A brief history of nutrition recommendations
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I don't remember some of the recent ones at all.
Have to admit I've often ignored these types of guidelines. Full fat milk products have been part of my diet for my entire life. Remember when eggs were considered to be bad for you? I thought it was crazy and ate them anyway.
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I’ve always found it weird all the quibbling about the relative benefits and harms of various natural foods. This seems like rearranging deck chairs on the titanic compared to all the pure junk in the standard American diet and the sedentariness of the average American lifestyle.
It’s like arguing about seed oils while ignoring the fact that you smoke 2 packs of Marlboro reds a day.
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The only problem I have with govt food guidelines is that they’re used to develop things like school lunch programs. Hilarity ensues!
What they dont use them for is selecting what you can buy with food stamps. There is no way soda pop should be on that list.
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The only problem I have with govt food guidelines is that they’re used to develop things like school lunch programs. Hilarity ensues!
What they dont use them for is selecting what you can buy with food stamps. There is no way soda pop should be on that list.
@Steve-Miller said in A brief history of nutrition recommendations:
The only problem I have with govt food guidelines is that they’re used to develop things like school lunch programs. Hilarity ensues!
What they dont use them for is selecting what you can buy with food stamps. There is no way soda pop should be on that list.
It's not in Florida along with candy bakery items processed foods (whatever that means) starting in February.
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Overhead Not Me say he has a cold and his voice sounds like it. So am eating one organic orange per day before I have to switch to supplements.
I didn't know but should have remembered 3 lbs of organic oranges equals three big oranges. Yikes.
I keep thinking about fasting (yeah, I know it's controversial) but I have lacked the will power so far.
All food prices are ridiculous. Not eating processed foods is an exorbitant proposition.
I don't think cost and availability (accessibility) entered Kennedy's mind.