KoKo (1000+ posts) Fri Aug-21-09 08:36 PM
Original message
NBC's Tim Russert was "Overweight" ..he died,yet CNN/ MSNBC/NBC is saying FAT PEOPLE are Problem?
This morning on that "Morning Joe Show" with Zbignew Bzhezinski's daughter "Mika the Fair" they were pushing that "Health Care Reform" should be on Prevention...and that Fat Americans were the cause of their own health care problems.
Here's my problem with that: They left out Genetic Disease..stuff we can't control that goes beyond lifestyle and is just in our code that we need to be monitored for. Their emphasis on "Fat Americans" didn't take into account that their own fat "Tim Russert" had a sudden heart attack on the set of his NBC Show and they spent DAYS Eulogizing and fawning over the FUNERAL which was broadcast as if REAGAN II had died!
Now ALL the Cables (not just MSNBC) are blaming HEALTH CARE RISING COSTS on FAT AMERICANS!
Where do these people like Joe Scarborough, Sanja Gupta,(CNN), "Dr. Nancy", Zbignew Bzhezinski's daughter (Mika) and the rest of the toned bare-armed females and tarted up silk suited male anchors on these Cable channels who push this JUNK SCIENCE for THINK TANKS get off preaching to the rest of us?
Blah, blah, bitch, blah, blah, moan...
Only two classes...many worker drones and nannies and we feed and care for the Queen Bee and America is the Giant Hive...The Hive being the Military/Media/Corporate/Industrial State.
Blah, blah, more bitching, blah..
Scrabbling and Scrambling to juggle jobs and family and seeing their wages so puny and declining they are just "holding on" by whatever way they can. If they have to eat Pizza and McBurgers seven nights a week..they have to do it....to get by.
Obviously Russert and the rest of the CABLE CROWD have Nannies, Cooks, Drivers and much STAFF/HELP to get them through the day.
Blah, blah, more blah, fat blah....
WHY DO THE PUNDITS NOW CLAIM THAT "FAT AMERICA" doesn't deserve HEALTH CARE unless they give up their FAT WAYS? Like we are "Pigs at the Trough" ...when we know that the REAL PIGS are WALL ST. BANKERS and the REST OF THE CORPORATIST INSURANCE SUCK UPS that CONTROLLED AMERICA!
Blah, blah, blah..
BTW...YES our AMERICAN DIET with CRAP FAST FOOD IS BAD! We need to eat more local, fresh foods and have them prepared at home. BUT...how can folks working two and three jobs do this? How? And as far as exercise goes...WHEN DO WORKING FOLKS with that kind of schedule have the TIME if they have families? We can do better...but this media BLAME BLITZ isn't being helpful. It's casting blame on Americans at the bottom...who have been hoodwinked by everyone...
tinkerbell41 (233 posts) Fri Aug-21-09 08:58 PM
2. Right ****ing on!!!!!!
I worked 2 jobs for about 4 yrs. Single mom, I cannot tell you how I didn't have time to cook, let alone exercise. If the place didn't have a window, we didn't eat. I was not happy about it. I like to cook, eat organic, free range most of the time. If I wasn't so stressed out every ****ing day, worried about my lack of employment (now), my health insurance running out, paying for college etc...
Maybe I could concentrate on myself and my health. **** THEM!!!!!!
An additional rant, when I am working I get up at 5am start at 7 home by 430, cook dinner, clean up
etc.. After working a 8hr day doing physical labor outdoors in the heat and cold I have no ****ing energy left.
Berry Cool (1000+ posts) Fri Aug-21-09 09:25 PM
Response to Original message
5. Actually, the 1950s were not a golden age of healthy eating either.
"Average American Lifestyles today are not like in the 1950's where Mom stays home and packs nutritional lunches and has the family meal at 6:00 p.m. filled with lots of lively conversation and filled with the latest 'Food Pyramid/s Most Nutritious.'"?
First of all, there WAS no "Food Pyramid" back in the '50s. The "Food Pyramid" didn't come about until 1992. Even back in the '70s, what we kids in school were lectured about was the "Basic Four" food groups--meat, eggs and fish; dairy; fruits and vegetables; and breads, grains and cereals--and we were lectured to try to eat an EQUAL amount of each group each day; there was no talk of eating more from this group or less from that group.
The '50s are before my time, but the impression I get is that notions of proper nutrition were even less sophisticated then--there just seemed to be a general idea that "protein" (as in, a big thick steak) was good and "vitamins and minerals" were good, and that was about it. But no one worried about stuff like sugar, trans fats or cholesterol. So even in the '50s, Mom didn't stay home and pack lunches or cook family meals based on "the food pyramid" or sophisticated nutritional concepts. In fact, the kings of the '50s kitchen were packaged convenience foods, much as they are today, except not as many and a lot less sophisticated.
nadinbrzezinski (1000+ posts) Fri Aug-21-09 10:00 PM
15. Still obesity wasn't that much of a problem there were reasons for it
People ate THREE STRUCTURED MEALS, if they were MC... and the kids had snacks. Not this eating at all times... which you can do today.
...
Of course don't get me started on the size of portions... lets simply not go there.
Missy Vixen (1000+ posts) Fri Aug-21-09 09:37 PMOne suspects that DUmmy Missy Vixen is neither sexually desirable nor "hot". Nor is she likely to bring the word "vixen" to mind.
8. But fat people are SATAN! Don't you all know this?
It's easy to ride the high horse over something half the population will never struggle with, and can look down their noses at. After all, fat is a moral failing!!!! All fat people are gluttons, pigs, don't care about themselves, lazy, stupid, on and on and on. They have no "self-control" or "willpower". One is not human in this society unless one is judged to be sexually desirable or "hot"; the fat aren't.
As someone has said previously, smokers were the scapegoat before, now it's fat people. There are millions more fat people than smokers at this point, so I expect the rhetoric will be ratcheted up to levels previously unknown to mankind. After all, there's not enough shaming and nastiness now.
Nadine has been talking about "The End of Overeating". I wait for the day when it's widely known that food additives work the same way in the human brain as nicotine does.
KoKo (1000+ posts) Fri Aug-21-09 10:23 PM
17. Yes...Health Care for Treadmills...not for basic treatment and screening.
Making us Pigs at trough...guilty for the lifestyle they forced us into. Monsanto/HFCS/Cloned Animal Farms/weird ingredient concoctions for taste and appearance...on and on. But, most of all you don't always get sick because of lifestyle. And why is it the Rich and Famous are given a pass for their lifestyles? Because they can afford the care ...plus the cosmetic surgery to keep them in the spotlight.
The rest of us just "suck." We are the ones to be penalized.
havocmom (1000+ posts) Fri Aug-21-09 10:27 PM
Response to Original message
19. do they think skinny people live forever?
My nephew was always very thin. He died at 42. Thin, but worked too long and hard.
We all die.
As far as eating good food: Corporations don't want to give up the profit on crap. Not much good food around, and not enough time to find, prepare it when you are busting your hump trying to keep a roof overhead with constantly falling real wages.
It's the capitalism that's ****ing killing us off too soon.
Berry Cool (1000+ posts) Fri Aug-21-09 09:25 PM
First of all, there WAS no "Food Pyramid" back in the '50s. The "Food Pyramid" didn't come about until 1992. Even back in the '70s, what we kids in school were lectured about was the "Basic Four" food groups--meat, eggs and fish; dairy; fruits and vegetables; and breads, grains and cereals--and we were lectured to try to eat an EQUAL amount of each group each day; there was no talk of eating more from this group or less from that group.
The familiar, black triangle, found on the majority of boxes of foods at the supermarket, has been an expected sight to our generation. Many Americans live by this food pyramid, which outlines a guide to healthy eating. Did you know that the food pyramid was conceived in the 1960s due to an increase in Americans getting heart disease? The U.S. Department of Agriculture responded with the food guide pyramid and Dietary Guidelines for Americans (a pamphlet which is updated every five years). Let’s trace the history of this food pyramid.
Early Beginnings
Before vitamins and minerals were even discovered, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) published its first dietary recommendations to the nation in 1894. Soon after that, in 1916, the first food guide, called Food For Young Children was published. Caroline Hunt, a nutritionist and the author, divided food into 5 groups: milk/meat, cereals, vegetables/fruits, fats/fatty foods, and sugars/sugary foods.
The Basic Seven and the Basic Four
Prompted by President Franklin Roosevelt, a National Nutrition Conference was called to action in 1941. For the first time, the USDA came up with Recommended Dietary Allowances (RDA’s) for Americans to follow. RDA’s specified caloric intake as well as essential nutrients. Also, the USDA announced the “Basic Seven†in 1943, which was a special modification of the nutritional guidelines to help people deal with the shortage of food supplies during the war.
Because of the complexity of the Basic Seven, the Basic Four was introduced and was used for the next 20 years. Milk, meats, fruits and vegetables, and grain products were the categories to eat foods from.
The Basic Four - modified
With chronic diseases like stroke and heart disease on the rise, the USDA needed to address the roles of unhealthy foods. So, during the late 1970s, the USDA added a fifth category to the Basic Four: fats, sweets and alcoholic beverages, for people to consume in moderation.
The Food Pyramid
A Pattern for Daily Food Choices, the USDA’s food guide, was being published annually since the 1980’s. However, people were still not aware that it existed. Beginning in 1988, the creation of a graphic to represent the food groups started. It needed to convey the three main ideas: variety, proportionality and moderation. The Food Guide Pyramid was finally released in 1992. Both the graphics and text conveyed variety and proportionality (by pictures of foods and the size of the food group).
On every food in the grocery store is a nutritional label. That was put into effect in 1994 by the Nutrition Labeling and Education Act. Now, Americans can follow the Food Guide Pyramid easily.
But, Americans remain confused about healthy eating. A 1996 telephone done by the USDA found that over 40 percent of people agreed with the statement “There are so many recommendations about healthy ways to eat, it’s hard to know what to believe.â€
Because of the emergence of so many diets and programs, it will be challenging to Americans to know just what to believe. It seems as if the information we hear is changing every day.
You know, I don't remember my grandparents whining and bitching like that bunch did. What has happened to Americans?
Entitlement society. Too many in the US now feel they deserve and are entitled to everything from $300 sneakers to world class health care on demand. To deny anyone is racist, homophobic, any other -ic and -ist. Entitlement parents have raised their children on the belief that although they can't pay for $300 sneakers they are deserved and it's those evil rich (Wall street, white, corporate, etc) folks keeping them from having what they deserve.
My grandparents worked hard for the little they had. Despite the fact that my grandmother lived in a 2 room block house, never had indoor plumbing and cooked over a coal stove up until she died in 1964 she was the happiest person I ever knew. I don't recall her ever saying she hated or even envied anyone.
My question was rhetorical. I think everyone on this forum(with a few exceptions) know what has happened. It's a tragedy isn't it, whiffle? My grandparents did well for themselves...even had a cabin for summertime up in the Pennsylvania woods. But my grandad drove around the same truck for 25 years and my grandmother made the house work on a grocery and household budget that was meager. They worked as a team and never complained about anything. Sure they'd get into political or current event discussions(pop pop in particular was an outspoken steelworker), but they never complained about their personal situations. My pop pop died trying to improve his life with what was an experimental surgery in '89. He never went in asking the doctor for reassurances or encouraging my grandmother to sue if something went wrong. He just said it was a risk he was willing to take to improve his quality of life; if that was it for him, then so be it. We knew his wishes. I find dealing with a lot of people nowadays tedious when I think of the person/people my grandfolks were(both sets). *sigh*(sorry for the story, peeps, just reminiscing and missing some of those people from my childhood)
However, if I am to be forced into certain activities and forced out of others then I think butt sex should be one of the activities to be forced out of.