Boy, you sure did show that poster! Nobody considers dates “evil.” No reasonable person has off limit foods. Nobody is dumb enough to think avoiding fruit is a good idea. Nobody reasonable believes avoidance of all carbs is a good idea. Some people don’t eat meat, they get their protein elsewhere. I eat a ton if meat myself. All that is not to the exclusion of realizing living off papa John’s pizza is a terrible idea. Yet, nobody reasonable thinks it’s evil and nobody reasonable would get bent out of shape having pizza, maybe even twice a week! Maybe plan it out? Crazy! Your thread is dumb. You are projecting restrictive eating habits that simply don’t exist across the population in the US. You then have concocted some theory that simply doesn’t hold any water. But do tell us about other countries like Korea because of some TV you watched. |
Are you new to dcum diet forum? Everyday someone posts telling people not to eat fruit, nor give it to their kids. Every day people post vilifying carbs. Dcum obsession with food avoidance is evil. |
Well, those people are ignorant and can be ignored. I’m having trouble following the “messy” of this thread. Is the theory the whole US has an evil food fixation or just this board? Quite messy the dialogue here. |
My obsession is foodscaping. I grow organic vegetables in my garden all year long. Just to remind everyone: pizza is not a vegetable. |
Pizza can be a vegetable, if you use cauliflower crust. Even with a regular crust, pizza can be healthy if it is made as a vegetable delivery system lol. |
Or just eat regular pizza and don’t worry about it. Just don’t eat it all the time. |
Pizza is a fine, fine food, I say. Delicious, soothing, gives you energy. On dcum, pizza is evil, carbs, must be made with cauliflower rice/flour? What on earth is cauli flower? Sadly, attitudes of such people are permeating the upper class people who buy into this rubbish. Dcum food avoidance theories and eating habits are evil. As all evil, they try to impose their nasty on others. And sadly, many buy into it, bcs like those stupid on dcum who think they are food smart, act like they GOOP. And other stupid people buy into their stupid food obsessions. |
You do understand that rain falls on your garden just as it does on any soil? Rain that was evaporating from pesticide infused soil of all of our earth. You do understand that right next to organic field is a regular pesticide full field, and your organic veggies get the same water drainage and flow from the other field? |
Man, crazy lady is at a 10 this morning.
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Well OP if you knew anything about Egypt you would know that it manages to both be relatively impoverished AND have one of the highest obesity rates in the world, most likely from the over-consumption of bread and carbs in the population. |
And they still smoke like fiends and Europeans drink WAAAY too much. Feel better, OP? |
This is fair. But drinking culture has definitely died down for business in Japan. Still strong in Korea. Both still smoking a lot. Lots of smoking and drinking elsewhere in Asia generally. |
Europeans do not drink waaaayyyyyy to much! Some Europeans drink and most Europeans do not drink much at all except at celebrations. Where are you getting your phony facts? Does it make you feel better thinking this? The idea that Americans are more virtuous in eating than Europeans is absurd. Let me rephrase, UMC and most of DCUM's food obsession are evil, and also evil at the societal level as you think you are better than those that can't afford to worry about if they had enough macros in their diet today. |
Are you having difficulty staying on "messy" here? Is it the Upper Middle Class, this Board, or all Americans? If everything is so evil here, why don't you leave? Maybe you can go to Egypt. They don't have any fatties there of course: "Prevalence of Obesity According to “100 million health” survey, which was conducted in Egypt in 2019 and screened 49.7 million adult Egyptians (≥18 years old), 39.8% of adult Egyptians suffered from obesity (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2)" - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8429929/#:~:text=Clinical%20Burden-,Prevalence%20of%20Obesity,30%20kg%2Fm2). |