[Mb-civic] Why obesity is winning - Derrick Z. Jackson - The Boston
Globe
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Fri Aug 19 04:45:04 PDT 2005
<>Why obesity is winning
By Derrick Z. Jackson | August 19, 2005 - The Boston Globe
NATIONAL PUBLIC Radio, which Republicans love to flog for ''liberal
bias," began a discussion this week about gasoline conservation with:
''When you go to McDonald's or Wendy's, park the car, get out, go in and
buy your hamburger instead of sitting at the window, letting it idle."
How American. Get out of the car to save gas. I figure if that happened
on the ''liberal airwaves," it demonstrates how junk-food marketeers
have conquered the national psyche. This is ironic because the majority
of major fast-food chains, including McDonald's, Wendy's, Burger King,
Coca-Cola, Pizza Hut, Domino's, KFC, Taco Bell, and their lobbying arms,
the National Restaurant Association and the American Beverage
Association, give the vast majority of their political contributions to
GOP causes. They are the very causes that keep trying to deep-six NPR
and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Since 1990, the food and
beverage industry and its executives have given $247 million to
Republicans and $110 million to Democrats.
More important, the politicians do the industy's bidding to enact bans
on obesity lawsuits, defeat or water down attempts to provide healthier
meals and drinks in schools, and decry any limitations to marketing. The
National Restaurant Association, with GOP Senators Mitch McConnell of
Kentucky, Rick Santorum and Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, and John
Cornyn of Texas in its pocket, held a press conference in June at which
NRA president Steven Anderson said food establishments ''should not be
blamed for issues of personal responsibility and freedom of choice."
The rhetoric of ''choice" is meant to obscure obesity's 112,000 deaths a
year, according to the Centers for Disease Control. That is nearly three
times more than the toll from drugs and alcohol. The toll is sure to
worsen as adult obesity has doubled since 1980 to 30 percent. The direct
heathcare costs of obesity have zoomed from $52 billion in 1995 to $75
billion in 2003. The healthcare costs are half that of those attributed
to smoking, and the gap is closing.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2005/08/19/why_obesity_is_winning/
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