You want the government to "act now" but refuse to consider a tax to pay for that action?
I don't refuse anything of the sort. I spoke out in response to Mike's advocacy of the idea that the United States government should "wring" itself back to solvency by imposing a higher level of taxes on individual consumers.
You do this despite evidence that exists right now that some of these "architectures" can and even do work.
No, I do this in spite of your perception that you have presented evidence that some of these architectures and do work in a manner that validates their widespread application.
We're talking about food - some types of which require preservatives to remain wholesome.
Actually, to be even more precise, we're talking about
consumers and purveyors of food. We are trying to curb certain behavior by some consumers by applying a tax which can support programs that enhance other groups' access to healthy foods. Such a program will have residual effects on certain kinds of business models. An assumption is being made that business models heavily dependent upon the sale of junk food items can be easily modified. I see no evidence that those assumptions are true. Instead, I see advocacy for anti-obesity measures (not yet validated) as a means to solve problems of access and distribution.
The idea, I suppose, is that fat people will finance subsidies that lower the cost of health foods for consumers. Troubling. If you intended that that help fat people, however, you should respond to the argument that obesity is already a form of lifestyle choice that entails enormous costs. If you intend that fat people simply finance other people's access to healthy meals, then please answer another question: if junk food is no longer competitive, what happens to those whose livelihoods depend upon it? I assume that it's expected that some of the little markets and Gas-n-Go's will begin to stock fruits and vegetables. That ignores the question of whether or not they will be able to afford: (1) new investments in refrigeration; (2) the "hidden" costs exclusive to the sale of produce; (3) the logistical and administrative costs of the collective bargaining that will be necessary to secure produce at competitive rates.
I'm talking about health inspectors - which, at least in my area, can and do shut down stores due to health violations. Said violations are also posted in the local papers. Store owners absolutely want to avoid that publicity.
The extent of perturbation required before remedial action is taken varies by jurisdiction. In many cases, the laws allow for flexibility. This means that unsanitary conditions can and will pertain. An NBC investigation of major supermarket chains nationwide in 2006 revealed numerous [url=
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10976595/ns/dateline_nbc/]shortcomings[/utl]. If this is the state of affairs at major supermarkets, which have staff to spare, I can only imagine what it must be at literal holes-in-the-wall.
Yes, and it's PROOF poor, urban people will buy such things if they are available.
It's proof that people will buy them, if available, not that convenience stores will be able to stock them. You are confusing business models.
Yes and yes. I don't know why you think it is such an inconceivable notion.
That is because I don't trust a 7-11 to maintain sanitary conditions. Their sandwiches are usually soggy, and their fruit often browned.
Could go either way, but because it might not happen you refuse to even try.
Hope isn't a substitute for hard fact. You're a poor steward of the public trust if you throw money at problems on the off-chance that something might work.
Oh, total bullshit - more small grocery stores is exactly what is need in the "food desert" regions, not expanded "convenience stores". And there are not "hundreds of thousands" of convenience stores, nor is their business likely to be "ruined" if an Aldi's moves in next door because, really, they can serve two different niches.
But grocery stories aren't found in food deserts despite their clear ability to out-price smaller markets with lower budgets, fewer staff, and less opportunity for bulk purchasing. If you wish to advocate a method to bring grocery stores into food deserts, I'm right there with you. A tax on junk food isn't necessarily a useful approach.
In inner cities, convenience stores naturally enjoy the business which would otherwise go to grocery stores if the setting were suburbia. A fax tax will either change nothing, because consumers will "eat" costs. Grocery stores are already competitive as matched against convenience stores in food deserts. Poor people pay more for their food; that's already a proven fact. The real problem is that grocery stores need to sell in bulk to recover costs -- and they can't achieve those kinds of sales in most purely urban settings.
If it takes months to sell that last bag then it's not worth the overhead. And maybe you never noticed, but potato chips have expiration dates, too.
Potato chips last longer than fruits and vegetables. They also sell more easily when one gets down to "the last bag." There is less intrinsic risk involved in selling chips.
Read the fucking labels, will you - the bags of frozen vegetables I buy have no preservatives whatsoever. And some foods actually should have preservatives in order to keep them wholesome, are you ignorant of that fact? A balanced frozen dinner with vegetables and an appropriate level of preservatives is not inherently unhealthy, and if it reduces caloric consumption compared to, say, fast food then it will help reduce obesity.
Most frozen food is less healthy than fresh food. Do you agree or disagree? One part of the push to bring cheaper, healthier options to people in inner cities should be, as Mike said, an encouragement of cultural change.
What do you think this thread is? What is the forum title? A DEBATE forum. Next!
Debate on this forum is not a substitute for national debate. Next!
Expecting much of government is an ideological stance. You're not debating any specific ideologies other than taxation.
I'm not debating taxation at all. I'm debating the merits of spending money on an initiative that does not have clear validation.
The government acting to ensure all americans have access to healthful foods? Define this.
The government should take action to ensure that all Americans have access to healthy foods at reasonable prices. The extent of that action can and should be debated. I am not inherently opposed to new or higher taxes.
The real problems is health behaviours. The current health behaviours is maladaptive. It is entirely possible for governments to socially engineer society so more healthful behaviours can be introduced.
It is possible, yes.
Based on WHICH specifics? You been arguing entirely regarding generalities, all of which are easily disproved considering that other countries and other cities have been doing so successfully.
The examples offered are not actually valid. I've provided detail in my replies to Broomstick above.
Small convenience style shops, hell, freaking tabletops with a counter has been selling fruits/vegetables in other countries for decades. Their failing popularity has more to do with supermarkets penetrating into their markets than the possibility of convenience shops NOT being able to store perishable goods.
One doesn't simply wake up one day and say, "Let's stock fresh fruits and vegetables in my store!" It's a business decision, motivated by a particular calculus.
Chicago supposedly have street vendors selling pumpkins and other perishable produce. Ditto to California.
Good for them. This doesn't in any way address any of my points. Street vendors operate on a business model with very low overhead. They usually sell fruits and vegetables exclusively, and only in certain types of weather.
And? What is to prevent convience stores from selling such produce? Hell, if Broomstick is right, its not as if supermarkets are on every single street corner, right? That's a market niche right there.
The existence of a market niche doesn't make it economical for somebody to fill it. There are investments needed.
Actually, I do. Both of them. The local 7-11 sell bananas, oranges and frozen grapes. Salads and oranges however are usually found in more established areas that pretend to have a cafeteria next to them, but bananas and grapes are routinely sold.
Bananas, oranges, and grapes. Sold in small bunches. To three or four customers each day.
Honestly, in the US the only regions that have problems are ones where people are like Axis Kast and refuse to even entertain the notion based on idiotic general ideological terms. Hell, in California, fruit trucks are more common than ice cream trucks. The desert regions of the United States already have extensive distribution networks to supply existing supermarkets, and many cities out there manage to have regular weekly/monthly farmer's markets, so a marginal tax should realistically be able to expand this network to include more smaller stores with healthy food. I can't think of any part of the US where economic factors actually WOULD be worrisome in this regard.
It isn't my fault your brain is broken.
I'm not refusing to entertain this program "on idiotic general ideological terms." I'm refusing to endorse this program because I don't see how it is likely to help the obese, the hungry, or those who don't get proper nourishment.
The distribution networks which supply supermarkets cost money. You are saying, "I see that some companies have distribution networks! Clearly, all companies can sustain them!" That isn't valid; it's an unsubstantiated assertion that compares apples to oranges.
On the other hand, Axis Kast lists his location as South Africa... which makes me think he's basing his opinion on limited information and/or caricatures of the US. Unlike him, however, I have actually been poor in major urban areas in the US and have some actual first hand experience with the issues involved.
I live in the United States. But, of course, that's actually immaterial as to whether or not I'm making good arguments.
Yes, food desserts exist. However, convenience stores also exist that do manage to sell a few fresh foods. Hell, on the Chicago subway you have homeless people selling bags of fruit. While not every urban poor person is going to run out and gorge on vegetables, there IS a pent-up demand for actual produce in some areas.
And how much rent do homeless people pay per day? How many employees do they hire? How many other items do they need to stock?