Then They Came for the FrescaThe growing ambitions of the food police.By William SaletanSept. 22, 2009
9/23/2009 8:23:37 AM
People are too stupid to eat healthy, we live in the fattest country in the world, and I have to pay for it through higher health insurance.Until all three of those facts change, I support any such "food police."
9/23/2009 8:25:35 AM
Yeah, you've pinpointed the problem: people like you.
9/23/2009 8:34:22 AM
SIN TAXget rid of the sin tax and then there can be no tax on soda and junk food.
9/23/2009 8:49:05 AM
How much do you weigh hooksaw? Any estimate of your BMI?
9/23/2009 9:03:56 AM
I read through that dutch study cited by the article you linked. It's completely based on generous arbitrary assumptions with some scant reference data. It also doesn't take into account the non-healthcare-related costs of obesity.That, combined with the biased tone of the articles, makes me doubt the objectivity of these conclusions.
9/23/2009 9:12:10 AM
More government overseers telling grown adults what they can and can't put in their bodies, for the good of the children don't you see.http://www.nbcdfw.com/news/health/FDA-Kisses-Non-Menthol-Flavors-Goodbye-60502762.html
9/23/2009 6:48:45 PM
9/23/2009 8:19:40 PM
9/23/2009 11:18:40 PM
^ Q. When have you seen me policing morality or calling for same? A. Never.For the gazillionth time, I'm not a social conservative--never have been and never will be. I just get tired of seeing the social conservatives constantly bashed and the leftists acting as if conservatives have the market cornered on hypocrisy. It just ain't so. You set up an either-or fallacy, schmoe. Can't a society exist without either the food police or the morality police? And for old times' sake:
9/24/2009 10:10:10 AM
no, junk food should be investigated, and some of the worst offenders should be banned.here's why:transfats, for instance, are in foods most likely to be marketed towards lower income people, directly harming the very people who can least afford to be chronically unhealthy.so they develop a host of long term health problems, lose more of their already-diminished earning capacity, are forced to use E.R.s and regional trauma centers as their primary healthcare provider, eventually go on disability collect welfare for the rest of their lives, and further entrench the "can't do mentality" in the eyes of those around them. this damages the economy on multiple fronts, drives up healhcare costs, puts downward pressure on our nation's GDP, and makes our country less safe from other nations who wish us ill.OTOH, two fags want to get married does nothing to harm the economic structure, probably makes them happier and more productive, thereby increasing the tax revenue and ultimately putting upward pressure on the GDP.
9/25/2009 3:02:00 AM
9/25/2009 3:36:07 AM
How about instead of taxing foods that are killing us and make us obese, we just stop subsidizing foods that are killing us and making us obese?Even some government guidelines against those foods would be nice. I'm thinking of something like the food pyramid, but not a disaster.[Edited on September 25, 2009 at 7:23 AM. Reason : sdf]
9/25/2009 7:11:46 AM
9/25/2009 9:25:04 AM
it's funny that the authors uses fresca as his example. fresca is basically flavored, carbonated water and would be unlikely to be taxed because there's really not all that much unhealthy about it. it's 2 calories per 8 oz.
9/25/2009 10:12:49 AM
its a SIN TAX.all or nothing.
9/25/2009 10:14:17 AM
Fresca tastes like shit, and that's all I got to say about that, and that's the bottom line 'cause Stone Cold said so.I'm not going to ban shitty food, but someone needs to stop subsidizing all that damn corn and put real sugar back in Pepsi.
9/25/2009 10:23:00 AM
^^^^ You made some good points, JCASHFAN.^^^ Do you check anything before you pop off (pun intended)?The Truth About Diet SodaThe authors of Eat This Not That reveal some hard truths about low-calorie sodas.
9/25/2009 10:41:54 AM
Why does that suprise you? I call you out for acting stupid, not for having bad opinions (then again, you do want to bomb iran like RIGHT DAMN NOW).Well, that and not engaging people's arguments (like the Iran thread).[Edited on September 25, 2009 at 10:51 AM. Reason : .]
9/25/2009 10:48:35 AM
^^your point? pretty sure these taxes don't affect diet sodas.and just to be clear, i don't think this tax is the answer. i think ending the subsidy for corn would do far more good for our country than this tax (and it would be much easier to carry out).[Edited on September 25, 2009 at 11:05 AM. Reason : .]
9/25/2009 10:56:42 AM
^ If you actually read the article, you would see that WS is quoting the authors of the New England Journal of Medicine mentioned in hooksaw's excerpts. Those authors say that even though diet sodas do not have any calories, they lead to people over eating other foods ("its okay to eat another slice of cake, I had a Fresca for lunch instead of a Mr. Pibb!"). As a result, they said that taxes on diet sodas may have to be considered in the future.
9/25/2009 11:16:34 AM
The idea of relying on continued consumption of bad things to combat the effects of bad things is a little dumb, no? I mean, funding health care with taxes on bad things? Why not find something that people won't stop having as much of b/c of this? I guess you could argue that less health care will be needed, but there's plenty of other things we eat that contribute. Sodium, cholesterol, carbs, calories. Why not find other revenue streams or reorganize and get your money elsewhere?I think if you make enough awareness about diabetes, heart disease, et al, it will do the trick. Taxes weren't what got trans fat out of foods.
9/25/2009 11:25:10 AM
hooksaw, Glad you made this thread. I was going to the other day, but forgot. I'm really surprised at the number of people that are okay with this.
9/25/2009 11:42:43 AM
Whole foods sells their name brand 365 soda which uses can sugar instead of corn syrup.its nice. and its 50 cents a can.
9/25/2009 12:05:58 PM
I prefer the Mexican Coke, or the Cheerwine w/ sugar you can get in the Greensboro area.
9/25/2009 12:57:45 PM
corn syrup sucks balls
9/25/2009 1:04:05 PM
9/25/2009 1:14:20 PM
All the Krogers in the Roanoke area have that Coke. I'm disappointed that they got rid of Pepsi Throwback so early. I should have stockpiled that stuff.brb, time for a Pepsi break.
9/25/2009 1:44:26 PM
So, why are we proposing taxing sugary drinks again?Drink More Diet Soda, Gain More Weight?Overweight Risk Soars 41% With Each Daily Can of Diet Soft Drink
9/25/2009 1:46:42 PM
People think that they can eat more of a diet food than of a regular food. It's not like diet drinks cease to follow the laws of physics when they enter the body.
9/25/2009 1:54:39 PM
^ The sarcasm was unnecessary. Why are we taxing sugary drinks when "diet" drinks are actually worse?[Edited on September 25, 2009 at 1:59 PM. Reason : And it's more complicated than that. Diet foods actually trick the body. ]
9/25/2009 1:58:38 PM
Chill out, I was stating a fact for the purpose of stating a fact. Diet drinks are not as bad if you drink them in the same amounts and don't pair them with other unhealthy crap. People drink a Diet Coke and then think it's ok to go have a baconator. This is really stupid. The #1 rule to healthy living is...will power.Of course, then you have the health food lunatics who are all "ASPARTAMINE! ASPARTAMINE! AAAAAHHH! IT KILLS!", but that's not worth addressing.[Edited on September 25, 2009 at 2:03 PM. Reason : /]
9/25/2009 2:02:27 PM
9/25/2009 2:03:03 PM
we should tax all of them. None of them are good for you.if we some how tax beer and cigarettes we should be taxing soda as well. We already give enough damn money to the corn growers.
9/25/2009 2:03:07 PM
We should tax pickles for sodium content. And hot peppers. And flavored water. And Mexican food.You could go on and on.
9/25/2009 2:04:47 PM
^^^ Doesn't mean diet sodas are actually causing problems. As we like to say, correlation does not equal causation. From one of the articles you linked:
9/25/2009 2:05:35 PM
It's amazing how trusting hooksaw is of science, as long as the issue is not climate change.
9/25/2009 2:06:18 PM
^ That's hilarious--the science hasn't been going your way lately, has it?^^^ And do you know that they aren't 100 percent certain that high cholesterol causes heart disease either? [Edited on September 25, 2009 at 2:20 PM. Reason : .]
9/25/2009 2:16:35 PM
9/25/2009 2:20:16 PM
^ Most people eat way too much sodium every day, though.And did you catch this part from above, PandB?
9/25/2009 2:21:34 PM
lol"my way"How quaint.
9/25/2009 2:22:43 PM
^ So, you agree that the planet is cooling, troll?
9/25/2009 2:24:23 PM
GLOBAL WARMING IS GLOBAL COOLING!
9/25/2009 2:27:46 PM
9/25/2009 2:28:11 PM
i agree.all of these taxes are pointless. but if they help get money back from the huge subsidizes paid to corn produces then that would help.
9/25/2009 2:30:42 PM
we could get rid of corn subsidies
9/25/2009 2:34:22 PM
9/25/2009 2:36:49 PM
^^^^ Apparently, you don't care about the facts about "global warming"--like many here who drank the Kool-Aid:
9/25/2009 2:39:15 PM
... because climate change is about thermometers, and not about humanities effect on the climate.It's kind of you to make it clear though that you don't now, and never have, understood the issues.
9/25/2009 2:45:10 PM
who in this thread is actually arguing in favor of this tax again?
9/25/2009 2:46:16 PM