^^ We are obsessed with thin, but we are also a nation of perpetual adolescents, so we seek to excuse our bad behaviors, blame it on something else, and rebel against society by choosing destructive paths for the sake of being the opposite of what society wants from us.
7/25/2008 11:22:10 PM
7/26/2008 6:16:42 AM
Fat during childhood, then.Exercises 2 hours a day to compensate for childhood trauma.
7/26/2008 9:36:42 AM
Personal responsiblity would fix all of this. People want to blame McDonalds or some other fast food place for their obesity. They post the health facts, you have to edumicate yosef.
7/29/2008 2:01:47 PM
The lame call for personal responsiblity. It has become the new logical fallacy of the right.
7/29/2008 2:13:55 PM
Oh please. Let's come out with it, already - the clarion call of the left: "You're too stupid to run your own lives!"
7/29/2008 2:22:41 PM
If youre dumb enough or lack the self control and you gorge on big macs, fries, etc. thats your problem. Fast food resurants are not the ones to blame. I can go in a chili's, a pizza place, or even to the grocery store to make my own fatty burgers. They have food thats just as bad. Don't pick on fast food resturants just because they're better at peddling grease, especially if they have healthy alternatives. If you don't want to eat there, dont. No one's ever held me at gun point to order a whopper.It's the same thing if youre a drunk. Alcohol is there and just as available as unhealthy food. If you want to guzzle booze and destroy your liver, thats your fault.
7/29/2008 2:45:53 PM
How long does it have to be before people wake and realize that claiming personal responsibility doesn't make it happen. Innercity plight - personal responsiblitypoor schools - personal responsiblityobesity - personal responsiblityhealthcare - personal responsibilityas long as we continue to burry our heads in the personal responsiblity sand we'll be continually facing these problems into the future^^It isn't about being "too stupid," it's about providing the proper motivation.
7/29/2008 2:53:35 PM
I will definitely agree with you on the poverty and poor schooling aspect to a point. Those are conditions outside of your control in many cases. While someone may not be able to help the fact that they were born into poverty or that they somehow became poor, they can decide if they are going to eat fast food. Hypothetically, if we took away fast food resturants, people with bad eating habits will find continue to have them elsewhere.I think our disagreement is about how much the government should be involved in our lives. I have sympathy for those in poverty and those with health problems out of their control. I do not belive it is the place of government to restrict my dietary options in an attempt to curb obesity. I think a proactive approach to healthcare concerns is admirable, but it should be in the form of education and other possible incentives.
7/29/2008 3:18:32 PM
7/29/2008 3:21:03 PM
7/29/2008 3:21:22 PM
all just examples of cases in which the argument is for more personal responsiblity when personal responsiblity hasn't shown itself to work.
7/29/2008 3:23:54 PM
No but for real people are stupid
7/29/2008 3:27:20 PM
I'm 100% for personal responsibility in cases like this where that's all it takes. Allow the obese to face the consequences of being a fatass and leave the rest of us alone. Unfortunately, poverty isn't just about personal responsibility. There are other factors at work.
7/29/2008 3:27:22 PM
The problem with obessity is that it doesn't just affect the obese. It costs you and I more money.
7/29/2008 3:36:33 PM
especially if we had socialized healthcare
7/29/2008 3:49:18 PM
healthcare is already soclialized in this country. HMOs are nothing more than socialized healthcare.
7/29/2008 3:50:50 PM
Perhaps health issues caused by obesity should be paid out of pocket instead of covered by HMOs. I mean, obviously there is a point where that becomes inhumane, but there is no reason the rest of us should bear the consequences of the obese when it simply is just a matter personal responsibility.Even if you think steps should be taken to protect the obese from themselves, this solution is sure to do nothing to solve obesity. Why does Chili's get a free pass and McD's can't open any new stores? I bet the average meal from Chili's or <insert horrible chain restaurant here> has twice the fat and calories as a meal from any fast food place.
7/29/2008 4:02:42 PM
7/29/2008 4:10:07 PM
7/29/2008 4:51:22 PM
If you are REALLY poor to the point where you are concerned about eating enough calories to maintain your already underweight status, fast food restaurants are awesomeThere's nowhere else I can get the calories and protein that are in a double cheeseburger for a dollar
7/29/2008 10:21:36 PM
Studies have shown that if the government has absolute control then it controls absolutely. So what if a study shows a result can be obtained? The whole bloody point is that it is not worth our collective freedom to achieve some hypothetical upgrade of public health. Again, even if we cede the point that these totalitarian eating restrictions will produce a marked improvement in public health, it is not worth the exchange of freedom. The goal of government should not be to tweak society towards its optimum efficiency, this only makes sense if the government is in charge and not the people. The people will never agree on what constitutes the "utopia". I, for example, would rather eat the food I like and die a few years early. This to me is better than living my life in fear of the optimum nutrition. You are free to disagree. But, damn it, I'm an individual and what I do with my own body is none of your business.
7/29/2008 10:48:24 PM
i haven't read this thread. i don't particularly like the ban because i think that citizens should be able to choose for themselves what to eat. BUT. i think LA isn't in violation of the constitution with this either. it's prerogative how they want to run their city. it's funny that this has fueled a thread, yet there are countless cities and towns throughout the country that have ridiculous restrictions on all sorts of things (eg strip clubs or taco vans/trucks in the west these days)
7/29/2008 10:53:40 PM
Incorrect. it is a violation of the right to contract freely and the right to earn a living, both common law protections and is therefore in violation of the California State Constitution. This law is also a violation of the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Of course, the constitutionality of a law is irrelevant in the 21st century, so I would not both mentioning it myself.
7/29/2008 11:06:09 PM
i meant the us constitution. i am obviously no scholar of the california constitution. but i doubt that this ban would fall under an equal protection violation. since when has the constitution implied that a city couldn't govern itself (and therefore decide what sort of businesses it wanted to allow -- within certain reasonable limits)?
7/29/2008 11:35:28 PM
That is just it, reasonable limits, and the limit in question is equality before the law. A city must treat all its citizens as equals and therefore all regulations must apply equally to all businesses. You cannot pass health regulations that only apply to McDonalds' owners just as you cannot pass regulations that only apply to black owned businesses. This is why the big-box laws in Chicago and elsewhere, which were drafted in such a way that they effectively only applied to WalMart, were found unconstitutional. If this law came before the California Supreme Court I believe it to would be rejected on similar grounds. If you want to outlaw unhealthy food feel free, but the law will need to be enforced against both McDonalds and Chilli's equally. If you want to ban trans-fats then you cannot exempt Krispy Kreme.
7/30/2008 1:45:28 AM
7/30/2008 2:06:21 PM
Do we really want the gov't to be in the business of choosing winners and losers in life?
7/30/2008 9:38:46 PM
Half of overweight adults may be heart-healthy
8/13/2008 4:25:19 PM
interesting
8/13/2008 4:27:29 PM
8/13/2008 4:57:30 PM
^MaryFran Sowers, an obesity researcher at the University of Michigan +Judith Wylie-Rosett, a nutrition researcher at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York+The first national estimate of its kind+The new study appearing in the Archives of Internal Medicine (an international peer-reviewed professional medical journal published by the American Medical Association)>>One bald Internet loudmouth
8/13/2008 5:37:22 PM
I could pretty much take anything you've ever posted and apply the same pattern to it and get the same result you old sack of shit.PleaseFucking please argue my point about being fat when you get older is the same as not being fat in regards to health problems.Dumbass.
8/13/2008 5:38:56 PM
^ Um. . .you don't have a point, PoleTracks--you're just trolling as usual. You conveniently overlook the glaring fact that many people who are not fat will never make it to being "older"--because they'll die before they do. In contrast, many fat people will live long and relatively healthy lives.I realize that this new national study is completely at odds with your weltanschauung. I understand that the study's results upset you to no end, but please don't take your frustrations out on me. [Edited on August 13, 2008 at 5:53 PM. Reason : PS: Please refrain from using "in regards to" (sic). Thank you. ]
8/13/2008 5:52:20 PM
You're really an idiot. Just...retarded.http://archinte.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/full/168/15/1617For starters, they used BMI for their classification, which has been controversial since it's inception.They even say this in the study
8/14/2008 9:37:15 AM
The food fascists are at it again:Michael Phelps: A killer at large?
8/22/2008 5:24:55 PM
pretty pathetic...although I do agree he should be on a Wheaties box just cause thats what super bad ass athletes (at least used to) do
8/22/2008 5:49:37 PM
^ Yeah, but they didn't win eight gold medals in one Olympics. Frosted Flakes FTW!!!1
8/22/2008 6:43:48 PM