| > What's your solution? Ban sugar, alcohol and social media? Padding on the sidewalks? There isn't "one solution". And bans generally are not a solution. But we need to fight with the same weapons they're fighting, for example, let's take sugar and unhealthy foods. They're presenting their food as fun and glamorous, let's blow that up, like we did for tobacco. No more mass advertising for it, anywhere. Horrible labels showing disfigured obese people that are suffering because of their addiction to junk food. The food is cheap because they use crap ingrediens? Let's tax food based on universal standards agreed upon not by the industry, but by healthcare specialists. The more you're off the mark from healthy food, the more you get taxed (excises, same as for alcohol and tobacco). Heck, I'd earmark those excises as funding for subsidies meant for producers of healthy, bio foods. These junk food companies are making their stuff cool, so let's prevent that and they're making it cheap by passing their externalities to us (diminished long term health) so let's make their food more expensive and let's make the healthy stuff cheaper. Ah, more than that, quotas of healthy food in every place serving or offering food. Get rid of food deserts. Poor people with low mobility should have access to healthy food at decent prices. Yes, this is all very complicates. Yes, it's very political. But doing nothing achieves nothing. Worse than that, doing nothing actively degrades the situation since these actors are actively harming people in very subtle ways. |
I'm all for banning specific ingredients and processes that are known poisonous (like BPAs for example are banned in many countries, deservedly) but unilaterally deciding what's healthy and having quotas for healthy foods is extreme. It will be the sugar vs fat thing all over and only the rich will benefit.
Just to make sure I understand what you’re proposing, taco trucks and ice cream shops would be illegal in your ideal world yeah?