Part One. Lexicon:
Social engineering; 90 % of human
beings want bread and circus
One. The Nanny State
Two. Paternalistic; when someone
takes on a parental role. This word often has a negative meaning, for it often
suggests someone being presumptuous enough to be an authority over another.
Three. Obesity burden; tax payers
have to absorb half the medical costs incurred by obesity-related ailments. Is
that fair?
Four. Fat Tax dilemma. If taxing fat
people and putting a “fat tax” on “fatty” items were to be effective, people
would live longer and old age increase would put a NEW tax burden on tax payer.
Five. Stigma vs. the Nanny State
Six. Gluttony: the sin of overeating
as a form of self-indulgence
Seven. The moral case against
obesity: Gluttony shows a disrespect for
the body and an excessive pandering to one’s ego.
Eight. Latent hostility against
obese people: See page 198 at bottom: We claim to be compassionate towards the
obese but in reality we are not when obesity inconveniences us. Airplane seats,
for example.
Nine: The sin of the obese: To
impose a burden on others by taking up an unfair amount of space. See 199 top.
Ten. Oversimplification: Attributing
complex problem to simple cause: to blame obesity on sin or indulgence or ego
is absurd. Obesity may be partly these things, but they don’t tell the whole
story.
Eleven. Ubiquity of cheap,
calorie-dense food: Ubiquity means “everywhere.”
Twelve. Either/Or Fallacy: to reduce
an argument to two possibilities, either/or. For example to address the obesity
crisis as either a sin or an illness is absurd. The problem is more complex.
Part Two. New Essay Option: Write a research paper that argues that the obesity
crisis is neither a sin or an illness, but a complex problem that cannot be
explained by a simple diagnosis. Your 6 mapping statements will explore 6 major
causes of obesity. No doubt, a 5 or 6-page essay can’t address all 15 causes.
That would require a book.
Part Three: The Two Best Books about
Food I’ve Ever Read That Will Change Your Life:
- Mindless Eating by Brian Wansink
- In Defense of Food by Michael Pollan
Both writers discourage going on a
diet. Instead, they encourage eating real foods that we like in moderation.
Their information is priceless. Read their books and you will never get
“punk-fed” again. Don’t let The Man poison your body or manipulate your eating
habits.
Part Four. The 15 Causes of Obesity:
- There is an abundance of convenient, cheap,
calorie-rich food everywhere we go.
- We move less than we did generations ago. Do we
chase the animals we eat? No.
- Mindless eating; not even knowing the quantity of
what we consume every day, much of it done while talking, watching TV, or
surfing the Internet, all forms of Mindless Eating. See book of same title
by Brian Wansink.
- Poverty; there is a relationship between poverty
and obesity. This is due to a lack of education combined with reliance on
cheap fast food.
- Parents. Children eat what their parents eat. If
the parents eat a “fat lifestyle,” so will their children.
- Friends. We eat and look similar to our friends.
We often call this “social eating.”
- Eating processed foods instead of real foods and
not knowing the difference. Please see In Defense of Eating: An Eater’s
Manifesto by Michael Pollan. In short, only shop at the far left and right
of supermarkets; avoid the middle; or shop at the Farmer’s Market.
- Super-sized portions are marketed as a “good
deal.” See the film Super Size Me and read the book Fast Food Nation by
Erich Schlosser
- Boredom; stay at home with nothing to do and
you’ll overeat
- Emotional eating; eating to feel “love” or
“self-esteem” or because you feel lonely.
- Lack of sleep. The more tired you are, the more
you feed your blood sugar to compensate.
- Education; knowing how to enjoy good healthy food
should be very practical but too few people know how to prepare food for
themselves that is good for them.
- Learned helplessness
- Dieting; it leads to weight gain, splurging,
neuroses, and messes up the metabolism which rebels and goes on “shut
down.”
- Fast food is marketed to children in an
aggressive way; see Fast Food Nation.
Sample Thesis Statements (all of
these are pretty good and take note they contradict each other as they go back
and forth):
One: It’s morally wrong to be fat.
Two: To condemn fat people as
immoral is an outrageous oversimplification that ignores the many complex
causes behind obesity.
Three: To justify obesity as a
“complex issue” is to enable fat people to go on with their immoral lives.
Four: To condemn defenders of the
obese by calling these defenders enablers evidences a gross blindness to the
deeper root causes of obesity, which these morally unrighteous prigs are
determined to ignore.
Five: Calling me a “prig” for my
stance against fat people does not change the fact that the obese population
would be well served to embrace my moral prescription, which will not only
alleviate their obesity but make them better, happier, responsible citizens.
Thus, I am doing fat people a service, sir, while you, taking the role as
paternalistic sympathizer, are actually helping to perpetuate their obese,
moribund, morally bankrupt condition.
Schadenfreude; taking pleasure in
other people’s misery and failure
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