Quote:
Originally Posted by Villages PL
We don't always blame fast food for obesity. But fast food is definitely out there as a contributing factor. For some people, it can't be ignored when it's everywhere. Since fast food vendors have been around for several decades and the fast food market has just about reached its saturation point, it looks like normal food to people who grew up with it.
When I was growing up, I never saw a fast food restaurant, or supermarket, until I was about 16 years old. By then my habits were pretty much formed.
Today, babies, toddlers, and pre-teens are taken to fast food places all the time. Their parents and grandparents grew up in a fast food environment. People don't think of it as bad because they grew up with it. And once they're addicted to high fat, high sodium, high sugar, low fiber, and low vegetables, even if they subsequently learn that it's not normal food, it becomes difficult for them to resist it's allure. They're hooked.
The food companies have become experts at hooking people. Remember the ad they once had for potato chips? "Bet you can't eat just one." They were bragging about the addictive quality of their product.
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I think that is just a little too simple. Even if the food companies didn't advertise and you can't blame them for promoting their business, that is the American way...even if they didn't.
There would still be people who chose food that was not healthy. They would not insist their children try everything so that they could get used to "what is good for you" and they would be too lazy to cook. They would still have tummies as they grow older unless they have unusual genes and they would still have difficulty keeping up the level of exercise that is needed for optimum health because we all are a little lazy.
There would be people from every background and every economic level who ate healthily but not perfectly by other peoples standards.
My view is to "run your own railroad and let me run mine."