Anonymous wrote:Like anything, done in excess, it is unhealthy. For instance, if you only eat hotdogs at baseball games, you are eating roughly 40 hotdogs a year (assuming you don't go to away games.) As for the senior citizens eating breakfast at McD's, how did they get there? Walk? Are they socializing? Life isn't about eating living in your basement and eating steel-cut oats.
Anonymous wrote:"Eating breakfast at McDonalds is not healthy and eating hot dogs at baseball games is not healthy..." Blah Blah Blah
But when I pointed out to her that we have members of our own family (plus many friends of theirs) who are in their 80s who have been eating breakfast at McDonalds and eating hot dogs at baseball games for most of their lives she literally had no answer or reply when I pointed that out to her
On any given morning most McDonalds restaurants are filled with senior citizens on a daily basis.
Now my question to you is have younger become people so involved at staring at their smartphone screens that they do not notice the world around them?
I apologize for any grammatical errors. English is not my 1st language.
Anonymous wrote:You've included:
1. Critique about one particular generation (millenials).
2. Defense of a position most people know isn't right (eating fast food).
3. Added an extra draw for those minded to take the bait (foreign extraction).
Conclusion: Troll level 1. You've hit all the points, but the topic isn't that interesting.
Anonymous wrote:You've included:
1. Critique about one particular generation (millenials).
2. Defense of a position most people know isn't right (eating fast food).
3. Added an extra draw for those minded to take the bait (foreign extraction).
Conclusion: Troll level 1. You've hit all the points, but the topic isn't that interesting.
Anonymous wrote:1. I mean, McDonald’s is not healthy, but I can’t imagine people are choosing it as a healthy choice. They’re closing it because it’s cheap, convenient, tasty to them, or fast, and those are more important to them than the health benefits or lack thereof. I don’t see the point of ranting about it but saying McD’s is healthy because you happen to know an 80-year-old who likes it seems like a weird conclusion.
2. Why is the ranter’s generation even relevant here?