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"Passive Obesity"

The UK Department of Health released its "Health Profile of England 2007". They noticed a trend:

The UK Government Office for Science projected that trend 40 years into the future and determined that a "bold whole system approach is critical":


Source: Tackling Obesities: Future Choices
"Although personal responsibility plays a crucial part in weight gain, human biology is being overwhelmed by the effects of today’s ‘obesogenic’ environment, with its abundance of energy dense food, motorised transport and sedentary lifestyles. As a result, the people of the UK are inexorably becoming heavier simply by living in the Britain of today. This process has been coined ‘passive obesity’. Some members of the population, including the most disadvantaged, are especially vulnerable to the conditions."Well, that's a new way to describe it, "passive obesity." I like its holistic view. It's more astute than the USDA telling Americans, "Eat your veggies."________

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  • Oh. A trend!

    A few weeks ago I posted a report by the UK's Government Office for Science which said:"The obesity epidemic cannot be prevented by individual action alone and demands a societal approach."
    ...
    "The people of the UK are inexorably becoming heavier simply by living in the Britain of today. This process has been coined 'passive obesity'."I lamented that government agencies in the US still frame America's weight problem as the creature of an individual's nefarious choices. "Eat less refined corn and soy products!" they say, as if our weight problem is our fault.

    It's incomprehensible to me that those same agencies, backed by Congress, turn around and fund the production of those very corn and soy products they tell us not to eat - making them cheaper, more accessible, and, well, downright popular.

  • The Mississippi House of Representatives has floated a bill (HB 282, below) that would make it illegal to serve obese patrons.

    The gentlemen below are the Bill's authors. From left to right: W. T. Mayhall, Jr. (R), John Read (R) , Bobby Shows (D). It appears to be a bipartisan effort.

  • The National Resources Defense Council has published this wallet card to aid in selecting fish. I know it's difficult to read. Clicking on it will take you to the original .pdf source where you can make some good quality printouts.

    ________

  • Melinda shared these photos of her garden-in-work:"Here are 3 pix of what I brought w/ me from the condo when we moved to the little house w/ big deck. As you see, so far they aren't in the ground, but I did just get the raised bed, so hopefully I'll get it together [soon]."

  • I'm still wondering ... is cultured meat living?

    A group of artists from the Tissue Culture and Art Project (TCA) in Australia grew this steak for their exhibition "Disembodied Cuisine".


    Click to read captions, and to see some cultured meat up close.

  • Lavender Blue shared these photos of her garden. (Click for larger.)

  • Some sad irony here:
    Rising Food Prices Are Likely To Worsen US Obesity Rate"... she lives on public assistance and eats junk food because it's cheap and more readily available in her Philadelphia neighborhood than carrots and apples."

  • From the Government Accountability Office, February 2007:"USDA inspects manufacturers of packaged open-face meat or poultry sandwiches (e.g., those with one slice of bread), but FDA inspects manufacturers of packaged closed-face meat or poultry sandwiches (e.g., those with two slices of bread)."

  • Talk about polarizing issues. While campaigning in South Carolina yesterday, presidential candidate Fred Thompson said:"I don’t think that it’s the primary responsibility of the federal government to tell you what to eat."Thompson: Don't Let The Government Tell You What To Eat

  • No, really. A comprehensive, online, free!, encyclopedia of every living thing on the planet. One page for each. Millions of pages. And it's a wiki - a collaborative, updatable effort from people all over the world. I can't think of a more ambitious project facing the internet.

    And it went live on Tuesday (although it may be slow, it's getting over a million hits per hour):
    Encyclopedia of Life (EOL)

    Here's what the New York Times had to say:
    The Encyclopedia of Life, No Bookshelf Required

    Here's its official blog:
    Encyclopedia of Life Blog

    Here are some sample pages (clicking the image will take you to EOL's demo page):

    Yeti Crab

    Death Cap Mushroom

  • Ruby shared these photos of her garden. (Click for larger.): "Here are some pictures of what I have going on this year.

  • There was a full moon last night. It will be visible tonight too, and according to NASA, it will be the brightest full moon you'll see for the next 16 years:"That's because it's the highest-riding full moon until the year 2023."


  • They became unstuck in time a day later.
    "So it goes."
    - Billy Pilgrim 1________
    Photo above: Homegrown, from a couple days ago. It's frozen water in the cut-off bottom of an old gallon jug. I use it as a water feeder for birds. They, however, use it as a bathtub. There's one particular female cardinal that sits in it at night (if it's warm enough) for about 5 minutes. The water comes up to her neck. She occasionally flutters her wings.

  • Do visit a Calorie Counter.

    It also counts protein, fat, carbohydrate, fiber, and lots of other nutrients the USDA has tucked away in their data base. Uncluttered, fast, informative - government agencies in charge of food could learn from a site like this. :)

    The owner of the site also has a blog. His last entry on November 6th points to a spectacular table he just created that compares basic nutrition facts for some popular foods from over 20 fast food restaurants:

    Fast Food Restaurants & Nutrition Facts Compared

  • A former White House Administration official wants to Nix The Farm Bill: 1"I’ve got a way to reduce global poverty, decrease the number of workers crossing our borders illegally, save American taxpayers money, and cut your supermarket bill -- in one fell swoop. How? Get rid of US farm subsidies and tariffs."

    For the rest, see former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich's latest blog post: Nix The Farm Bill.

  • This was unbelievable. To see this kind of frankness in a public report just made my jaw drop. Virtually all of the diabetes- and health-related material I've laid my hands on over the years has skirted these issues. Most of those publications, however, were either produced by drug companies directly, or indirectly influenced by them. My non-profit is.

  • Famed for its wine. Wikipedia has Burgenland inhabited since the Stone Age. How many years ago that was, I can't tell. I wonder if Burgenlanders enjoyed wine back then.

    Below is Willi Wetschka (right) and his friend in the barn of Wetschka's winery, 2007.


    Click to enlarge.________

  • The photos below are from photographer Peter Menzel's 2005 book, Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.

    Menzel traveled to 24 countries, visiting and photographing 30 families for the book. Each photo represents the weekly food intake for the families pictured. (Each family was asked to purchase, at Menzel's expense, a typical week's groceries. The book lists the food items in detail, broken down by food group and cost, along with how the food was raised and prepared.)

    I came across Menzel's photos on Amber's Blog (on Gaia), her post from November 27, 2007. She has a few more there, and some interesting comments.

    Germany: The Melander family of Bargteheide
    Food expenditure for one week: $500.07

  • Recall my post from a few weeks ago, Living High Off The Hog?, where livestock farmers in Pennsylvania ..."... started giving their pigs and cows chocolate - and banana chips and cashews and yogurt-covered raisins, any of which were cheaper than run-of the-mill corn and beans. One farmer even supplied his cattle a special "party mix" of popcorn, pretzels, cheese curls and crisps. This, he told reporters, saved 10% on feed costs."It looks like livestock farmers in Europe may add animal remains to their party mix: 1
    "The European Union is preparing plans to allow pig remains to be used to feed poultry. The practice - banned in Europe after the BSE* crisis 10 years ago - would save farmers millions of pounds as prices of cereal feed for chickens soar, say officials in Brussels."

  • Until after the esophagogastroduodenocolonoscopy.1 Well, not all eating. This is tonight's dinner:


    And tomorrow's breakfast too. Actually, just 4 Dulcolax. But the whole bottle, 14 complete servings of that MiraLax must be enlisted to perform the unsubtle function.

    I had reservations posting this. But, well, what's a blog for? So, if you have any experience with this procedure, your comments are welcome!
    ________1 A combined esophagogastroduodenoscopy and colonoscopy.
    Photo: Homegrown. I wish it wasn't.

  • An NPR commentator asked a dairy farmer how Daylight Savings Time affects his cows. I thought it wouldn't, because cows live by a biological clock. That was my knee-jerk reaction.

    The farmer said, "It's tough getting them up early!" *
    (So, they make the cows live by man's clock.)
    "And they don't produce as much."
    (...)
    "But it's not as bad as in the fall when we gain an hour!"
    (Oh, no...)
    "The cows get health problems in their udders because their milk builds up!"
    (Why don't we just schedule people to work around the cows' cycle?)
    ________* I'm paraphrasing.
    Photo: Dr. Baker milking cow, circa 1900, Texas.

  • Lavender Blue sent me this article from Newsweek:

    Junk Food County: Why many rural Americans can't get nutritious foods. The unhealthy truth about country living.

    I can't stop thinking about it. It's troubling, on a number of levels.

    An excerpt:

  • Michael Winner is an English film director, producer, and food critic for the UK's Sunday Times. He just wrote a book, "The Fat Pig Diet."

    Here's an excerpt (1 stone = 14 pounds):

    The Fat Pig Diet: Michael Winner's Guide To Getting Thin

  • Ronald's comment reminded me of this.

    Libby's Ingredients: Mechanically Separated Chicken, Partially Defatted Cooked Pork Fatty Tissue, Beef Tripe, Partially Defatted Cook Beef Fatty Tissue, Vinegar, Salt, Spices, Sugar, Flavorings, Sodium Erythorbate And Sodium Nitrate.

    Paul Krzyzanowski posted this photo of his collection:

  • The USDA has jurisdiction over meat, poultry, and eggs. The FDA has jurisdiction over just about all other food products. The FDA does not currently have recall authority, but they are in the process of asking Congress for it.

    In my previous post I said I did not know whether the USDA had recall authority. The article below suggests they do not have recall authority, nor do they want it:

  • I have a question ... for anyone ... because it looks like many of you know more about prehistoric man than I do.

    I looked up the average lifespan for some older humans (I don't know prehistoric designations, but this chart said Neanderthal, Upper Paleolithic, Neolithic):
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  • Boy, do I get excited over new foods. Red quinoa! New for me, old for people who live in the Andes Mountains of South America, who, according to the box, have been growing it for more than 5,000 years. I wonder what they served it with. Maybe it's old for lots of you too, but I'm having fun with it!

    It's a little more crunchy than the white quinoa I'm used to, if you could call quinoa crunchy at all. Otherwise, it's pretty similar in taste and cooking time.

    The rusty red color of the grain blooms to a foggy purple color when cooked. (Click for larger.)

  • Melinda's raised-bed installation:


    Click for larger.________Photos: Melinda

  • Every day, a little bit of my faith blows away ...

    Cancer Docs Profit From Chemotherapy Drugs
    Situation begs the ethical question: Are they overprescribing?
    "The significant amount of our revenue comes from the profit, if you will, that we make from selling the drugs," says Dr. Peter Eisenberg, a private physician who specializes in cancer treatment.________