First it was "Europe," but alas -- UK, AND Spain, AND Italy didn't play along with the preconception. Neither did Kuwait, on the other thread.
But I think you've got a winner with Japan! Can we agree to do what Japan does for children, and what has been shown in the research on their success to be key? You all are up for higher taxes so we can get *good* meals into the schools with healthy ingredients for every kid? (Spoiler alert: Japan has had this model since the 1800s.) |
I'm in my 20s and live in DC as well. I see lots of overweight people <30 daily. |
I watched a PBS documentary about Sicilian beach culture and—at least the adults—were at least as fat as their American cousins on the jersey shore. So I think it’s not all europeans. |
I hate these shaming threads under the guise of being informative. |
Why all the anecdotal evidence instead of using hard data on child obesity?
https://worldmapper.org/maps/obese-children-2015/
There's a higher rate of obesity among American children compared to European children. |
No those threads were awful I prefer this nonsense. Maybe inflation has finally doused the wanna be wasps with reality? |
+1. I lived and worked in Germany for a few years, but in a small, rural community. We had lots of larger people. My village had its own bakery and butcher. I’d see the old woman walking in the morning to get bread and many were fat. My late 20s hair stylist was chubby. People eat at these festivals, and not a vegetable could be found. It was always some form of pork wrapped in bread. I didn’t see many fat kids mostly because they don’t have many kids. My son was in a German hospital for two weeks. The place was big with 20-30 pediatric overnight rooms. We never saw more than 2 other kids there the entire time. Men were definitely thinner, but they wear tighter pants and don’t generally lift weights. I’m a bigger woman 5’5” 165lbs. HHI $350K. It is more acceptable and normal to be my size. People in the past seemed to have to apologize for their weight. I wear what I want and do what I want. My size doesn’t hold me back like it may have in the past. |
Yes, totally agree on Japanese food. It's real food and they make it there and traditionally the kids serve and clean up. But for those who said Japanese women eat small portions, not in my experience of living there for several years, including with two host families. They ate a lot. But it was all fresh, extremely seafood-centric, and usually included soup and vegetables at each meal. And they ate virtually no sugar outside of a small amount in sauces. No dessert. They'd drink tea after dinner and maybe have some fruit. Occasionally they might have dessert but it was Japanese-style, which are not super-sweet and typically made from special bean pastes or glutinous rice, not sugar, chocolate, etc. Even more rarely they might buy a Western-style dessert or eat one at a special cafe, but even those were far less sweet than we have here, and usually included some kind of jello so they were really voluminous but light. I hated them actually, they tasted totally wrong to me. I absolutely loved Japanese cuisine though, and between my host mothers' excellent and fresh cooking and all the biking I did to get around, I ate amazing food in large portions and lost weight. |
Simply drive to the eastern shore of Maryland. I'm 140 pound 5'6" female and feel positively svelte. The only ethnic group that regularly puts whole fruits and veggies from the produce department in their shopping carts are Haitian immigrants. White/Black/Hispanic people all have shopping carts filled with 2 liter sodas and processed foods. |
I'm 22:05 poster.
One of my workers on the eastern shore of Maryland had a 19 year old son who had gastric bypass surgery at age 19 because he wanted to be normal. He died 30 days later from side effects of the surgery. This makes me very sad every time I think about it. Another worker from lower Delaware lost her brother at age 32 to morbid obesity. He literally died from morbid obesity. She would tear up every time she talked about her brother. The fat acceptance movement is doing no favors. |
Surely not. I was told by a very confident person that Europeans - yes, all Europeans - eat a single piece of fruit for lunch, if anything at all. Perhaps an open faced sandwich with just one slice of bread and on that perhaps just a couple of slices of cucumber. |
I live in an affluent part of LA and see plenty of young overweight people. People heavier than middle-aged, out-of-shape me but half my age. Kids in general are heavier too but it seems to vary by socioeconomic class. |
It is absolutely this. Coupled with the fact that our soil is largely depleted of the microbiota that makes nutrition in food (due primarily to the massive amounts of inputs we use in corporate farming, but also global warming) https://www.politico.com/agenda/story/2017/09/13/food-nutrients-carbon-dioxide-000511/ the number and amount of additives that are used in all foods, even “whole foods” that you wouldn’t think would have any, and that labels don’t have to list them. We have no idea what’s in our food. |
Seriously? Your first example is of a young man who died trying to lose weight and you immediately start to blame fat acceptance? |
Total non-sense. All Americans (young and OLD) are significantly FATTER than anybody. |