Explore
Gaia Soulmates
 Advertising keeps Gaia free! Interested in sponsoring us?

Our Children are Fat and Someone’s Going to Pay

Posted on Mar 8th, 2006 by Shawn : Integral Strength Shawn

Today I ran across an emotional commentary regarding childhood obesity on one of my daily blog reads. It's a serious problem and while what they had to say about who's to blame will certainly piss some people off - I agree!

More on that in a moment but while we're on this serious subject, I've got to get some things off my chest.
Fatkid_mcdonalds_1

If you think the current healthcare costs for obesity related diseases are going to bankrupt this country - well, you're right but that's nothing compared to what the future holds.


I for one would favor a return of the ol' "Red Menace" - the great Russian threat. For at least during the cold-war we believed we knew the enemy.


Today, the enemy is not simply among us, it is us.


I am certain it's not news to you that America's children are growing faster than any children should - and I don't mean up. I mean...wide, in shear mass

According to government research, 60% of children between the ages of 5 and 10 years have at least one cardiovascular risk factor and 25% have two or more... there are 3 times as many overweight children between ages of 6 - 11 as there were 30 years ago.

And also, in classic "American Style" it's time to locate the cause - to point the finger, to lay the blame. The most obvious targets to take the "blame grenade" are the fast-food purveyors and the marketers who spin their webs.


It's a tight race for 1-2 but I selected the order above given that it's the fast-food sellers who pay the marketers - that's the food chain, so I lop a little more up top.


So, our children are fat
...and who are we going to blame? Well, the blog I mentioned a moment ago, Ardants says "Obesity is not marketers fault nor is it the fast-food company's. It's time to get children off their fat asses and parents involved."


The BLOGGER who prompted Ardant's thinking goes further in making a case that marketers have done a lot to support the health and well-being of children. Of course, he's from a national marketing organization.


While I wisely question to noble efforts of the marketing white-knights in their quest to make every child safe from influential messages for food, I agree, wholeheartedly, with the position here: The fast-food industry is not to blame.


I know...I know... for anyone who's seen my presentation at Integral Life Practice on the parallel progressions of fast-food consumption and our country's health care costs over the last three decades, it's got to be hard to believe I'm saying this... But I am saying it and have been for a long time.


My case is simple: While I agree that fast-food has been a scourge on our society in many ways, ultimately it is a business! And a business flourishes only when consumers support it. We must play the game for them to win...

Sure, we've been marketed to - we've been sold a bad bill of goods, but tath implies we still took our wallets out and bought it! Right.

They served - we volleyed. We've played the game, like it or not. We are not innocent victims but active participants in our own collective suicide. Not willingly but certainly not ignorantly at this point.


To point a condemning finger at fast-food for making our children fat, is like pointing blaming the middle-east for our gluttonous consumption of fossil fuel. It doesn't make a lot of sense, does it? Yet, in both cases, it's what we often do.

The "golden arches," "the king"... these fast-food joints are snuggly positioned at the bottom of the valley of nutrition - the place we all land when we slip and fall, when we fail to plan, when we find ourselves, hungry, weak and craving.  They reside there, happily like a venus fly trap, waiting for our weakness to serve them.

They remain poised there because big-business is first and foremost about profits - first (not in absolute exclusion of concern). They have little real motivation to change that now... Sure, it's wise to look like they are changing things but really changing would be foolish...

UNLESS...


Unless, someone like you care a whole awful lot
*...about yourself, your life and your children's life and our world. Only then will we, one by one, start choosing the freedom of healthier foods - be they "fast" or no so...


When your almighty dollar is directed elsewhere...then...and only then will things changes. Remember, the power to change the world, to create a better future, not just for ourselves but for the generation coming, is in your hands.

Keep this in mind -- and choose what you eat wisely.

* Special thanks to Dr. Suess for his inspiration on this quote (see The Lorax)

Access_public Access: Public 7 Comments Print views (1,011)  
MsCapriKell : Essential Wellness Consultant
23 minutes later
MsCapriKell said

I just saw a media piece on this recently… and it breaks my heart that the children are being raised like this.  We have no other choice but to make a health-conscious change … and NOW.  I look to my best friend as a sign of hope, that there are people doing it right still…. her children get well balanced meals, as well as treats (“like other kids get to eat”), and they also get a great deal of activity - *having* to play outside with their friends and active participation in what ever sport they choose to pursue…. and they are encourage to pursue more than one.

Time to accentuate the positive out there… turn the limelight on *how to do it right*… show people how easy it is.

~C4Chaos : (hyper)linker
4 days later
~C4Chaos said

wow! i couldn’t agree more. but imho, it’s still an all-quadrant affair (what is not anyway?). it’s true that the bulk of the responsibility is on the individual and the basic unit such as the family. but the same logic doesn’t hold if we say that the drug problem is not to be blamed on the drug pushers and drug cartels. those are businesses too. i know this is an extreme example. but there.

so i’m left wondering… does Fungibility apply to Obesity too?

i’m off to drink my Caramel Macchiato now…

4 days later
deepsurface said

There is a difference between knowing the information about what’s bad for you and actually consciously making choices in your own best interest. This is pretty clear in all aspects of life. That gap between knowing what is right and doing what is right is heavily influenced by marketing. In fact, I would argue that marketing exists mostly for the purpose of convincing people, one way or another, to buy or do something that goes against their own best interest.

Yes, every individual is responsible for his or her own actions, but those choices are often made by our level of consciousness, regardless of the information we are given. So that fat kid does need to get up off the couch, but we have a collective, societal responsibility as well.

See the rest of my long-ass response on my blog.
Shawn : Integral Strength
4 days later
Shawn said

Thank you c-mel and deep-s for your comments. Yes, I agree that it’s an AQAL affair and rest assured, I am not absolving the companies in question but rather seeking to engage at least some vague hint of personal accountability. Hence the reason why I take a hard shot - or stance.

For “most people” (love that term, not but it does seem to apply) the idea that they have any accountability in the matter is a shock. My purpose is to shock that awake.

Also, know that I am often writing to those who are not going AQAL full time.

Oh, much more to say on this… but I appreciate you both. And now I’ve got to go grub some chow at my nieghbors!

Peace,
Shawn

~C4Chaos : (hyper)linker
4 days later
~C4Chaos said

i hear you Shawn… maybe that’s why after reading your response i serendipitously read this news on my RSS reader….

“Parents who want to raise mature young people who will contribute to society must not only have values that infuse their own lives but must also be willing to enforce them in their children’s lives. Young people need to be taught, before reaching adulthood, that taking a powerful position involves a weight of responsibility to others.”

The Don’t Blame Me Generation

By Patricia Dalton
Sunday, March 5, 2006; Page B03

Robin : holon
14 days later
Robin said

I came acrosse the rath unbelievable article the other day that postulates that obesity may actually be a contagious disease!

Incredible?  no kidding..   I bet someone will be making a few million searching for the vaccine for this one..

Check it out

Michael : Zaadzster
22 days later
Michael said

Unbelievable!  I now know there is a logical reason I have an unavoidable craving for Deep Fried Snickers bars … .  I am not washing my hands enough!  Great posts by all!  Thank you for the information.

BTW, Dr. Seuss rocks!

You have to be a Gaia member to post comments.
Login or Join now!