is really all you need. Putting something like, "WARNING: Eating this product could make you fat" isn't going to do shit nor is really factually accurate. Having an occasional hamburger won't make you fat.Obesity is an "epidemic" because we have easy access to lots of food, most of the things that shouldn't be consumed in excess taste delicious, and most people lack self control. Different labeling won't help with any of that.
6/2/2013 6:41:10 PM
the problem is that even food that seems "normal" or regularly healthy can be loaded with sugar or HFCS, especially HFCS. most of the milk kids drink at schools has so much HFCS or sugar that they might as well drink soda.
6/2/2013 7:59:36 PM
6/2/2013 9:18:40 PM
FIFY
6/3/2013 8:41:48 AM
yellow dye #5 has never hurt anyone.
6/3/2013 10:55:41 AM
6/3/2013 1:23:36 PM
I'm confused, are there really millions of people that don't realize that Cheetos aren't good for you? I'm almost certain nearly every single person who is overweight knows exactly why and just would prefer not to spend time/effort/money on changing anything.
6/3/2013 1:30:07 PM
^ will you stand by that statement in 2040? A time when about 1/3rd of middle age Americans had graduated high school overweight. Would you consider a different attitude if nearly every single adult over 30 became overweight?Your question of "why?" is only trivial in a trivial sense. Why has a single individual become overweight? Why were they eating more? Why was the entire goddam country eating more?So tell me, why did the nation, and the entire developed world eat more from 1980-2010 than before that? Laziness?-----I made this thread because I'm thin and I realized something: I will probably die fat. Statistically, there's no mistaking the trend. I would have to be extraordinary to get through the rest of my life without joining the growing portion of the nation who are overweight or worse (unless I die young). There's no reason to think the trends won't continue.So I want you to tell me, why am I going to die fat?[Edited on June 3, 2013 at 2:13 PM. Reason : ]
6/3/2013 2:08:23 PM
^^ do those people also know that their milk (with sugar added), or orange juice or apple juice or giant bagel is really bad for them?no, most people really have no idea how unhealthy most of the stuff they eat and drink is. and even those who think they do often only look at fat or calories and ignore carbs. people will buy a fucking bag of twizzlers because it says "fat free treat!" on the bag. [Edited on June 3, 2013 at 2:18 PM. Reason : .]
6/3/2013 2:15:46 PM
^^^no. there also aren't any people who quit smoking because of the label on the box.People like to eat and food is fucking cheap in the us. That's it. That's all there is to it.theres this retarded myth that people just don't get nutrition, and while its true they might not understand specific science, they sure as shit understand that eating more of things makes you fatter. They just don't care. Similarly smokers didn't give a shit until it started to affect their wallets. Taxes drove up costs and insurance cos were finally allowed to single out smokers for higher premiums. If you do the same things with food by eliminating farm subsidizes on stuff like corn and allowing insurance companies to charge more for overweight people, you'll suddenly start seeing people start to care. (it would also help solve one part of our healthcare problem).slapping a label on Cheetos that says "this makes u fat, stoopid" is some feel good do nothing garbage.also re taco bell meat: according to their site its 88% beef and 12% secret. The reason there are no current requirements to list percentages of ingredients is because its usually a trade secret. Now days with the level of food science we have and what not I dont think there are many recipes that cant be reverse engineered so I wouldn't be opposed to requiring ingredient percentages be on the nutrition label.[Edited on June 3, 2013 at 2:28 PM. Reason : ^]
6/3/2013 2:28:10 PM
6/3/2013 2:29:27 PM
6/3/2013 2:48:26 PM
Those lobbyists really should have written and voted for better legislation.
6/3/2013 2:52:52 PM
^^Did the food pyramid have any effect on the eating habits of Americans whatsoever?If the same foods were available at the same cost, but the food pyramid had fewer carbohydrates and more green vegetables, do you think we'd be in a different situation? I don't. Food that is bad for you tastes delicious and takes less effort to obtain. I'm having a hard time agreeing with any solution to the "obesity epidemic" that involves artificially changing any of that (unless we somehow make healthy foods taste fucking great and make them cheap and ubiquitous).
6/3/2013 3:59:07 PM
6/3/2013 4:12:00 PM
And that's why go to McDonald's and they eat Doritos and all the other shit in the picture at the top of this thread? Or is this some paleo plug.
6/3/2013 4:14:38 PM
Straight refined sugar is still in the carbs group, if we're labeling all calories as fats, carbs, and proteins.Indeed, the critical error that culminated in the food pyramid was the judgement that fats were the greater evil over carbohydrates. Both categories are diverse, and a reductionist view is probably wrong. For both fats and sugars, there are types that will probably lead you to feel less satiated.The (energy in)/(energy out) balance dictates how weight will change, with a nearly perfect scientific consensus behind it. This theory predicts that rising calorie consumption happened in parallel with the rise on overweight individuals. And what do you know...Ironically, this image is from the sugar lobby itselfhttp://www.sugar.org/sugar-and-your-diet/caloric-intake.htmlThat level of mechanistic logic is unimpeachable. Making the link between eating more calories and being lazy is the dubious one. It's not particularly clear that we now eat "more" food, because with what metric do we measure food? I'd wager that the volume of food we eat has decreased. Look no further than the water content of vegetables to see that my claim is trivially true.If we measure food in terms of satiation, then do we eat more than we used to? After all, isn't that biology's control feedback? What other metric has been steadily increasing since the 80s that could be the root cause of our bodies desiring more food?
6/3/2013 4:28:53 PM
What?Who is arguing that we eat more food by volume and how is the link between eating more calories and lazyness not compelling? Which is easier: ordering out/eating a frozen meal/preparing a pre-packaged processed meal OR creating a meal plan and preparing healthy balanced meals throughout the day? Which option generally will result in larger and more calorie-dense portions?If the problem is people doing too much of the former and not enough of the latter, what does that have to do with the sugar or HFCS content of the shitty food?
6/3/2013 4:36:33 PM
6/3/2013 4:39:37 PM
I'm not saying it's the entire picture but the availability/variety of shittier food options has increased over time. I'm not sure why that's cuckoo.
6/3/2013 5:11:52 PM
But if "the availability/variety of shittier food options has increased over time", then what should the counter-balance be to it? I can't see what solutions that begs other than: - we accept that we'll be fatter. forever. it's the price of... the free market? - we balance worse food availability by better self-controlThe latter is not a reasonable expectation. You can say that. You're free to sit there as the average weight of 300 million people has gone up well over 30 pounds above what it biologically should be, and think it's because they just didn't have good values taught to them... or something like that.The former makes me ask - what do we get for this? We have a situation that pretty much all of us don't want. Even if I can stay thin (although I won't, I'm convinced I'll die fat), I don't particularly want my neighbor to be fat. It's like national masochism..
6/3/2013 5:28:20 PM
6/3/2013 6:09:15 PM
6/3/2013 6:31:54 PM
So, we'll keep giving kids pizza, fruit coctail floating in sugary syrup, and milk with added sugar in their school lunches and blame them when they turn into adults who are addicted to pizza and sweets. Forgive me if I seem skeptical about the effectiveness of that plan.The problem starts long before adulthood. Kids are wired to crave/love sugar. That's evolution, not self control. As long as we have a system that feeds and promotes this as an acceptable diet to them we'll be stuck in this downward spiral. As long as the food companies can get away with serving up shit as the main course and the corn lobby is subsidized to support the shit they're producing we'll be stuck in this downward spiral.[Edited on June 3, 2013 at 6:47 PM. Reason : l]
6/3/2013 6:40:26 PM
6/3/2013 6:44:21 PM
^^No, I don't think that, but you have to realize that kids are developing a taste for this stuff at home. You're not going to find a lot of morbidly obese little kids with fit, health-conscious parents.Schools serve that kind of shit because there's a demand for it. If 95% of parents were demanding healthier lunches and the removal of junk food, it would happen.
6/3/2013 6:47:18 PM
Nah, that's not really why that's what's in school lunches. That's what's in school lunches because of terrible government decisions. It's not like schools are catering to the wants of 10 year olds, they don't do it forlunch or curriculum. That stuff is all driven by active lobbyists and an apathetic populous.There are plenty of cheap, healthy options for school lunch, but school boards have chosen not to serve them.
6/3/2013 6:53:33 PM
When I was in high school, there was the "pizza line", and then there was the "poor line". The "poor line" had vegetables and that kind of nasty shit. This is America, don't serve me anything that isn't breaded, covered in cheese, or loaded with sugar.
6/3/2013 6:56:57 PM
Oh, fuck yeah, I used to eat cookies and pizza for lunch in high school. Of course, I also swam for 2 hours after school almost every day and lifted weights after that... but my mom also cooked real honest to god food for dinner and understood that what I was eating for lunch was not a healthy choice.
6/3/2013 7:00:33 PM
I love hearing the food pyramid and agricultural lobby hasn't helped cause the obesity we have today. It sure as hell isn't everything but telling people they should have a shitload of nutrient poor grains and very little saturated fat is an absolute joke. This won't keep the fatties eating fast food all the time from doing that but it sure as hell doesn't promote healthy diets either. I really believe there are plenty of people who want to lose weight and will eat less but still eat shitty foods because they don't know any better.
6/3/2013 9:39:59 PM
I hate obese people
6/11/2013 4:58:25 PM
TED MED talk:Here's the guy's website, and what he thinks the best science is:http://nusi.org/the-science/review-of-the-literatureHis central claim is that we don't know how carbohydrate consumption affects obesity. Plenty of studies have been done where carbs were restricted (for instance), but that lowered total calorie consumption. So it's impossible to say if the type of food consumed is affecting weight loss.While that's a valid scientific point, it's kind of self-evident from a dieting standpoint. If you want to lose weight eat fewer carbs, and your total consumption will drop. Sounds like that's already a winning theory.This is all quite admirable, but in terms of policy, we already know everything we need to know. Weight gain as well as insulin disorders result from eating too much food of too high density. In practice, the calorie density drives this all. It's simply the foods that have calories and no nutrition and no fiber that causes it all. It's the introduction of those food that caused people to overeat on the population level.We need to tell it like it is. A particular type of business strategy has caused entire nations to gain weight.
6/27/2013 10:43:53 AM
One thing I'm curious about is why animals are following this same obesity trend. Not even domesticated animals, this trend is showing up in wild animals as well.
6/27/2013 10:59:35 AM
You know what else is the fucking problem. Not just the shitty food choices but the damn portions people eat. Not to gloat, but I started an aggressive exercise program recently as well as dramatically changing my diet to 1,500 calories day. For lunch I may bring to work something like 4oz of grilled chicken breast with ¼ cup of wholegrain rice and a cup of steamed broccoli, about 300 calories. Compared to what my co-workers are eating my lunch it is tiny. Do you know what 4 oz of chicken breast looks like? It’s about a 1/3 of the whole breast. I used to eat the whole damn chicken breast and that’s not uncommon. When I go out to eat with coworkers they get fatty ass burgers, French fries and Cokes and eat it ALL. They are probably eating 2500 calories in one sitting. I’ll get a sandwich with vegetables and water and only eat half. It’s gotten to the point that I am disgusted at the food choices other people are making. What makes it worse, they are fat as fuck. I mean super fat and all medicated up on blood pressure meds, diabetes meds, cholesterol meds. It’s a fucking conspiracy between the food companies and the drug companies and it fucking disgusts me.
6/27/2013 11:36:11 AM
^ Just curious are you full or satisfied with smaller portions? If not how do you handle that? I sometimes will just have a leafy salad for lunch and it doesnt quite quench my hunger. I feel like I could eat two.
6/27/2013 11:52:45 AM
6/27/2013 12:13:18 PM
^^dude eat the salad just be careful of the dressing. even the healthier version of salad dressing, tbl spoon of olive oil and vinegar is 130 calories. use fresh squeezed lemon. i also eat 5 meals a day at about 300 cal per meal to help cravings. if i get cravings between the meals i'll chug about 20 oz of water.
6/27/2013 1:07:49 PM