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It's only a free choice if you know what your choosing.
Name one thing you have no idea what is in it.
It's only a free choice if you know what your choosing.
you make it so easy... LOLName one thing you have no idea what is in it.
you make it so easy... LOL
No one is out there force feeding the people out there with junk food. It is a free choice.
How much of a free choice is it for someone who's poor and/or infirm, doesn't have a car, has hardly any time to cook (and perhaps not much more than a hotplate), let alone much time to wait for and take buses to the nearest supermarket with a decent variety of fruits and vegetables (and let's not even get into organics)? On the other hand, every supermarket and minimarket everywhere has lots of very cheap, very preserved, already prepared food that makes its consumers sick over time.
You're right: in addition to consumers, producers, distributors, and advertisers of this junk food should be taking responsibility for what they do. "Caveat emptor" is an ethically bankrupt way to sell to fellow human beings.
I mean food wise but just about anything else is easily found online as well. There are hardly any secrets anymore.
One major difference is that during the Great Depression, foods like Doritos, Hamburger Helper and Twinkies weren't available on most store shelves, and home gardens and preserving were considerably more prevalent.
That'd be great if everyone had a computer with internet.
Classic set up either way. I won't give the punch line as it would only get everyone going.
Now as to your question, I actually am pretty well versed in food nutrition, but not everyone is. I'd say 90% Americans don't know what they're eating. And most of them don't know they should know what they're eating. Of course everyone's heard the term Junk Food, but do any of themknow why it's called that? Or they assume the food they're getting is actually food and not just a box of man made chemicals.
So you're saying that everyone can just hop on their computers and find out what they're eating online? That'd be great if everyone had a computer with internet.
Man-made chemicals?! You make it sound like they are producing Soylent Green. :rofl:
One major difference is that during the Great Depression, foods like Doritos, Hamburger Helper and Twinkies weren't available on most store shelves, and home gardens and preserving were considerably more prevalent.
I'll have to send along my raspberry lemonade recipe.
... it is on the package. Pick up package. Read.
They're putting saltpeter in our food too, and not telling us
They're putting saltpeter in our food too, and not telling us
So you approve of having this information on the package. You see its potential value, and feel that consumers who don't read and heed it have only themselves to blame. All well and good.
But do you realize that food manufacturers did everything they could to resist putting such information on packaging? And that the only reason they finally began doing so was because they were forced to -- by government? And that these same food manufacturers do not put the information on their packaging when selling in foreign countries that don't require labeling?
right. Everyone is lining up at the library. Plus, everyone can read.
Twinkies have no manmade chemicals in them... just all natural...
Enriched Bleached Wheat Flour [Flour, Reduced Iron, B Vitamins (Niacin, Thiamine Mononitrate (B1), Riboflavin (B2), Folic Acid)], Corn Syrup, Sugar, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Water, Partially Hydrogenated Vegetable and/or Animal Shortening (Soybean, Cottonseed and/or Canola Oil, Beef Fat), Whole Eggs, Dextrose. Contains 2% or Less of: Modified Corn Starch, Glucose, Leavenings (Sodium Acid Pyrophosphate, Baking Soda, Monocalcium Phosphate), Sweet Dairy Whey, Soy Protein Isolate, Calcium and Sodium Caseinate, Salt, Mono and Diglycerides, Polysorbate 60, Soy Lecithin, Soy Flour, Cornstarch, Cellulose Gum, Sodium Stearoyl Lactylate, Natural and Artificial Flavors, Sorbic Acid (to Retain Freshness), Yellow 5, Red 40.
I've got a modified corn starch plant in my backyard, right next to the sodium stearoyl lactylate and sodium caseinate tree.
Twinkies not a good example? How about Wonderbread...
Whole wheat flour, water, wheat gluten, high fructose corn syrup, contains 2% of less of: soybean oil, salt, molasses, yeast, mono and diglycerides, exthoxylated mono and diglycerides, dough conditioners (sodium stearoyl lactylate, calcium iodate, calcium dioxide), datem, calcium sulfate, vinegar, yeast nutrient (ammonium sulfate), extracts of malted barley and corn, dicalcium phosphate, diammonium phosphate, calcium propionate (to retain freshness).
I know when I made bread I always use my dicalcium phosphate, datem, and diammonium phosphate. Doesn't everyone?
Just like mom just to make... right?
Isn't it interesting that in these other countries that don't have labeling requirements, they have less of an obesity problem than we do here?
right. Everyone is lining up at the library. Plus, everyone can read.