Nev wrote:I'm not really in favor of setting precedents for the government to intercede in private lives like this. It takes up taxpayer time and money and sets up an abusable system.
Much as I hate to sound like an ass, at least the kid in the picture is fat and happy, and he never, ever has to worry about dying of starvation from a stuck elevator. I kinda think you're nuts for making a big deal out of this, Seek.
So you are in favour of allowing parents the ability to bring their kids up poorly? What do you feel about beatings and other such abuses?
Though I would like to hear your thoughts on the anti-smoking campaign towards children over the years; I feel there are a lot of parallels.
Also, do you know that the child is happy and not just smiling for that particular picture? If you would like, I can easily pick out A LOT of examples of kids brought up fat who are miserable for being fat. Though I don't think I have to do that, it is quite apparent.
Numbers, please. What does this childhood obesity epidemic* actually cost a health system? How are you measuring those costs? How does that cost compare with the cost of, say, state care of children "abused" through malnutrition? What kind of adults do these obese children grow into - what kind of value do they bring to a country? And conversely, what kind of adults do state-raised children grow up into?
What is the cost of just the process alone of removing a child from their family? What kind of load does that add on social workers, courts, and administrators?
http://www.abc.net.au/health/thepulse/s1587390.htm
Obesity costs Australia alone more than 11 (eleven) billion dollars per year. The anti-obesity school programs the government has put down so far only costs 116 million.
You're wrong; sorry. Packaged foods are cheaper and - this is probably more important - more accessible than fresh foods. This is because packaged foods are cheaper to produce, transport, store and sell than fresh foods.
Are you sure? The really fattening packaged foods such as breaded hotdogs, packaged pasteries, potato chips, and such like that are more expensive than healthier alternatives such as frozen veggies (even fresh veggies, it costs less than a dollar for a bunch of fresh carrots or bananas). What of fast food?
Yes, because packaged foods are cheaper now than they were. If you look at the poor in Africa, they're generally not going to be obese because the least expensive foods available in the west are not available there.
The poor in Africa are skinny because they're starving. That is an entirely different and more severe problem right now; it might be related to over-population, it might be related to a corruption of the wealthy, I am not going to tackle this right now.
The working poor - in the USA, at least - do not have the time or money to feed their children well. It's not exclusively for laziness, as you're intimating.
Neglect is a form of child abuse, whatever the reasons for it might be. What demograph do you think social services seizes by far most of their children from? For what reasons?
Reference, please. The figures I've seen have shown no such drop in life expectancy. Even with this "epidemic" of obesity we are living longer than we have done in history.
Sorry, I should have posted a link to this before:
www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7209499 "U.S. life expectancy will fall dramatically in coming years because of obesity,"
Define obesity. Do we measure it by total body fat? BMI? The definitions shift constantly. In Australia, at least, part of the reason for the increasing percentages of obesity is that the characteristics defining obesity are getting tighter: for example, where we would now consider a person with a BMI of between 30 and 40 obese, that person would have been considered overweight in 1970.
Also, define the causes of obesity. Overeating? Poor nutritional value of the food being eaten? What if the food is being eaten during school - would the child be seized then? What if the child had a genetic predisposition to being overweight? What if the child is not getting enough sleep? How do you propose the government verify that every obese child is obese through poor nutrition for which the parent is entirely responsible?
Obesity is caused by a combination of poor eating and poor excersize.
Obviously if a child was genetically overweight due to glandular problems they wouldn't be classified as being fattened up by their parents. That would be a legit disability just like any other legit disability, not a forced one.