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| In the U.S., "a few extra pounds" might mean . . . |
As luck would have it, the very next day after my post ran, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services issued its Scientific Report of the 2015 Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee, and the Advisory Committee made one of the same recommendations I did. In Part B, Chapter 2, of the report, the Committee recommends:
Implementing economic and pricing approaches to promote the purchase of healthy foods and beverages. For example, taxation on higher sugar-and sodium-containing foods may encourage consumers to reduce consumption, and revenues generated could support health promotion efforts.It seems obvious that good public policy is to tax things that are harmful to the public and subsidize things that are beneficial, not the other way around. As it is now, we subsidize corn, for example, which ends up as
But I was remiss in not pointing out, in my original
- Obese women (BMI > 40) in occupations that involve interacting with other people earn about 5 percent less than their normal-weight counterparts, according to a study by Jennifer Shinall of Vanderbilt University Law School in Nashville, Tennessee. Studies have consistently found that overweight adults earn less than their normal-weight peers. Overweight workers are more apt to miss days of work due to health issues; they get fewer promotions; etc.
- Minority and less-educated workers are more likely to be overweight, compounding the wage difference that already hampers those groups in the workforce. (Black workers are almost 1.5 times as likely to be obese as white employees.)
- A billion additional gallons of gasoline are consumed each year transporting overweight and obese Americans, according to research from Sheldon Jacobson and Douglas King at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. (Ever wonder why airlines charge extra for luggage now? Americans are heavier than they were just 20 years ago.)
Wouldn't you agree?
You can help. Please join me in submitting your comments on the Committee's report at http://www.health.gov/dietaryguidelines/dga2015/comments/writeComments.aspx. The comment deadline in April 8. I've submitted my comments, and if you live in the U.S., I strongly urge you to do likewise. Please tweet the link.
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I've made some improvements to my Twitter timeline-scraping code and can now thank even more people for retweeting me. The following list (of people who retweeted me yesterday) might still not be 100% complete, but it's more complete than it would have been with my old code. (Please follow the folks shown below. They retweet! Click their pictures; the pics are live links.)
Have you added your name to our mailing list? What the heck are you waiting for, a personal invitation from @TheTweetOfGod?
Also please visit HackYourDepression.com when you have a chance, and share the link with someone you know! Thanks!

As an obese person THANK YOU for writing this. As kind as society is in trying to make fat cool - it's not like being gay. Fat is a choice. Fat is a lifestyle. Being fat doesn't make me a bad person or less of a human being but it does put me in danger. You rock!
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you took it in the right spirit. I took a bit of heat on Twitter for the choice of photo, which to me is a neutral photo -- people bring their own prejudices to the photo. I was in a live-in relationship for over a year with a woman who weighed 250 lbs., so I know a tiny bit about what heavy people go through. Fat is and is not a choice. Sure, you choose what you put in your body, but also society chooses for you. It's a multidimensional problem. It's not simple.
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ReplyDeleteObesity can cause many problem in a human body. so you need to do some exercise to control your obesity. you can also use fitness tools like Garmin while doing exercise it can track your every physical activity and statistics recorded in each activity let you analyze your performance and improve on it next time. Garmin has also introduced an application Garmin Express that helps you in easily setting up, registering and managing your garmin devices. It also monitors and watches the work of your garmin devices on your computer.
ReplyDeleteDownload Garmin Expres