Anonymous wrote:Yes. People do what’s cheap and easy. The problem is that eating crap is cheap and easy NOW but is very expensive for us later when it comes to paying for obesity, diabetes, hypertension, other conditions. It’s also not easy, as we need to consider what our limits as a country will be in supporting people who are expensive to care for and don’t have possibility of a healthy recovery. We need to make junk as hard for people now as their medical care will be for us in the not too distant future.
And the idea of teachers handing out junk food in school classrooms as rewards and incentives is completely outrageous and needs to be banned TODAY.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What if government tries to make healthy food ingredients affordable and heavily taxes unhealthy packaged and processed food and beverages ? Would you support any such effort?
The problem is that the government currently subsidizes most of the crops that highly processing foods are made from.
How about we stop subsidizing those and subsidize regenerative farming and whole food production with fewer chemicals.
I would support food stamps to only go to Whole Foods rather than processed junk which would alleviate food deserts as retailers would have to adjust.
Yes! Stop subsidizing corn, wheat, soy, milk. Start subsidizing arugula, broccoli, sweet potatoes. Will save healthcare costs. FWIW, I’m not MAHA, just tired of bringing my own dinner to baseball games.
Anonymous wrote:Define “processed food”.
Anonymous wrote:What if government tries to make healthy food ingredients affordable and heavily taxes unhealthy packaged and processed food and beverages ? Would you support any such effort?
Anonymous wrote:A ban? No
Would I support improved nutrition education in schools, and improved food labeling so people have a better sense of what choices are healthiest? Probably
Would I support increased restrictions that take some of the most problematic ingredients out, like they have in the EU? Probably
Would I support taxing certain ultra processed foods, and then using those tax dollars to subsidize people having access to healthier foods? Probably
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What if government tries to make healthy food ingredients affordable and heavily taxes unhealthy packaged and processed food and beverages ? Would you support any such effort?
The problem is that the government currently subsidizes most of the crops that highly processing foods are made from.
How about we stop subsidizing those and subsidize regenerative farming and whole food production with fewer chemicals.
I would support food stamps to only go to Whole Foods rather than processed junk which would alleviate food deserts as retailers would have to adjust.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Healthy food already is relatively more affordable than processed food.
Wrong. An apple costs more than a bag of doritos.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Healthy food already is relatively more affordable than processed food.
Wrong. An apple costs more than a bag of doritos.
Have you been to a grocery store lately? A family size bag of apples is about the same cost as a family size bag of doritos.
Beans, legumes, rice, frozen vegetables, and water are all infinitely more healthy and considerably cheaper than a ton of processed food at the grocery store.