Anonymous wrote:
Why would anyone take responsibility for someone else’s mistakes? I don’t do this in real life, why would I do it for someone like OP who blames everyone and everything other than themselves for all the crap food they eat?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to know what OP has for dinner at her 'upscale hotel' tonight.
Yeah, I’m at a hotel with $300-$400 rate and multiple restaurants. The food here is mostly crap (I finally did find a decent Italian restaurant last night). They don have nutrition facts so I have no idea what I’m eating.
So if I can’t find healthy food in this setting what hope so you have for low income people?
I guess I should drive to farmer’s market and cook something up in my room.
There’s really not a single salad on the menu? Or grilled meat with steamed vegetables? Usually the options are there, but they don’t taste as good so people don’t order them.
This is true but you’ll likely get some bagged iceberg lettuce and dried out grilled chicken with some diced cucumbers and likely no homemade dressing, so you’ll need to ask for the sad Heinz vinegar and oil
DP. The PPs would consider that "good food," having never actually experienced actual good food before.
How would you know what food the PPs eat, or consider good?
I don’t know, but I think PPs point was, if you happen to be in a chain hotel, rural area, etc. and the restaurant options are sparse, you are likely going to end up at a place that has 90% “unhealthy” items and fried food. So your choice ends up being wings done well or a salad done terribly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to know what OP has for dinner at her 'upscale hotel' tonight.
Yeah, I’m at a hotel with $300-$400 rate and multiple restaurants. The food here is mostly crap (I finally did find a decent Italian restaurant last night). They don have nutrition facts so I have no idea what I’m eating.
So if I can’t find healthy food in this setting what hope so you have for low income people?
I guess I should drive to farmer’s market and cook something up in my room.
There’s really not a single salad on the menu? Or grilled meat with steamed vegetables? Usually the options are there, but they don’t taste as good so people don’t order them.
This is true but you’ll likely get some bagged iceberg lettuce and dried out grilled chicken with some diced cucumbers and likely no homemade dressing, so you’ll need to ask for the sad Heinz vinegar and oil
DP. The PPs would consider that "good food," having never actually experienced actual good food before.
How would you know what food the PPs eat, or consider good?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to know what OP has for dinner at her 'upscale hotel' tonight.
Yeah, I’m at a hotel with $300-$400 rate and multiple restaurants. The food here is mostly crap (I finally did find a decent Italian restaurant last night). They don have nutrition facts so I have no idea what I’m eating.
So if I can’t find healthy food in this setting what hope so you have for low income people?
I guess I should drive to farmer’s market and cook something up in my room.
There’s really not a single salad on the menu? Or grilled meat with steamed vegetables? Usually the options are there, but they don’t taste as good so people don’t order them.
This is true but you’ll likely get some bagged iceberg lettuce and dried out grilled chicken with some diced cucumbers and likely no homemade dressing, so you’ll need to ask for the sad Heinz vinegar and oil
DP. The PPs would consider that "good food," having never actually experienced actual good food before.
How would you know what food the PPs eat, or consider good?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And OP STILL refuses to tell us which country she is from.
I don’t even think it matters! She clearly is determined to never take responsibility for her choices…it feels so much better to deflect and say that her diagnosis is because of big, bad America instead of owning up to her personal decisions.
America us 73% overweight. Why don’t you take responsibility for THAT?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And OP STILL refuses to tell us which country she is from.
I don’t even think it matters! She clearly is determined to never take responsibility for her choices…it feels so much better to deflect and say that her diagnosis is because of big, bad America instead of owning up to her personal decisions.
America us 73% overweight. Why don’t you take responsibility for THAT?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to know what OP has for dinner at her 'upscale hotel' tonight.
Yeah, I’m at a hotel with $300-$400 rate and multiple restaurants. The food here is mostly crap (I finally did find a decent Italian restaurant last night). They don have nutrition facts so I have no idea what I’m eating.
So if I can’t find healthy food in this setting what hope so you have for low income people?
I guess I should drive to farmer’s market and cook something up in my room.
There’s really not a single salad on the menu? Or grilled meat with steamed vegetables? Usually the options are there, but they don’t taste as good so people don’t order them.
This is true but you’ll likely get some bagged iceberg lettuce and dried out grilled chicken with some diced cucumbers and likely no homemade dressing, so you’ll need to ask for the sad Heinz vinegar and oil
DP. The PPs would consider that "good food," having never actually experienced actual good food before.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And OP STILL refuses to tell us which country she is from.
I don’t even think it matters! She clearly is determined to never take responsibility for her choices…it feels so much better to deflect and say that her diagnosis is because of big, bad America instead of owning up to her personal decisions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to know what OP has for dinner at her 'upscale hotel' tonight.
Yeah, I’m at a hotel with $300-$400 rate and multiple restaurants. The food here is mostly crap (I finally did find a decent Italian restaurant last night). They don have nutrition facts so I have no idea what I’m eating.
So if I can’t find healthy food in this setting what hope so you have for low income people?
I guess I should drive to farmer’s market and cook something up in my room.
There’s really not a single salad on the menu? Or grilled meat with steamed vegetables? Usually the options are there, but they don’t taste as good so people don’t order them.
This is true but you’ll likely get some bagged iceberg lettuce and dried out grilled chicken with some diced cucumbers and likely no homemade dressing, so you’ll need to ask for the sad Heinz vinegar and oil
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to know what OP has for dinner at her 'upscale hotel' tonight.
Yeah, I’m at a hotel with $300-$400 rate and multiple restaurants. The food here is mostly crap (I finally did find a decent Italian restaurant last night). They don have nutrition facts so I have no idea what I’m eating.
So if I can’t find healthy food in this setting what hope so you have for low income people?
I guess I should drive to farmer’s market and cook something up in my room.
There’s really not a single salad on the menu? Or grilled meat with steamed vegetables? Usually the options are there, but they don’t taste as good so people don’t order them.
Anonymous wrote:And OP STILL refuses to tell us which country she is from.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Sounds like your kid wanted a Frappuccino, which is basically a milkshake. You can easily order plain coffee or an americano in Starbucks with no sweetener. Did you really not know that sugary drinks have a lot of sugar?
Why would a person think a coffee drink = sugary drink. Only in America. Kids don’t know this. They also think chocolate milk at schools is healthy. The sugar, additives, preservatives get concealed in food and drinks in America.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“JuNk fOoD aDdIcT” PP feeling kinda butthurt, eh?
Naw. But it is glaringly obvious you've never tasted truly good food. That's why you think Disney has good food. Idk what to call people who think Disney has good food. Junk food addict seems reasonable, though. Maybe consider why you feel the need to defend the vile food of multibillion dollar entertainment juggernauts? It's certainly not logical behavior.
Again, I am not the Disney poster. But clearly you have nothing else to cling to, so you keep bringing it up. I’m sorry you misinterpreted the thread so badly that it needed to be explained to you like a toddler…that must sting a bit.
Your beef is with people like OP who have money and education yet unrepentingly shovel junk food into their bodies and then wait for the government to save them from their choices. I will continue to eat healthy food as I always have, instead of junk. Have a great day 🙏