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Junk food: opiate of the masses : Comments
By Andrew Gunn, published 7/5/2009People eat junk food to make themselves feel better. To tackle obesity, let's first consider what causes it.
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I might point out, as Dr. Gunn hinted, that there are also a lot of myths about obesity. For one thing, the goals have definitely shifted downwards, making the problem look worse than it might be. The BMI scale is a notoriously misleading indicator; I work with a fitness instructor who flatly refuses to use it. I think the famous example is that, on the BMI scale, George Clooney is considered obese.
A case in point is the "Australia is the fattest nation on earth" survey. When this was first trumpeted in the media, my first reaction was immediate skepticism, and sure enough, it was soon shown that the survey was indeed questionable. Nevertheless, the idea had taken root, unquestioned, in the national conscience.
I myself am on the large side, but I don't live on crap, and I'm not entirely sedentary: I train in martial arts, and I bushwalk fairly regularly. That said, my main problem is definitely lifestyle - my work traps me in front of a computer 8 hours a day. I know that exercise helps: On an extended bushwalk, I can easily lose several kilos over a couple of days despite a solid diet of high-energy foods.
But I digress; to address the theme of the article, I think that Dr. Gunn is only mostly right. People (in rich nations) often do eat to make themselves feel better. That most of them eat crap is due to the successful marketing of crap as desirable. For myself, if I go more than a few days without a "fix" of fresh vegies or fruit, I start to feel horribly unwell.
Perhaps we need more Jamie Olivers in the media, marketing fresh food as feel good food?
My kids love watching Jamie Oliver, after all.