Benefical to health, not to ADM profits.
Yep. They don't appear to have that many competitors which probably doesn't help.
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/co?s=ADM+Competitors
Benefical to health, not to ADM profits.
Having people in my own life who try desperately to keep to a healthy weight (and cannot do so due to medical conditions and/or medications) I feel that the universal "just eat less and exercise more you slob" is quite rude. I find it especially rude when such comments come from a person who I can tell (from their lack of muscle tone) is only thin due to a fluke of metabolism.
Even at my thinnest and healthiest, when I was walking miles every day and eating very little, I still looked big. It upset me to no end that even with all that effort I simply went from a size 18 to a size 14 and stayed there. Some people can sit on the couch all day eating Cheetos and look like a walking skeleton, some can exercise and eat right for years and still look like something out of a Rubens painting. I became a much happier person when I just accepted that and started working on feeling good (and having muscle tone) rather than looking good.
This ^
I don't mind if other people choose to be fat, that's up to them. I'm a smoker and I don't expect people to pick on me for my habit, so why should I pick on fat people?
In the UK, taxpayers pay for the surge in obesity and obesity-related illnesses through the state-funded healthcare system. Tobacco is taxed to pay for the cost of treated smoking related illnesses, what about the clincally obese? I'm not advocating taxing high fat and sugary foods, for this would penalise normal weight people who enjoy the odd treat, just as much as the obese, but at what point do people who have brought their ill-health upon themselves be made to pay the cost of their health care?
Tricky dilemma.
I have not read much about that movement, but to me it means accepting the state of being overweight or obese as an acceptable norm.
I'm not in favor of that because to me that means the same thing as us, as an entire society, throwing our hands up in the air and giving up on this perplexing problem that has only occurred on a massive scale fairly recently (1980s or so).
Even though I'm in the process of losing weight, again, for the 6th time since my late 20s -- I don't think we should give up figuring this out.
I'm not ready to give up yet at any rate.
And before anyone posts with a comment along the lines of:
"Move more, eat less"
"A calorie is a calorie -- you must burn off more than you consume"
My response is yes, of course, that is true, but IMHO it's more complicated than that.
Personally, I have finally understood that I only get good results when the majority of what I eat is "whole foods" with high fiber and little to no added processed sugar. We are biochemical machines and eating sets off a cascade of biological reactions that is affected by not only how much we eat but also by what we eat.
Yes, I've heard it a great deal. Often from little slips of women, hardly more than girls, with skinny stick arms and next to no muscle on them. Occasionally from people who don't do this themselves, do not seem to understand that they have won the metabolism lottery and should stop gloating at the rest of us.
Actually, I have never been insulted when the person who says this to me has obviously followed this advice themselves. When someone with nice muscle tone and possibly the little bit of extra skin at their neck that indicates massive weight loss says something like that you do well to listen. Then again, people who have actually followed that advice usually have more to say than just empty platitudes.
If it's possible to get them into a seat with more legroom and some nice person is willing to switch, then they should be accommodated to a reasonable extent. They should try to book their seats early or get to the gate early to avoid this if at all possible. If you're too big widthwise to fit into a standard seat though, then you should pay for business class or buy two seats.
Ideologically I veer towards less state intervention in the private realm, not more, so I'm in a bit of a dilemma about this. I'm a smoker (see the edit I made to my post above, which I made having reflected on the idea of 'normalisation' of certain behaviours) and I don't take kindly to the state meddling the choices I make about what to put in my body. The state's job is to look after the public realm, what I do in the private sphere is my business.A tax might be a good idea if it was levied at an amount that would not make the odd treat an unaffordable luxery even for the poor.
What I personally find annoying is how in the US many healthy foods cost more than their unhealthier counterparts. For example I can get 20 pounds of white rice for $5.00 but only about 3 lbs of brown rice for the same amount of money. I can buy a huge loaf of white bread loaded with corn syrup for 99 cents, but have to pay over $3.00 for a smaller loaf of 100% whole grain bread. Perhaps the difference is not that much money for an individual, but it can be more significant for a family that is struggling paycheck to paycheck. It would be nice to see that price differential between healthy and unhealthy foods disappear, or at least get much smaller.
I also think it would be good to see processed foods with added processed sugar stripped of its fiber sold in separate stores much like alcohol is only sold in liquor stores in most states in the US. Not going to happen, but I think that such a policy would be beneficial over the long run.
I don't expect the airline to accommodate me because I'm tall.
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What that should be telling you is that whatever you are doing, especially what you think works , is not, throw it out the window, get rid of it, don't look back.
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Your essentially trying to cram the square peg into the round hole here, but because the square peg is what you would rather use, you are making excuses as to why it is not going into the round hole.
We weigh too much ( with very limited exception.) because we eat too much. Then a lot of us try to eat the same amount of food but "healthy" food, and still wonder why in the world we weigh so much. It is simple, our bodies don't need to consume the amount of food we want to, we don't need to eat every time we get a hunger pang ( again with rare medical exceptions.), and whether this is uncooked almonds, or a candy bar, the fact remains we are tossing more fuel onto the fire when it doesn't need it.
The biggest problem is folks think that they need to shave a bit off their diet, i know i did, but the stark reality is we need to severely reduce the intake of food. Skipping that midnight snack isn't going to do it, having a light lunch isn't going to do it, one needs to completely rethink their relationship with food.
I have just about the slowest metabolism out there, i eat like a bird, and if i don't, i gain weight at an epic rate. It took a lot of self convincing that even though it isn't fair i can't eat what others can, if i want to be thin, i have to do it. Life isn't fair, and dieting certainly is not fair, but if you want to lose the weight you have to give up on this concept of the "Perfect diet" in which your never hungry, and can eat at your own pace. If we throw out all the harmful fad diets, a good rule of thumb is that the less you enjoy the diet the better it is going to work.
Ideologically I veer towards less state intervention in the private realm, not more, so I'm in a bit of a dilemma about this. I'm a smoker (see the edit I made to my post above, which I made having reflected on the idea of 'normalisation' of certain behaviours) and I don't take kindly to the state meddling the choices I make about what to put in my body. The state's job is to look after the public realm, what I do in the private sphere is my business.
That said, I confess I'm a bit fattist and don't find fat people attractive, but I hate health zealots (especially ones in government and prohibitionist pressure groups) more than anything.I support people having autonomy over what they do in their private life as long as it doesn't start impacting on others. So, if I smoke, I believe that there should be private smokers only clubs where I can go and smoke away from non-smokers. If people want to enjoy food and be a bit chubby then good on them for not being brow beaten by health nazis.
But, there's being a bit on the chubby side and there's being dangerous obese. It's the latter that we're seeing more of these days and that's a social problem that is costing us dear. I don't mind paying tax on tobacco, to cover costs to the NHS. Any more than that is taking the mick. IIRC, taxing high sugar and high fat foods is something they're trying in the Netherlands but personally I don't think it's the answer. I think we need to look more at why some people get so out of control that they become morbidly obese and tackle the problem from that end. The problem is with the person, not the sticky cake.
Coming on to the point you raise, Kaylee, about the discrepancy in price between processed and non-processed foods, I'm guessing this is due to the processing add cheaper ingredients: sugar, high fructose corn syrup, vegetable fat, to bulk out foodstuffs, therefore making them go further, and give them longer shelf life. 'Healthy' foods tend to have a shorter shelf life and are therefore more expensive. The white loaf in your example may have preservatives added to stop the bread going stale, and sugar to make the dough go further (please someone correct me if I'm wrong, I'm not a baker or a chemist), whilst the wholemeal loaf is probably free of preservatives, hence the dearer price tag.
This is so well said.We weigh too much ( with very limited exception.) because we eat too much. Then a lot of us try to eat the same amount of food but "healthy" food, and still wonder why in the world we weigh so much. It is simple, our bodies don't need to consume the amount of food we want to, we don't need to eat every time we get a hunger pang ( again with rare medical exceptions.), and whether this is uncooked almonds, or a candy bar, the fact remains we are tossing more fuel onto the fire when it doesn't need it.
The biggest problem is folks think that they need to shave a bit off their diet, i know i did, but the stark reality is we need to severely reduce the intake of food. Skipping that midnight snack isn't going to do it, having a light lunch isn't going to do it, one needs to completely rethink their relationship with food.
Yes, we've overcome the big problems in history of malnutrition and starvation, and that is something that collectively we should be proud of. Now we have a situation where obesity is associated with poverty, whilst in the past it was the rich, if anyone, who were fat. And then only a small minority of the rich. Gout-ridden kings spring to mind.I prefer less vs. more laws and regulations also but I think this area is an exception. A lot of what food ends up in our stores has to do with price supports which must involve laws and regulations. So since they already exist, why not shape the regulations to benefit the majority? I don't think we want to eliminate regulations in this area entirely because that would probably cause a situation where we would once again have [more] starving people. That seems to be a problem that we, as a country, have somehow managed to ease. But can't we regulate our food supply along with price supports in a way that deals with the relatively new obesity problem?
Vested interests. But substituting one carbohydrate staple for another isn't going to make people eat less. They'll just eat too much quinoa and smother it in butter. The bottom line is that in a world where we have abundant cheap food and cars to drive around in people like to satisfy their once-useful evolutionary drive to seek out food, but over and over again.I think that is part of the reason but not the entire reason. I recall reading that we have a lot of corn and corn derivatives in our food supply because of govt subsidiaries. Well, if corn isn't that healthy for us -- why not subsidize something else? Like quinoa for example? Or perhaps we don't need corn subsidies anymore since the farming industry no longer consists of mostly family farms.
I don't know what chia is, I'm afraid.I think sometimes opportunism governs prices. Chia seeds is suppose to be quite healthy and in my neighborhood goes for $7.99 a pound. But I recall chia pets being sold very cheaply back in the 1960s or 1970s as a gag gift, apparently before we knew about its health benefits.
Kinda like pet rocks.I don't know what chia is, I'm afraid.
With other medical disorders, we don't judge people for having them or kibbutz on their treatment..
A kibbutz is an Israeli collective community. I think you mean kibbitz.
Yes, we've overcome the big problems in history of malnutrition and starvation, and that is something that collectively we should be proud of.
Now we have a situation where obesity is associated with poverty, whilst in the past it was the rich, if anyone, who were fat. And then only a small minority of the rich. Gout-ridden kings spring to mind.
I don't think raising the price of sugary and fatty foods by a few cents/pence is going to change the behaviour of the socially disadvantaged who make poor food choices. It's the same with alcohol. Raising the price of alcohol doesn't stop poor people drinking, it just means they spend more money on alcohol.
The food industry is dominated by big, powerful players who know how to sell cheaply produced junk food at inflated prices. Can you see your government taking on someone like Nestle? I can't see that happening.
Vested interests. But substituting one carbohydrate staple for another isn't going to make people eat less. They'll just eat too much quinoa and smother it in butter. The bottom line is that in a world where we have abundant cheap food and cars to drive around in people like to satisfy their once-useful evolutionary drive to seek out food, but over and over again.
I don't pretend to have the answers. Here in the UK there's a bit of drive by government to intervene in child obesity: weighing kids in schools and writing officious letters to parents if their child's BMI is too high, that sort of thing. I don't like this, it's nanny state. I'd rather see a change in attitudes come from individuals, which going back to the OP would require less fat acceptance, not more. If it was socially unacceptable to have fat kids, then you wouldn't let your kids get fat, period.
I don't know what chia is, I'm afraid.
So the next time you feel like bashing a fattie and congratulating yourself on your only achievement in life being remaining a certain size - ask yourself this: if there was enough evidence that the healthiest weight category is that one or two pips above mine - would I then go out of my way to gain and retain the "missing" fat for the sake of my health, despite what problems that would cause in my daily life and how hard I would have to work to maintain that? (If you have a quick metabolism for example, you might have to plan your entire day around eating so you don't miss important calories. You would also have to keep eating even after you are stuffed, to keep this up.)
Well, would you?
Hmmm.... I would take this study with pinch of salt. Research on longevity indicates that long term caloric restriction is the key to long life, not being "somewhat overweight" or "overweight". Is this study looking at correlation, rather than causation? Maybe that's why the results are at odds with what research has told us.As pointed out by SezMe the generally accepted study that checked morbidity showed that the only categories that had any increased morbidity was underweight (by post 1998 bmi charts) and the morbidly obese (by same chart) - i.e those too obese to move themselves. The underweight were slightly worse off, then the morbidly obese followed by the normal weight group. The "somewhat overweight" and the "overweight" groups had the best survival but generally the differences were pretty small and it is hard to say that any particular weight in the span that was neither underweight nor morbidly obese is healthier. Please note that this study used post 1998 bmi cutoffs as measurement. BMI is of itself only useful on population level and the decision to move overweight from pre 1998 bmi 26 to post 1998 bmi 24.9 made millions overweight over night was made for no really good reason. - When people start going on about health around fat people they almost never bother to actually check their facts.
Abstract
The diet known as calorie restriction (CR) is the most reproducible way to extend the lifespan of mammals. Many of the early hypotheses to explain this effect were based on it being a passive alteration in metabolism. Yet, recent data from yeast, worms, flies, and mammals support the idea that CR is not simply a passive effect but an active, highly conserved stress response that evolved early in life's history to increase an organism's chance of surviving adversity.