More People On Earth Now Obese Than Underweight, Says Study (statnews.com)
An anonymous reader writes: According to a new study published in the Lancet, obese people now outnumber the underweight population for perhaps the first time in global history. Majid Ezzati, an environmental health researcher at Imperial College London who led the study, analyzed data from 1975 to 2014 across 19.2 million adults from 186 countries. They found that over the 40-year-span, the proportion of obese men worldwide more than tripled, to roughly 11 percent, and the proportion of obese woman more than doubled, to about 15 percent. Researchers estimate 18 percent of men and 21 percent of women worldwide will be obese by 2025. What some may consider more surprising is that more than 25 percent of the world's severely obese men and almost 20 percent of the world's severely obese women are American. However, the rapid rise of obesity in developing nations is most concerning as it's more difficult for obese people to modify their diet and have access to medication.
And the people most upset are the anti-American retards who hate the US.
But for some reason it's OK for Mexicans to be fatter.
it's more difficult for obese people to modify their diet and have access to medication.
Why is this?
Although obesity may seem like a problem in developed countries, the fact that there are more obese people than underweight people in the world means that starvation is much less of a problem than it used to be. We now have enough food to feed the world. This is a good thing. Better to be a bit chubby than die of starvation which in some parts of the world, people used to do.
If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
Somewhat related:
http://www.motherjones.com/environment/2016/03/us-increase-meat-consumption-europe-less-meat-sustainability
Yes people that frequent /. are heavy users of technology and more often than not lead sedentary lifestyles and therefore are very likely to be dealing with obesity.
On the Oregon Cost born and raised, On the beach is where I spent most of my days
"where even the poor people are fat."
Pound for pound there are a lot more obese people.
I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
I'm old enough (58) to have seen some cultural shifts which seem related to this. I don't think it is anything so simple that you can blame it all on a few things, but it seems to me that these cannot possibly be helping:
** When I was a school child, there were no video games or internet. When you wanted to play, you got some friends together and had a pickup game of baseball or you rode your bikes around town or did some other outdoor activity. We were physically active on a daily basis, while now the normal entertainment is to sit still and play games. There's nothing wrong with games, but every hour spent doing that is one hour not spent running around outside burning calories.
** Sugar based sodas were consumed in moderation, or often, not at all. There were no "64 Oz Big Gulps", and no one ever drank sodas in my school. Your choices were milk or water. Parents rarely let children consume sodas.
** There was less acceptance of overweight people, more social shaming. I won't say that was a good thing - shaming people can cause long term emotional harm and hurts in other ways. But one byproduct of this is that no one wanted to be "that fat kid". (My school had just one fat kid, where now childhood obesity is systemic, and I see 3rd graders who look... morbidly obese).
Now I'm nearing 60 and still normal weight. I have an easier time going up multiple flights of steps than, I would estimate, around 2/3 of the people who are in their 20's, because I'm carrying 50, 100, sometimes even 200 pounds less than they are at the same height.
I think the solution needs a cultural shift back towards valuing healthy eating and exercise. There are no shortcuts. The culture has to value this, or it won't happen.
Obviously Western Civilization and Capitalism are to blame for this.
Wall Street sells us "imitation food" because the family farm doesn't scale. The most obesogenic of these so-called foods is "biodiesel", aka "vegetable oil".
For better health, we should all eat less biodiesel. Corn oil, soybean oil, rapeseed oil, grapeseed oil, linseed oil, and all other predominately unsaturated oils should only be used to power diesel engines.
The Obesity Epidemic: Evidence of a Crime Against The Public’s Health
People correlate "fat" with "obese."
BMI's of greater than 30 are not necessarily large in any dimension.
Societal norms decline on an epic scale and the people strive to blame somebody else. Being the best doesn't matter as long as you show up (everybody gets a trophy syndrome). Personal responsibility doesn't matter as you will state on social media that it's not your problem that you made piss-poor decisions about your diet regardless of the McCalorie-outlets of the world. It isn't your fault that good nutritional information is available if you just do the research (and it works in the Library.. you don't have to have a state-sponsored 10M up 10M down connection). There have been government programs in the US for nutrition since before WWII yet this post tells us there are some epic failures as this trend didn't start in 1937... It started MUCH later.
The McCalorie/McObesity/McDiabetes/McHeartfailure problem is tied to a lack of education, lack of will power or a problem of convenience. Spend an hour making a meal that was carefully researched and ingredients found either at the local supermarket.. or maybe the bulk store... that doesn't threaten your cholesterol level in a nuclear way is possible but it requires commitment. On a daily scale or just when you show up in the drive through with your wallet... and eat what they bring in a paper bag to the driver's side window it isn't being forced down your throat.. its just being coaxed by your commitment to not care about your existence or your family's.
It's soon time for the Harvest. Those can be sometimes rather .. affecting.
That's what's dong it. And it rots your teeth too.
“He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
Yes, because truth might create bad 'feels' and issuing such triggers is emotional abuse. Shitlord.
captcha: collagen
I know this thread is going to be full of We Hate Americans - it's already started. But I just think this is really amazing. For the entirety of human existence, food has been a huge problem. Hunger was always, at most, a year or two away. Starvation is the best way to kill huge numbers of humans at once. Malnutrition, or control of food, is one of the best ways to keep them in line. Ever seen those fiftyish/sixtyish Chinese ladies who are all so short? It's because their growth was stunted as children because their government didn't provide enough for them to eat. Even without shitheads starving people to death for political reasons, lack of enough food was always a concern.
Now, we not only have solved the food problem, but we have gone too far the opposite direction. Wow! People have too much food. Food is too cheap. But that's not all, they don't just have too much food, they have the wrong kind of it! It's not just the quantity, it is the diversity and free choice that is causing all the problems. Who would have even imagined such an outcome? Did any of the visionary Sci-Fi authors of the 20th century see this coming? Because this is more earth-shattering than landing a probe on a comet (but I have been educated by the media and now understand that the shirt the spokesman was wearing when he made the announcement WAS more important than any scientific achievement humanity might have accomplished that day). Moreover this food is available just about anywhere. It tastes delicious as well, something people today barely realize, if ever.
One of my minor hobbies is making old or ancient recipes straight from manuscripts or books, as close as I can. Something I've noticed is how much they really aren't that good. They're edible, to be sure, and they get you full and they're nutritious because they're always made from scratch. But they just ain't that good. There is almost always some simple optimization that would make them taste much, much better. I'm not saying the people of old didn't enjoy their food, because they did. It's a universal human condition, whether you're eating oeufs au plat Meyerbeer prepared by a separate entremettier, rotisseur and saucier; or a bowl of oat porridge with pig fat. A lot of people ridicule McDonald's hamburgers or Applebee's entrees in the boil-in bags. But damn, that food is super-tasty. Far better than kings used to eat. It's never spoiled, either, and if it is you send it back and get a fresh one...something else we never take note of.
Yeah, unhealthy food causes disease and cancer. We all know. But this is a new, thrilling problem to combat. It's *the right kind of problem*. It's like being confronted with what to do with too much money. How can we make healthy food taste just as good or better than that fast food crap? Surely society's great minds are going to work on this one. I don't know though...I get the idea too many people out there just enjoy hating fatties, Wal-mart, Applebee's, trailer parks, and Monsanto far too much to ever think that maybe things should be better. Imagine a day when McDonald's goes out of business because people can pick more delicious foods from public orchards. A microwave burrito that is more nutritious than fresh blueberries. A boil-in bag that makes fresh spinach look like a twinkie. It can happen, if we want it to happen.
Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
In Belgium they have an egg and milk fund that every family with children gets every month. You can't use it to buy processed foods.
In the United States of America, food stamps (well, credit cards now) can be used to buy processed foods. It's too demeaning to have any proper controls and limit things to rice, flour, sugar, eggs, milk, etc. The big food manufacturers love it, the poor love it and changing it back to the basics (remember government cheese), will be next to impossible to do.
I've noticed that there is a correlation to the people who use food credit cards that they usually have two carts with free food and another with beer and yet more crap that isn't free. Usually they are in front of me in line and yes they are usually fat pushing obese.
I have three kids. I like the way Belgium does it better. The rich have always had a really good deal in the US, because taxes are based on non-investment income (why Warren Buffet still pays a lower percentage in taxes then his secretary). Now the poor also have a good deal. The middle class get jack all in this country. Poor kids get free breakfast and lunch and free after school programs (50$ for my kids). Poor families get free phones, free cable, free housing, free food, etc. But being poor is based on reported income. So there are literally millions in this country who get all the free stuff and can still drive around in a brand new mega truck cause they don't report their income.
More and more are gaming the system and for some getting on the government dole is the new American dream. And in instead of doing anything about this, the government keeps rolling out more and more programs for the fraudsters. I blame the baby boomers and their offspring, of which I am neither.
If the definition of obese is a BMI over 30. The average slashdot user is probably American and probably between the ages of 26-44, then it would be pretty reasonable to argue that typical (average) slashdot user is likely obese.
We could probably drill down on the details and make vegas style odds on if the first post of the next article is obese.
“Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
I totally agree, and im 36. I was actually thinking about it the other day, I feelt like my generation was more or less the last one for a lot of that, so maybe its just decreased more and more. People in rural areas especially.
I remember my farmer grandad ate huge hearty meals, bacon and eggs and sausage....like you said though, they worked it off with much more physical labor. They needed to eat a big meal for breakfast and dinner, so even if the serving size isn't all that changed its still more than most people need in one sitting.
Yea, people need to get off there ass's just a little bit more, I always get depressed when I look at pictures of my parents and all the people in the background from the 70 and early 80s, they all looked healthy and skinny. I live in a pretty obese city, its like living in the walking dead.
The largest cultural shift to happen in your time frame has been two-income households and on top of that most people are working longer hours than ever before.
That means less time to cook nutritious meals, less time to monitor what the kids are doing, and less time for recreation.
This notion of a qualitative shift within a few generations is asinine. There's a reason energy drinks happened within this generation. People are tired and harried.
I hate to confirm the bias, but I'll readily admit that I'm contributing to the problem. I don't know about "obese," but I could stand to lose 10 pounds, by which I really mean 20 pounds, and only at losing 30 pounds would I approach unhealthily skinny. I keep up some active hobbies like fishing and vegetable gardening (and eating fish and vegetables), but my work and my play tend to keep me seated in front of computers most of the day. As a result I weigh more than I'd like.
Thanks to the War on Drugs, it's easier to buy meth than it is to buy cold medicine!
Even though you are more than a decade older than me I will say I have seen similar trends.
Before air conditioning we'd see more people go to a swimming pool to cool off. If not that then people would at least sweat off some calories.
Before computers and video games people would be more likely to go outside to play. This has some overlap with the air conditioning thing since people are also just as likely to read a book or play a board game inside as opposed to going out in the heat. Even when outside people will play with electronics rather than go climb a tree.
It's not just soda that makes us fat, it's fruit juices, breakfast cereals, and so many other sweet foods that got cheaper. Also with more money it's easier to treat yourself to something sweet than if you don't have as much money. I say this is true even of the "poor" since poverty in the USA is not like poverty in other places. Even the "poor" in the USA can afford a candy bar once in a while. It's a cheap and easy to get treat.
The trend to do less biking, hiking, and exploring is because of a (IMHO, highly irrational) fear of injury, abductions, and so forth that parents have of their children. At a young age my brothers and I asked our parents if we could walk the two miles home from school to avoid the lengthy ride on the bus. The bus would drive in a big loop and we were the last to get dropped off. If the weather was nice we'd walk. Few parents would let their children do that today out of a fear that their kids could get run over, kidnapped, molested, or get lost.
I will agree that there has been a shift in the public acceptance of being overweight. I don't watch a lot of TV but I do notice that there are more heavy actors on TV than I recall before. When there were fat characters in the past their weight was usually seen as a flaw or somehow an aspect of the character. Now we have obviously overweight people on TV but their weight is rarely mentioned.
I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
I gave up soda pop and believe me, it helped, but only about 5lbs worth. The trouble with Americans is that junk food is a cheap pleasure in a world that doesn't give out many pleasures to the poor. At the end of a long, miserable day it's hard to say no to a cheeseburger, fries and a chocolate shake. The fact that I can get all that for $6 bucks (no tip, it's fast food) is just icing on the cake (there's a pun in that somewhere). It doesn't help that vegetables are expensive and unsubsidized and that just about everything has added sugar...
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
News for Nerds.... Stuff that Matters
nutritious food is too expensive. Also companies are modifiying our food supply to make it addicting and encourage overeating (it's not an accident that eating chips goes well with soda pop). Plus people are turning to junk food to cope with the misery in life and to get a quick boost to get them through a long day.
When you look at wealthy folk they're rarely overweight. It's poor people getting shafted by a bad system. That's where the hate is coming from...
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
I recently read an article that showed the method most western governments use to measure who is over weight is actually not that accurate. In fact many professional sports people or gym junkies would be classified as overweight based on the measurement systems used. Trying to define who is overweight with a single measurement doesn't work due to lifestyle and genetic variations.
I think I'll leave everyone with. One of the aspects of our food supply nobody every talks about is that we use oil byproducts to replenish soil. That's how we're able to grow so much food. Anyone want to guess what's going to happen when our oil supply dwindles...?
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
Yep
Hmm... your post made me hungry.
"I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)
I visit the USA several times a year. I come from a place where obesity is much less common, and much less extreme. These are my observations of the USA. I don't want this to sound like I'm hating on Americans, because some of you are super nice. This is just what I've seen.
The obesity axis runs diagonally, northwest to south east. People in Seattle are not much bigger then people around here. People in Mobile were appallingly huge. My theory is this correlates with biscuits and sausage gravy for breakfast.
It also correlates with escalators. In Seattle most people were walking up the escalators, In Mobile nobody walked up escalators.
A much bigger percentage of black people are overweight compared to white people. (Is this poverty related?).
You all drink way too much coke cola. I met people who drank 2 or three cans of soda per day at work and then drank it with every lunch and dinner.
Food servings in some restaurants are stupid big. Plates of spaghetti that two of us couldn't finish. 24 ounce prime rib. (really)
Most appalling thing I saw was whole families of fat people which is super rare here. Like mom and dad both 250 lbs plus and then 2 or 3 huge fat kids. Around here if your ten year old was 150 lbs the child welfare people would be all over you.
This is a good thing. Being overweight is pretty much always better for you than being underweight. If you're 50 pounds overweight, yeah, that's not great, but if you're 50 pounds underweight, you're feeling really bad. Even 10 pounds underweight isn't good for you.
"First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
Remember how it went - when forming the football teams one gets the fat kid, the other gets the weird kid. Notice there is only one representative of those groups. I am in my early forties; back in primary school we were 36 kids in the class. We had 1 fat boy and 2 fat girls and that was that...
"News for Nerds.... Stuffed with Matter"
FTFY Fatties!
http://www.everydayhealth.com/...
"I observed the obesity paradox in a published study I conducted while studying at the Mayo Clinic. We looked at 226 people who experienced a heart arrest in the community and were resuscitated. What we found was that people that were slightly overweight (BMI from 25-30) had the highest 5-year survival at 78 percent. People who were underweight had a significantly lower survival at 67 percent, similar to people considered morbidly obese."
The redefinition of what is "overweight" by lowering the ideal BMI did more to harm the validity of scientific analysis than any pseudoscience postulation ever could. Overweight people live longer than underweight people. You twiggie admirers can go hump yourselves.
Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.
Bananas are just sugar.
Please don't spout half-truths.
"The good: This food is very low in Saturated Fat, Cholesterol and Sodium. It is also a good source of Dietary Fiber, Vitamin C, Potassium and Manganese, and a very good source of Vitamin B6.
The bad: A large portion of the calories in this food come from sugars."
Also note the sugar in bananas is not quite the same thing as the white stuff people put in their coffee or sprinkle on their breakfast cereal.
Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
Belgium sounds nice. I wish I lived there...
It isn't, I grew up there and left for good in 2001. It is a tax paradise if your money isn't coming off your own work... if you let out properties for non-commercial use, the revenue will be taxed on 140% of a fictive annual rent (what the rent on a similar place would have been on the 1st of January 1975). If you flip properties every 5 years and a day or land every 8 years and a day, the profit is tax free.
On the other hand, if you do work... the tax rates are insane: 25% on revenue below the poverty line (8680 per year), 30% on the next slice (up to 12360), 40% on the next slice (up to 20600), 45% on the next slice (up to 37750), 50% from there on. The employer also has to pay 35% extra on top of your gross salary. Then they wonder why so many people moonlight.
"What some may consider more unsurprising is that more than 25 percent of the world's severely obese men and almost 20 percent of the world's severely obese women are American."
You could use me as an anatomy model. You can see individual fibers of the muscles on my body move independently.
I'm technically obese.
Just saying- we have a lot of fit people these days who are classified as obese.
She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
Most people use the World Health Organization metric of a BMI of 30 to define obesity, but it's kind of a load of crap because it assumes that everybody is the same age and gender, both of which have different ranges for what is probably healthy and what isn't. What's best is if you figure out what weight percentile you reside in for your age and gender. This calculator for example:
http://halls.md/body-mass-inde...
If you're at 45 then you're in good shape. If you're 50 or above, then you will probably benefit from weight loss, but not necessarily. Believe it or not you can be obese by every definition and still be perfectly healthy. I dropped a lot of weight myself (about 90 lbs) because I have kidney disease caused by an immune disorder (IgA nephropathy) and being at a light weight reduces the burden on my weakened kidneys, meaning they'll last longer. (Light weight includes not having a lot of muscle mass either, as more muscle means more creatinine, which is fine for healthy people but bad if your renal system is compromised.)
Also I think the #1 thing anybody can do for fat loss is to remove all sugar from their diet. Most sugars found in sodas, candy, pastries, etc, has high amounts of fructose (and no, HFCS isn't alone here, ordinary cane sugar and even fruit based sugars contain basically the same amount) which is well documented to give you a caloric load without triggering the release of leptin in your blood to signal fullness. It also raises your LDL (bad) cholesterol and triglycerides (also bad.) Using that theory worked pretty well for me.
The rising rate of obesity *may* be because sugar has lowered in price over the last few decades, so now more people can afford more of it than in the past. It's one of those things that used to be a rich man's luxury, along with salt.
Supersize me worked better than expected. Thanks, McDonald's.
Your post was informative and insightful. If I had mod points, I'd give one to you.
the vegetables on special don't keep. When you're working poor you usually have two jobs and pull 60/hr a week. Getting to the store every day isn't happening.
You know what does keep? Frozen veggies. I see them in every value grocery store. Generally cheap and frozen at peak flavor. Or buy the ones on special and freeze yourself if you can't use them immediately.
Bananas are just sugar. That's why they're cheap.
No they're cheap because they are grown in countries where labor is cheap and companies have fought to control those labor prices and keep workers' pay as low as possible. And only one exact same genetic variety is common for those cheap bananas, meaning they all ripen at the exact predictable rate, allowing vastly better large economies of scale in transport. But they aren't a great health food -- still better than most fast food of junk food.
Whole Chickens aren't cheap when you count the calories in them. They seem cheap because the weight of the skin and bones is part of the cost.
Whole chickens are amazing things, and you can often get 3 meals of more out of them for a family. The bones and skin are the most essential parts, providing flavor in the form of fat that can be rendered for sauteing things and collogen and other elements that can be harvested for a tasty stock. First roast your chicken. Eat much of the meat for meal 1. Then pick off the remaining meat and simmer the bones and skin for stock. Refrigerate and skim fat. Make chicken and veggie soup next day. Meal 2. Use and remaining chicken bits, fat, etc. And simmer bones again (what the French call remoullage) for a second stock to be used to cook rice or beans or some other thing. Meal 3. Labor intensive, yes. But lots of cheap meals.
Cheap cuts of beef aren't. They don't really exist anymore. Even 80/20 pink slime is $3/lb in a lot of places.
Buy large packs in bulk when on sale or special. Freeze if you can't use right away. Don't ever use store-bought ground beef. Buy a cheap meat grinder instead.... It's simple, fast, and tastes so much better.
But perhaps more important: if you're poor, stop trying to eat so much meat! It's nutritious, but think of it more as a small flavorant or garnish in most meals, rather than the centerpiece. Buy the cheapest toughest cuts and use in stew, etc.
Onions aren't food. They're a garnish.
Actually, they have quite a bit of nutrients, though not very concentrated. They do provide a lot of fiber, like many veggies. When I was low on money, I often ate at least an onion per day in soup or stew or whatever... Good for bulking up the food and making it both flavorful and more filling.
Like lettuce they're cheap because their complete lack of nutritional value means they're cheap to grow.
Again, completely wrong. Iceberg lettuce has no nutrition, and it's cheap because it can be stored long, which makes for better distribution and economies of scale. Other leaf lettuce is more nutritious but also often more expensive. Better to go with spinach of another darker green (frozen, if you need really cheap).
Eggs are up to $3/dozen for the off brand. They also don't keep long if you're not buying the fancy ones. Those are $4.39/dozen.
Eggs have become expensive of late. But I have no idea what you're talking about "not keeping long." Even cheapest eggs generally keep at least a couple weeks or more.
Flour and butter are basically junk food. Flour especially. Why do you think they make donuts and cheap bread with it?
Whole grain flour has a lot more nutrients. Why do they fortify white flour? To replace the nutrition that was removed. But yeah, flour shouldn't be a central component of nutrition --yet it can provide a lot of
Methinks he doth protest too much...
the vegetables on special don't keep. When you're working poor you usually have two jobs and pull 60/hr a week. Getting to the store every day isn't happening.
So buy them once a week, do a bulk cookup and freeze it. That's what I do.
Bananas are just sugar. That's why they're cheap.
So the fact they are an awesome source of vitamins and minerals (particularly potassium) means nothing? Diet is about more than fat/carb/protein.
Whole Chickens aren't cheap when you count the calories in them. They seem cheap because the weight of the skin and bones is part of the cost. Cheap cuts of beef aren't. They don't really exist anymore. Even 80/20 pink slime is $3/lb in a lot of places. Onions aren't food. They're a garnish. Like lettuce they're cheap because their complete lack of nutritional value means they're cheap to grow.
High protein tends to be slightly lower calorie compared to complex carbs per weight. Again what's your point? It is a cheap PROTEIN source (relative to other protein sources.
As per onions, they are good for fibre and cholesterol. Again diet is about more than fat/carb/protein. They have other benefits too: http://www.nutrition-and-you.c...
Eggs are up to $3/dozen for the off brand. They also don't keep long if you're not buying the fancy ones. Those are $4.39/dozen. Flour and butter are basically junk food. Flour especially. Why do you think they make donuts and cheap bread with it?
I will take your argument on off brand eggs on board (even though I have seen no evidence personally of it).
Flour and butter are not junk food. Just because they are used to make donuts... They also are used to make fresh pasta, GOOD bread (no preservatives), and it and similar grains have been the basis for many cultures go to foods for hundreds of years.
They are also showing saturated fat is good for you, and butter can provide this along with some cheap calories (as that was your argument against chicken).
That leaves bulk rice and beans. For beans you better know what to buy and how to cook them or you're going to get sick. I forget why. I suppose I'll give you rice though.
rice... a staple food for about 20% of the planet's population. It's a pretty good option with endless ways to use it.
beans... they are a very safe food if they are cooked. They can be cooked in any way, but baking and boiling are the two easiest (and most intuitive) ways. They are also really good nutritionally.
Canned baked beans are always a staple everyone should have in their cupboard. A cheap healthy option that doesn't go off, and can be pulled out when you haven't managed to get to the shops.
So you have picked one easily worked around bad point about some cheap foods, and have thrown in the towel.
Whatever. A banana every now and then is good. You can eat one between every meal to give you some extra energy.
Using it as a substitute for the meal isn't very healthy.
...y'all might bear in mind, here, that the government deliberately changed the definition of what "overweight" is, specifically in order to describe more people as overweight. Now, I'm not saying that people haven't gotten heavier. You look at an old black'n'white movie and everyone looks practically gaunt. But, the statistics have been meddled with by changing the definitions.
The federal government plans to change its definition of what is a healthy weight, a controversial move that would classify millions more Americans as being overweight. ...old article, just first one up. This change was, in fact, made. So, instant "fat epidemic", courtesy of the government's fat fingers on the scales.
I like how chickens aren't cheap because they only have nutrients and not enough calories. And then flour is bad because it has calories.
But the absolute best part is "onions aren't food".
** When I was a school child, there were no video games or internet. When you wanted to play, you got some friends together and had a pickup game of baseball or you rode your bikes around town or did some other outdoor activity. We were physically active on a daily basis, while now the normal entertainment is to sit still and play games. There's nothing wrong with games, but every hour spent doing that is one hour not spent running around outside burning calories.
When you were a kid, you played on playground equipment that was barely safer than just handing kids a box of razor blades. Nobody asked just why Mr. Johnson always had a pocket full of candy and liked to watch the children play all day. You would have killed your parents to get your hands on one of the video games we have now, you just didn't have a choice and can feel nostalgic about it.
** Sugar based sodas were consumed in moderation, or often, not at all. There were no "64 Oz Big Gulps", and no one ever drank sodas in my school. Your choices were milk or water. Parents rarely let children consume sodas.
And a lot of those kids grew up and said "I'm not going to be MY parents, here baby, have all the soda you want!" Besides, mommy and daddy are too busy working 24/7 to maintain our lifestyle to actually pay attention to you.
** There was less acceptance of overweight people, more social shaming. I won't say that was a good thing - shaming people can cause long term emotional harm and hurts in other ways. But one byproduct of this is that no one wanted to be "that fat kid". (My school had just one fat kid, where now childhood obesity is systemic, and I see 3rd graders who look... morbidly obese).
Congrats, you made fat people feel horrible and caused years of mental therapy and possible physical violence, but as long as they put down a hamburger mission accomplished I guess. You must feel proud. Not like anorexia is any kind of problem at all. Or like overeating can be caused by emotional trauma like hazing.
Now I'm nearing 60 and still normal weight. I have an easier time going up multiple flights of steps than, I would estimate, around 2/3 of the people who are in their 20's, because I'm carrying 50, 100, sometimes even 200 pounds less than they are at the same height.
We invented elevators and escalators because stairs suck, and now we shame people for using them.
We beat world hunger! We beat the over loving shit out of it.
It's not like there's some obvious marker..
No, what they're doing is doing statistics on BMI, and using some arbitrary thresholds.
In theory, BMI is distributed in a normal (gaussian) distribution, and there's some number of SD above and below that establishes "normal".
Or, they are making a circular argument.. "Studies show that people with BMI greater than 30 have more problems" so then they define the cutoff as 30, but in reality, it could just as easily be 31 or 29, because those studies don't show a CURVE of health effect vs BMI. they're binned into arbitrary bands.
a. After a 60 hour work week plus dealing with the kids you didn't want to have (but couldn't stop yourself from having because a substantial portion of our electorate is trying to keep you from affordable birth control options because little hussies like you should have to have kids in exchange for sex) you're in no shape to clean. You live in a cheap, shitty apartment. That means bugs, and lots of them. I'm not the first one to make this observation. It was made in a rather famous essay kicking around google from a single mom with bad teeth who lived homeless for sometime because the bad teeth kept her from getting a job.
b. Cheap junk food and TV are the only pleasures the 1% let the working poor have. They don't get vacations or even time off. They're kids are miserable because so are they. They're poor education means enjoying literature is beyond them and the lack of birth control and a social safety net means they have to be careful with sex.
We here in America like punishing people. We just do. Well, not all of us, but the ones that do vote. And the ones that vote make the rules. So there you go.
You overstate things. I was born to a pair of mentally ill parents and grew up in a home for children funded by the state. A lot of the other kids there made worse choices than I did, and the consequences for them were worse than for the bad decisions I made. As it turns out, I have a good life and most of them do not.
Choices and decisions when we are young have a huge effect on us the rest of our lives - something that American children just do not seem to be taught; perhaps because their parents aren't teaching them this, as they themselves didn't learn it until much too late (if ever).
There is still chance and opportunity in the US and how people end up is a question of the decisions they make more than just what the 1% 'allows'. That this decision making process seems to be broken in much of the US is a societal problem but cannot be blamed on the 1% but on our own parents (or caregivers, whatever).
Birth control is freely available in most parts of the US, if not all (walk into a planned parenthood if nothing else - walk out with free condoms). Getting it and using it are choices that people make.
Spending your time watching garbage on TV vs. that same time at a (shitty probably) part time job to build up some cash to pay your way through school (or to pay for dental work) is a decision. I, with no parents and no family to support me, managed to make this happen - so can others, if they chose.
I do think that there are things that need to be fixed - tax dodges for the very rich who throw everything into 'family directed charity organizations', tax dodges for corporations who shift their profits offshore to avoid paying tax in the place where they make their real profits, usurious interest rates on credit cards and other debt that traps the unwary and this ridiculous system of student loans being a few of them. But even so, success in America is still possible and at the end it depends on the decisions that we as young people make, one way or the other.
blindly antisocialist = antisocial
"What some may consider more surprising is that more than 25 percent of the world's severely obese men and almost 20 percent of the world's severely obese women are American" I am surprised that the rate is not higher. Who ever is surprised that it is at least 20%/25% has not visited the US in the last 10 years or has not been able to compare to other countries. I have flown all over the world. But when I am in the US, it is always shocking me with abandon.
C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
visit randi.org
This study can't be used to come to that conclusion. 1975 is well after the 'Chew Mrs. Goldfarb, Chew" song's era. Was I the only person who saw that in a video in history class?
"But it takes work. So nevermind. Just complain instead." people which are in the poorer job often work multiple job or longer hours and are far more tired or have no time to cook. Really I knew a few people working minimum wage job and they came back at 20h-21h with feeding 1 or 2 kids and in such case what would you do ? Remember as study showed over and over they can't get food reserve long in advance so food and essential stuff is bought on the last moment when it is needed with the money at hand. This means doing the grocery AND preparing the food which can and will take a long time if you add vegetables compared to a macdo which takes 15 minutes if you are in city. I timed myself, the easiest meal I prepare are 15 minutes vegetables preparation included, 15 to 20 minutes buying included. That's 30 minutes over a long day. And that's an easy to make meal but making the same over and over and you get mad. The more complicated one can take upward an hour with half of it washing and preparing various ingredients. I am betting that you have a enough money to buy stuff once per week in advance in nice enough quantity like I do. But some people don't. Look. It is not stupidity or lazyness which somestimes drives people to macdo or similar junk food. But simply the lack of time overall, because they already got physically and mentally drained by the terrible low wage job they got.
C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
visit randi.org
I like how chickens aren't cheap because they only have nutrients and not enough calories. And then flour is bad because it has calories.
Yeah, I don't think you can expect logic in a post so full of misinformation. Or even a simple thought, like -- why not combine the two? Chicken and dumplings, anyone? Or chicken and homemade bread? Biscuits? Classic combos of nutritionally dense with cheaper calories.
It's almost like he came to the conclusion that cooking was impossible for the poor a priori, so the only rational choice must be a McDonalds double cheeseburger, a bag of potato chips, and a box of Little Debbie snack cakes.
Karo Corn Syrup manufacturer would have you know that their corn syrup is not "high fructose corn syrup.
you're fat.
** There was less acceptance of overweight people, more social shaming.
There are subtler and more powerful forces in play. Humans on the whole don't like to be the odd one out. We also judge ourselves on how we compare to others. If you're a fat bloke in a slim part of the world you stand out. There's no shaming, finger pointing, whispers behind the back etc, but you still stand out. Likewise if you're a skinny guy in a fat part of the world you ALSO stand out.
Few people like standing out.
SJW n. One who posts facts.
With all this shit spewing out of your probably fat, lazy ass I'm surprised you didn't also attack the humble potato.
"How is this news for nerds, unless we assume that the typical slashdot user is obese?"
They hope somebody will build an app for feeding the fatties to the starving.
I'll give you odds at nine gets you seven.
Or nine gets you eight if you wager on ~p instead of p.
The house wins either way, of course. Captcha: Avarice.
Surprised that it's not higher?
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
In the same time period, it has been discovered that pulsed electromagnetic can disrupt transport system in the body leading to an increase in body fat.
The correlation being that obesity and the prevailance of pulse modulated sources appear to run hand-in-hand.
Most people use the World Health Organization metric of a BMI of 30 to define obesity, but it's kind of a load of crap because it assumes that everybody is the same age and gender,
First you're incorrect: BMI is segmented by gender. Second it's not a load of crap: the thresholds are set such that if it says you're obese, there's a 95% chance you are (statistically), but if it says you're not you still may be.
If you crunch the numbers, it works for 95% of the population.
It's kind of funny that on every other thread people complain about special snowflakes, yet on a fat thread, half of the posters here are the 5% of special snowflakes apparently.
PS statistical marginalisation is not "a load of crap".
SJW n. One who posts facts.
With dry red kidney beans there is "phytohaemagglutinin" that causes diarrhoea if they are not soaked for hours and then brought up to a boil for ten minutes or more. That's potentially a problem with using a slow cooker which is otherwise ideal for beans and may take hours on high to get up to a boil. I was thinking about slow cooking beans in a solar cooker while camping but that is the showstopper:
http://www.medic8.com/healthgu...
Canned beans are a different story but much more expensive (though cheaper than a lot of other things).
A lot of asian food is very cheap to cook but it's a learning curve for most people in the west. If someone has poor reading skills and nobody to show you how to make the stuff it's not likely to happen - plus the stuff that tastes the best isn't any better for you than high fat stuff from the west.
It's actually worse for you (fructose) but there is nowhere near enough of it to matter unless you eat multiple large bucketfulls of them daily. Even blended down to liquid that would be a challenge.
I guess you've already answered your question.
Looking back at photos the "fat kid" wasn't that by current standards either. And that was with baked goods at the school canteen dripping with fat (cream buns, sausage rolls etc). No carbonated drinks though, which I suspect are a very major part of the cause.
Surprisingly low, yes.
Nonsense. Where do you get your information? Start reading up before spouting garbage. Eggs, kept in the fridge can last for weeks if not a month. The rest of your comments are also flawed.
It's not a damn disease, you calorie intake was significantly more than you need for extended periods of time. That's it.
Just call it what it is, and stop sugarcoating the truth.
It's not that the sea levels are rising! Oh no, it's because all the extra weight is make the ground sink.
the vegetables on special don't keep.
Eh? My wife and I go to the local veg market once a week. We buy things like cabbage (some will keep for months, especially the hard types), roots (carrots, swedes (rutabaga in the US) etc - they keep for at least week), onions (keep for a month or more), etc etc. Plus potatoes and other starchy veg, which keep for ages too.
[Eggs:] They also don't keep long if you're not buying the fancy ones.
What nonsense is this? Eggs were evolved as little packets of nutrients that had to stay fresh for long enough that the developing fetus inside could nature without much of an immune system - in an environment where bacteria are abundant; of course they can keep. In the supermarkets in UK they not even kept in cold store - they are out on the shelves in ambient temperatures. We buy them and keep them for as long as it takes to use 15 or 30; the worst I have seen happen is when I forgot one egg for months in the fridge - it had dried out so the shell was only half full.
Onions aren't food
Tell my Chinese wife that - we eat one or two onions as a vegetable dish on most days. Peel, chop and stir-fry for a couple of minutes, so they lose the hotness. Brilliant.
Flour and butter are basically junk food. Flour especially. Why do you think they make donuts and cheap bread with it?
Wheat flour contains protein and vitamins as well as starch - read the label. Cheap crap like donuts is cheap because flour is cheap, especially in bulk; they become crap because the factories cut costs in the production - that doesn't mean that donuts have to be crap. And cheap bread is crap because of what the factories to make it cheap - read about The Chorleywood Bread Process (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chorleywood_bread_process) for example. You can take poor quality wheat, add emulsifiers and other stuff to increase your profit margin, and the result is crap, but cheap. Again, anyone with an oven and the will to learn can make a good, healthy bread cheaply.
That leaves bulk rice and beans. For beans you better know what to buy and how to cook them or you're going to get sick. I forget why. I suppose I'll give you rice though.
Beans (dry): soak them overnight, cook until they are nice and soft - often something like 1 hour. 15 minutes is enough to denature the protein that is poisonous, and some beans are not poisonous at all - like chickpeas. Just cook them all, that's all you need to stay safe. It is probably the cheapest and healthies kind of dried food you can find anywhere. Add spices and vegetables (onions, garlic, tomatoes etc) to make them tasty.
Cheap junk food and TV are the only pleasures the 1% let the working poor have.
No - the limiting factor is not money, but education and planning. Buying and preparing a crappy ready-meal from frozen often takes 30 - 50 minutes in the oven, the same time it would take to prepare and cook a bunch of vegetables with a little bit of meat. Or beans, which require a minimum of planning: soak them overnight, cook them when convenient, use them following day. As for the pleasure part: there is far more pleasure in preparing and eating a good meal than there ever will be in eating junk food and watching mind numbingly stupid entertainment.
But you are right about "the 1%" wanting it to be this way - the rich get rich because the poor and the middle class allow them to keep them trapped in this situation. A lot of companies and their rich owners would be in trouble if people at the bottom of society stopped buying all the cheap crap they don't need and stopped wasting time and energy on idiotic television. Read 1985 again - it may have been a story about Communism gone wrong, but you find the same mechanisms at work in today's capitalism.
Those fat bastards are so many that they pull up the awerage! /s
I don't know what happened to your OP who works 2 jobs and 60 hours a week and can't find time. I regularly work 12's(to 14+ hours) 5-6 days a week at the end of projects and even then find time to make basics. My mother in law, on the other hand, used to work 3 jobs for 12-14 hours a day 7 days a week to feed her family of 4 so they could have the American dream of Spaghetti and meatballs with Rice and Microwave Mochi. You know how that works? Kids can cook at some point. Not American kids, these are Japanese kids so they have magical ninja abilities that we white people don't have. I think it's called discipline and structure as part of their culture. Well it must be magic because we can't seem to master that in the west on any sort of scale.
Ever want to feel like an entitled white person? Marry a Japanese girl who grew up poor with parents who lived through the battle of Okinawa as kids. Mold? cut that shit off and eat it you spoiled brat.
Don't do red kidney beans in a slow cooker, then. *eyeroll*.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
We need reservation (Quota) for the underweight people now.
I see what you did there.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
In terms of number or quantity?
If it's the former then I retract my question as I am outnumbered :P
'Veggie'? Sounds like something a liberal would say.. How disgusting.
Last I checked Michael Moore was a Democrat and hates guns, and he's about as fat as they come.
He also stinks. A lot. I have been attending an event in France where he was present and the stench was unbelievable. His presence was embarassing, not just because of his foul body odor but for his annoying demeanour. You could see all the European guests barely tolerated him and his rants, and his pathetic attempts to fit in with the elite which made it clear he did not belong. He had been a somewhat useful propaganda tool during the Bush years but now he had outlived his usefulness. Too bad he could not see it.
One thing I cannot stand: fatsos. They're ugly, repugnant, smelly and filthy. Whenever I see one of those disgusting piles of flabby chicken-like skin stretched over a bloated pile of lard, I want to torch it with a flamethrower and see if it burns to a crispy or simply melts like an oversized shapeless candle. Fatties should not be allowed to live, period.
I think the problem with BMI is because it doesn't take muscle mass into account that 5% you're on about is largely made up of athletes and other sporty types who are apparently obese. Of course none of this really matters because nobody develops eating disorders because they've been erroneously labeled as obese especially not children.
Build a Man a Fire, and He'll Be Warm for a Day. Set a Man on Fire, and He'll Be Warm for the Rest of His Life.
Fat people are eating skinny people. None of us are safe.
People have a choice. They can go back to farming and growing or raising your own food. I did. It's not expensive, but you no longer have money for various wants and you have to budget your money carefully. I know many others who did also.
I recall hearing somewhere that the chances of a male dying from cancer is about 50%.
As my old doc used to say, if a man lives long enough he will get prostate cancer. It's inevitable.
Boy, are people on /. Really into killing off grandma and grandpa, in whose basements they really live in? Come now, BMI is a fallicy. It is a way to encourage people to have a body that feeds on itself rather then feeding off of the foodstuffs. When thee body, of a person, eats, they store the nutrients, for a bad day. It's how the body is designed. As every hunter knows, some days you miss. Babies will go hungry then, so give it a carrot to suck on. The hunter may be in the middle of a migration period. So they live off the bodies fat. Same if you get sick, your reserves are to carry you thru. Low bmi people have a higher death rate even in hospitals then higher bmi people. That's genetics.
Part two, it's also in what you eat. Some foodstuffs, encourage bingeing. Some foods have been modified to fool you into thinking you are dieting, and some foodstuffs are made unknownly to the consumer to be bad for the body. Check birth weights inn the US, check population replacement, check worldwide births, for some reason, worldwide rates are going down. Fat is needed in women to encourage population reproduction. Skinny women produce fewer, sicker, and less healthy children. That's why all the ancient texts show vennus as overweight. Better able to have healthy offspring. Why aren't people tying this all together? Or maybe they are, and it's part of an agenda.
...on average, world hunger is no longer a problem?
It's true muscle mass matters. At its peak, Arnold Schwarzenegger had a BMI of 33, while having very little fat. But let's be honest, very few people have the kind muscle mass to let them win the title of Mr. Universe. Pretty much everyone who uses the argument of muscle mass is just in denial and trying to find excuses.
Also, that kind of muscle mass is almost as bad for health as fat.
BMI isn't a great indicator for whether someone is overweight or not. A few years back, I got serious about weight loss. I was at 255 and really not feeling good. I watched what I ate (did a Weight Watchers-style thing) and eventually got down to 175. For the first time, I wasn't overweight as far as BMI was concerned. I was normal weight. Everyone who saw me, though, told me that I looked too skinny. (The first time in my life I had ever heard those words referencing me.) Sure enough, I had bones sticking out everywhere. I've found that my ideal weight is about 190. BMI-wise, that's still overweight, but it's good for me.
My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
It's not the diet causing obesity, it's the lack of exercise. Automation is killing people by placing them in sedentary jobs. Corporations need to be held responsible and do more to make options for treadmill/standing desks and on-site gyms with showers available for all workers including contractors and temps.
Cheap cuts of beef aren't. They don't really exist anymore. Even 80/20 pink slime is $3/lb in a lot of places.
Buy large packs in bulk when on sale or special. Freeze if you can't use right away. Don't ever use store-bought ground beef. Buy a cheap meat grinder instead.... It's simple, fast, and tastes so much better.
At the Sam's Club by me you can get 93/7 ground beef for $3 a pound. At a grocery store 93/7 usually runs over $6 a pound. At $3 per pound savings after buying 15lbs (3 packs) you've already saved the cost of a yearly membership, so anything after that is pure savings. I usually take a 5lb pack, quarter it up, put it in bags and freeze it. That and a $13 bag of frozen chicken breasts usually lasts me and my wife about 3 weeks.
The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
Don't do red kidney beans in a slow cooker THE WRONG WAY by being impatient about it being slow is the very simple answer.
I see this "choices you made in the past put you where you are now" attitude a lot, especially in political debate. This is, of course, true - and it is also true that choices (or circumstances) of your parents, their parents, etc. also influence your starting point and therefore your chances of "a good life."
What I think is lacking in today's "American Dream," is the ability for anyone - regardless of present circumstance - to pick themselves up and realistically turn their life around to achieve "middle class" or better status within the next 10 years. Too many people are too held down by poverty to realistically do anything about it before they die, and this can happen to them before they even reach the age of high school graduation.
If you have to work 40+ hours a week to keep a safe roof over your head with decent clothing and food to eat, there's no realistic capacity to also pay for a valuable education that opens doors to a better job. I'm not saying that a higher education should be a requirement for a decent paying middle class job, high school or equivalent should be enough, but it mostly isn't. Throw in a couple of children, part time jobs that require travel expenses to/from work and have dynamic/unpredictable schedules, medical expenses and the other realities of living poor and the idea of night school becomes less and less realistic.
I'm not saying that it's impossible, people hit the lottery every week, and get other fortunate breaks much more often, but it's not something that people can just "put their mind to" and make happen on any kind of realistic/regular basis.
that 5% you're on about is largely made up of athletes and other sporty types who are apparently obese
Perfect! The 5% it gets wrong already know better. If you know better, ignore it. If you don't know better, the accuracy is much better. That's like the most benign possible failure mode.
Of course none of this really matters because nobody develops eating disorders because they've been erroneously labeled as obese especially not children.
So... telling professional athletes who know better that they might be obese gives a small percentage of children eating disorders so we should drop it rather than tell the 60% of the adult population who are obese that they are obese and ignore the massive number of health problems that it causes.
Oh please won't somebody think of the children!
Seriously?
SJW n. One who posts facts.
I hate to confirm the bias, but I'll readily admit that I'm contributing to the problem. I don't know about "obese," but I could stand to lose 10 pounds, by which I really mean 20 pounds, and only at losing 30 pounds would I approach unhealthily skinny. I keep up some active hobbies like fishing and vegetable gardening (and eating fish and vegetables), but my work and my play tend to keep me seated in front of computers most of the day. As a result I weigh more than I'd like.
I think you're confirming that modern society today is too concerned about being overweight and not concerned enough about being underweight. I'm in the same boat as you. I would be underweight if I lost 30 pounds but I have no desire to lose 30 pounds. Every once in a while you hear about a nasty strain of flu that is killing the "ultra healthy". My suspicion is that these "ultra healthy" are actually getting killed by not having enough reserve to help them thru their sickness. There are obviously plenty of obese people but I don't think someone with 10-20 pounds of "reserves" should even be considered fat. We are designed to have reserves and it's unhealthy not to have some. You'll be thankful for those reserves if you ever get seriously ill and can't eat for a week or two. Moreover, there are plenty of other factors more important than weight. I know "overweight" people that regularly exercise and underweight people that sit in front of their computers 24/7 eating nothing but doritos and mountain dew. I would guarantee that the overweight person who regularly exercises has better overall heart, lung, and body health than the skinny person who doesn't exercise.
in 'Murica they like to blame fattening foods and processed foods and sugar for obesity, what do they claim in other countries?
I'm not sure what the Universal definition is, but at one point I looked up a medical definition as defined by the USA government, and I was obese because I was 20lb over wight and 6' tall. According to my wellness teacher at State Uni, who has been involved with a lot of ground breaking weight and health research, 10lb over is the same as 1lb under. I would rather error on the side of caution and be a bit over weight.
Does this mean that Earth will now have a larger mass and we'll fly out of orbit? We could get the whole population to Mars by starting a national campaign to eat more twinkies and drink Coke !!!
Seems cheaper than building a rocket for "5" people and would stimulate the world economy to boot !! everyone wins!!
In case you misunderstood - a real slow cooker only takes time to get to the boil. A solar oven may never get there but still may get close enough to do potatoes or rice but not red kidney beans.
You made the main point I was going to make, but also:
1. You have to do the main dough prep a day or 2 before, with a food processor and a fridge that many people don't have access to
2. It's actually a good focus for an evening getting a few people involved in the toppings
3. Pizzas are much better veggie only (but not vegan - need the cheese). That was a surprise to me too
4. Having done the above, you realise that the ingredients used by chain pizza places are cheap and nasty. Down to the fake cheese
5. To quote Ed Goldberg on the top 3 places to get pizza in USA: 1- Italian-family-run in NY. 2- Other in NY. 3- There is no 3.
Add: Shirts were required to be worn tucked IN. No possibility of hiding fat as it grew.
IMHO, the clothing manufacturers are behind this. They have been secretly gaslighting us for the past 10 years by cutting clothes just a little bit smaller and labeling them the same as before in order to save money. Example: Levi's 505 and 550 jeans are now cut for emaciated hipsters when they should have left them alone and made a new number.
Hey Polly, want a cracker?
On the internet we hear this parroted a lot. Most people who like to repeat this without ever thinking are fortunate enough to not post it on Slashdot which is infested with sysadmins who pull 60+ hours a week.. And feed themselves just fine. Some of us admins are actually not poor.
So when we pull 60-80+ a week and feed ourselves just fine, is it possible that the number of hours worked per week is not the problem? Could education be the problem? Self control? Actually thinking before making dietary choices? The ability to plan?
Could it be that we are willing to skip tonight episode of "Dancing with the has beens/nobodys" and make a meal or a quantity of food we can eat every day for the week.
You seem to be unfamiliar with eggs. Eggs will keep a long time.. ON YOUR COUNTER. In the fridge they will keep so long they dry out.
If worst comes to worst, eggs also come out of chickens who will happily live in your back yard for cheap. You are 1 Google away from being able to do this yourself. Google is available at the Library.
Do you actually believe this? Have you thought about what you are saying? You have clearly never been poor.
Seriously, you give me onions, split peas, and some old ham bones and I will make you a pea soup you will be happy eating every meal for a week. It costs ~1$/day to eat this.
Bad news. The poor are usually poor for a reason. It may be painful to say it is their bad choices but it is. As adults they are responsible at least in part for where they are. "I have to live in my own place!", "I WANT BABIES!!!!", "Sweet I will just buy that with my credit card!", "Scratch offs? Sign me up!", "I have to have a nice car!", "NEED TO MAKE MORE BABIES!!!", etc
I'm skeptical that you know what "unhealthily skinny" is. I know someone that's 6'1" and 155-160#, eats like a horse and doesn't work out much at all, and is perfectly healthy by any metric you'd care to throw at him. Unhealthy would be sub-150# most likely.
We've always privately thought he's breeding colonies of tapeworms in his intestines to stay at that weight but the doctor has said otherwise.
What this means is more people are getting more than enough to eat. Starvation is in decline, partly thanks to the rollback of a lot of Marxist totalitarianism and globalization. People who live in a food-rich nation have 99 problems, and starvation isn't one.
People who don't have food only have one problem. We lose sight of this.
They found that over the 40-year-span, the proportion of obese men worldwide more than tripled, to roughly 11 percent, and the proportion of obese woman more than doubled, to about 15 percent.
60%? Where did you get 60%, it appears that TFS says 15% of women and 11% of men, not exactly anywhere near 60%.
APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
They found that over the 40-year-span, the proportion of obese men worldwide more than tripled, to roughly 11 percent, and the proportion of obese woman more than doubled, to about 15 percent.
60%? Where did you get 60%, it appears that TFS says 15% of women and 11% of men, not exactly anywhere near 60%.
And this guy was going on about accuracy
Build a Man a Fire, and He'll Be Warm for a Day. Set a Man on Fire, and He'll Be Warm for the Rest of His Life.
First you're incorrect: BMI is segmented by gender.
No, it's not. The world health organization only gives one number for each weight classification threshold, not two. That is less than 18.5 is underweight, >25 is overweight, >30 is Obese 1, >35 is Obese 2, >40 is Obese 3 or also called morbidly obese. There is no distinction between male and female, period, and the formula for calculating BMI doesn't take into account male or female.
Second it's not a load of crap: the thresholds are set such that if it says you're obese, there's a 95% chance you are (statistically), but if it says you're not you still may be.
When they calculated these numbers, they didn't come up with i.e. >25 for overweight for males, they actually came up with 26.4 for males and 25.8 for females. They also came up with obese at 32.1 for females and 31.1 for males. By the way, did you notice how those numbers obviously don't scale linearly? Another thing this ignores is that it's actually healthier to slowly gain weight as you age. This is why the percentile figure is a better guideline. Oh and by the way, 18.5 BMI is well below a safe threshold for being underweight for males who shouldn't be under 20.7. It is unsafe for females as well, but only just barely, and again, due to rounding they chose that number.
They chose 25 and 30 respectively, for both males and females, because they round nicely and are easier to remember, but still remain problematic unless you happen to be just the average person at the average age. However if you're just trying to get a quick measurement on the spot and you don't have a calculator on hand, 25 is ok.
In fact, I recently had a new appointment with a doctor I hadn't seen in the past, and I told him I was aiming for 161lbs, (BMI of 23.235) and he didn't understand why I was making the effort because he had just calculated my BMI at 25.8, which he said is perfectly healthy. (I explained to him my renal impairment immediately afterwards and he agreed that it would probably be a good idea.)
I have the same thing. 250 dropped to 160. People would ask me if I was sick before congratulating me on my weight loss.
Then I would hear that I was too skinny.
I think it is because the average person is overweight so healthy looks skinny now.
You fat fuckers!
Honestly, I've never heard of a strain of flu killing off the "ultra healthy".
I think it is because the average person is overweight so healthy looks skinny now.
This. BMI is certainly not a perfect measurement, fx if you build a lot of muscle, but not so badly off for most people as some here seem to believe.
So buy a freezer? buy a slow cooker? (buy a $1000 set of clothes to get a job interview and then a job)
I forgot.. buy a meat grinder? I didn't know that was cheap, and it takes room.
Just kidding!
Bulking up, flavouring, greasing up, proteining.. mmmm, those are nice things indeed! Although the latter word isn't a real word.
Re. the freezer : if you're poor it's possible to have one, but you would likely depend on your Land Lord having chosen to include one. Small kitchen fridges (waist height) with a freezer do exist and the freezer is real sometimes, albeit small. Just enough room for an ice cream, a pizza and the shit ton of frost that's in there. I'm sure I could do what I saw my grandma do : she cooks vegetable soup then freezes it.
The self-powered slow cookers / crock pots I see on image search look like greatly useful piece of kit. On this continent they're likely uncommon (and if you're poor : are you going to put it on the stove? on the floor?)
I don't know the fuck why but beans are like 5x more expensive than canned beans here, so canned beans it is and there isn't much need for cooking.
One issue that's a bit sad is many people will be a single 20-something then 30-something, or a single mom with one or two kids etc. and thus doing a three-meal chicken (or just two meals) isn't much practical.
It's a general guide for people of average activity levels. Also BMI is not a good metric for general health, as there are more dimensions to health than can be represented by a single number.
If you're an athlete with 5% (or less!) body fat, then BMI is a totally meaningless number. But BMI is really easy data to capture compared to other metrics for physical health, and it can be a useful tool for statistics over large populations (no pun intended).
If people perceive you as "skinny", remember their opinions are relative. They are possibly just used to seeing people who are overweight and anyone approaching historic average has "their bones sticking out". Of course there is a some range of individual variation, but it's not quite as wide as other species of animals. Example in other species: greyhound dog versus shar-pei, a you can see the ends of ribs in a healthy greyhound, and the entire rib in a malnourished greyhound. but never in a healthy shar-pei. Humans don't vary quite so much as dogs.
“Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
Michael Moore is a lifetime NRA member
We kicked the shit out of that horseman and threw him on top of Pestilence. Now we're coming for you DEATH!
Sadly War seems to linger around, although we've shrunk him down quite a bit.
Pasta makes you fat.
Most flours are simple carbs, leading to fat-assery.
Bananas are just sugar.
Please don't spout half-truths.
"The good: This food is very low in Saturated Fat, Cholesterol and Sodium. It is also a good source of Dietary Fiber, Vitamin C, Potassium and Manganese, and a very good source of Vitamin B6.
The bad: A large portion of the calories in this food come from sugars."
Also note the sugar in bananas is not quite the same thing as the white stuff people put in their coffee or sprinkle on their breakfast cereal.
The amount of sugar in a banana is dependant on how ripe it is. A green banana is pretty nasty tasting because it has no sweetness to it while a black (very overripe banana) is like eating candy (sickly sweet for a fruit)...
I always wonder who determines when a person is obese or not. Is it a definition cooked up by health and life insurances? Or is there any substantial scientific research done? I wonder because both my grandparents would have easily fit into the obese category and they lived to be 96 and 98, respectively.
The largest cultural shift to happen in your time frame has been two-income households and on top of that most people are working longer hours than ever before.
That means less time to cook nutritious meals, less time to monitor what the kids are doing, and less time for recreation.
This notion of a qualitative shift within a few generations is asinine. There's a reason energy drinks happened within this generation. People are tired and harried.
remember when you couldn't change the channel without getting out of your chair? if you gave people the option of perfect health until 100 years of age, but they would have to give up the remote, which do you think they would choose? i'm not even sure which i would choose.
Star Trek transporters are just 3d printers.
Looking back at photos the "fat kid" wasn't that by current standards either. And that was with baked goods at the school canteen dripping with fat (cream buns, sausage rolls etc). No carbonated drinks though, which I suspect are a very major part of the cause.
absolutely, sugary drink are a major source of excess calories. time was, of course, when a normal soda was 6 ounces. now the norm is to guzzle down 4 times that. and that's led to every other kind of sugary drink, crapuccinos etc.
Star Trek transporters are just 3d printers.
I see this "choices you made in the past put you where you are now" attitude a lot, especially in political debate. This is, of course, true - and it is also true that choices (or circumstances) of your parents, their parents, etc. also influence your starting point and therefore your chances of "a good life."
What I think is lacking in today's "American Dream," is the ability for anyone - regardless of present circumstance - to pick themselves up and realistically turn their life around to achieve "middle class" or better status within the next 10 years. Too many people are too held down by poverty to realistically do anything about it before they die, and this can happen to them before they even reach the age of high school graduation.
If you have to work 40+ hours a week to keep a safe roof over your head with decent clothing and food to eat, there's no realistic capacity to also pay for a valuable education that opens doors to a better job. I'm not saying that a higher education should be a requirement for a decent paying middle class job, high school or equivalent should be enough, but it mostly isn't. Throw in a couple of children, part time jobs that require travel expenses to/from work and have dynamic/unpredictable schedules, medical expenses and the other realities of living poor and the idea of night school becomes less and less realistic.
I'm not saying that it's impossible, people hit the lottery every week, and get other fortunate breaks much more often, but it's not something that people can just "put their mind to" and make happen on any kind of realistic/regular basis.
People can certainly pick themselves up and turn their lives around - if they haven't made too much of a mess of it already (which is generally based on the choices that they have made that put them wherever they are now).
My experience has been that the vast majority people "held down by poverty" in the US are actually held down by the limitations they set on themselves. There are social services throughout the country that just don't exist in third world countries. Education is free through high school. Free food. Free housing. Free medical care. None of this is available to the poor in third world countries.
Now if you take an Indian (the kind from India), generally speaking, and you put them in the US and you give them the advantages that an American gets just by being born in the US - they'll take those advantages and run with them and while they'll start with nothing they will generally succeed at building a life for themselves. It's a question of attitude and knowing what life is like when social services aren't available. They'll scrimp and they'll save and they won't spend 100 dollars on sneakers or spend their evenings watching serials or sports. They'll work that 40+ hours a week and then on top of that they'll go to school or open a small side business of their own. When that fails they'll do it again and again until it works.
Even in the situation you describe the overall situation you are describing is a major success story for most of the world. Those two kids that you 'threw in' were choices - either the choice of not using protection (again something that is freely available in the US that is often not available at all in other parts of the world) or the choice made to have those children. Choices again.
My father in law is from a third world country. His village still has no electricity even now and running water only in the sense that there are streams (no plumbing). He and his older brother were living alone in a town away from the family from when they were 11 and 13, respectively. They shared an apartment and leaved on what their parents could spare after paying for their not free education and the costs of feeding a family of nine. Today my father in law is a licensed doctor here in France - a country he didn't even speak the language of when he came here. His older brother is a genetic researcher and professor fi
blindly antisocialist = antisocial
Of course you can "hindsight" every choice every person ever made and point out places where their life _might_ have gone easier or better had they done the other thing.
What I dislike most about life in the USA is the extreme element of risk-reward that goes into so many life choices. Starting from an impoverished background and pursuing a medical doctor degree is a very high risk undertaking in the US, even if you have all the aptitudes for it. PreMed programs are arbitrarily difficult, they flunk out huge percentages of capable candidates just because the numbers allowed to progress up the ladder are strictly limited. Many "respected" schools are very expensive, so now they offer you loans: take out a huge debt on the chance that you get a good paying job later to pay it off. Most business has always been a matter of luck + connections - without the connections you need to be very lucky to succeed, with them you have a better chance but still can fail even if you make all the best choices (given the information available when you start.) The safer businesses (franchises, etc.) require you to be quite wealthy, and put that wealth at risk, just to start.
There is plenty of chaos in the US economy, enough that some poor people become rich and some rich people become poor, often with little connection to the "wiseness" of the choices that they have made.
Of course you can "hindsight" every choice every person ever made and point out places where their life _might_ have gone easier or better had they done the other thing.
What I dislike most about life in the USA is the extreme element of risk-reward that goes into so many life choices. Starting from an impoverished background and pursuing a medical doctor degree is a very high risk undertaking in the US, even if you have all the aptitudes for it. PreMed programs are arbitrarily difficult, they flunk out huge percentages of capable candidates just because the numbers allowed to progress up the ladder are strictly limited. Many "respected" schools are very expensive, so now they offer you loans: take out a huge debt on the chance that you get a good paying job later to pay it off. Most business has always been a matter of luck + connections - without the connections you need to be very lucky to succeed, with them you have a better chance but still can fail even if you make all the best choices (given the information available when you start.) The safer businesses (franchises, etc.) require you to be quite wealthy, and put that wealth at risk, just to start.
There is plenty of chaos in the US economy, enough that some poor people become rich and some rich people become poor, often with little connection to the "wiseness" of the choices that they have made.
Do you have the possibility of going to India for awhile?
blindly antisocialist = antisocial
It is fool not to understand they have interests in obesity.
Do you have the possibility of going to India for awhile?
In no way am I comparing the US to other countries and their current state of opportunity or fairness... mature places like Europe have incredibly entrenched wealth/ownership much moreso than the US, emerging markets like India/China still have crushing poverty for the majority of the population like the US hasn't seen for 100+ years. This is more a statement of where we are vs where we could (should) be going.
Still, emerging markets like India also offer incredible opportunity for building wealth - if you have enough to invest/risk, you can be making 4x the gains there that you might for equivalent investments in the US today.
Do you have the possibility of going to India for awhile?
In no way am I comparing the US to other countries and their current state of opportunity or fairness... mature places like Europe have incredibly entrenched wealth/ownership much moreso than the US, emerging markets like India/China still have crushing poverty for the majority of the population like the US hasn't seen for 100+ years. This is more a statement of where we are vs where we could (should) be going.
Still, emerging markets like India also offer incredible opportunity for building wealth - if you have enough to invest/risk, you can be making 4x the gains there that you might for equivalent investments in the US today.
I'm not talking about building wealth. I'm talking about gaining perspective and adjusting one's attitude to fit the realities of life as opposed to the sense of entitlement that we westerners are born with.
That person of the family of four who wants to go to night school but 'cannot' should go live in India for a year and then we'll see if they still think that they 'cannot' do night school back wherever they come from even given the inconveniences that they face.
blindly antisocialist = antisocial
Do you have the possibility of going to India for awhile?
In no way am I comparing the US to other countries and their current state of opportunity or fairness... mature places like Europe have incredibly entrenched wealth/ownership much moreso than the US, emerging markets like India/China still have crushing poverty for the majority of the population like the US hasn't seen for 100+ years. This is more a statement of where we are vs where we could (should) be going.
Still, emerging markets like India also offer incredible opportunity for building wealth - if you have enough to invest/risk, you can be making 4x the gains there that you might for equivalent investments in the US today.
I'm not talking about building wealth. I'm talking about gaining perspective and adjusting one's attitude to fit the realities of life as opposed to the sense of entitlement that we westerners are born with.
That person of the family of four who wants to go to night school but 'cannot' should go live in India for a year and then we'll see if they still think that they 'cannot' do night school back wherever they come from even given the inconveniences that they face.
I consider a sense of entitlement part of the human condition, and not an altogether good one. I think that humanity as a whole needs to get stronger perspective on what they are doing to their planet and adjust their expectations of what the Earth should be giving us - this guy stood up and published a book along those lines: http://eowilsonfoundation.org/... basically what I ranted in a blog about a few years back: https://5050by2150.wordpress.c...
Still, even if we do scale back our expectations of what the Earth should be giving us, I don't think for a minute that those of us who are not "untouchable" should be grateful for our standing, or that the untouchables should be grateful to be alive as humans at all... Those who are more fortunate should share, better than they do today, with those who are less fortunate. From the perspective of an already highly fortunate westerner, the sad perspective of the last 30 years is that we have been sharing less and less, not more and more. It's an extremely complex picture, nothing one person can realistically communicate to another in its entirety, but the high level trends seem clear enough from where I stand.