Wyrm wrote:Tahlan wrote:We tried that solution already: We let the prepared food companies have their way. The junk food bonanza and the current obesity trend was the result.
There is not a 100% correlation between "the junk food bonanza" and "the current obesity trend." I'll agree that there is a correlation, but there are many more factors affecting obesity in the States than just junk food, and I might add, fast food, which is almost a synonym for junk food.
Waddya mean "almost"? Fast food
is junk food. Haven't you seen
Supersize Me?
Yes, there are many factors to the obesity epidemic —excercise, for one— and yes the correlation isn't 100% (some obesity is simply caused by lack of excercise and overeating of non-junk food), but junk food
is a major contributer to obesity in general, from fast food replacing normal meals, to the munching on snacks that do not satisfy you for long between meals.
The current obesity trend wouldn't be nearly as bad as it is currently without junk food. As far as I'm concerned, the major contributers to a problem share the blame, especially if there's no clearly identifiable chief contributer.
I think we have an issue of semantics here.
First, can we agree that "fast food" is purchased at McDonalds, Jack-in-the-Box, Burger King, What-a-Burger, Taco Bell, KFC, Subway, Quiznos, etc.?
Second, can we further agree that not all "fast food" is "junk food." E.g., a salad purchased from Jack-in-the-Box is not junk food, although it does qualify as fast food.
Third, can we also agree that "junk food" includes
most fast food, but also includes all manner of chips, Ho-Hos, Twinkies, Ding-Dongs, etc. There are many more examples, and a concise definition of "junk food" that everyone agrees upon is impossible.
Junk Food
Therefore, in my lexicon, "junk food" is a broad definition that includes not only
most fast food, but includes a myriad of other foods as well, and I use the term "foods" loosely. Hence my statement that "
fast food...is almost a synonym for junk food." Junk food is a broader category than fast food.
Since the definition of "synonym" is:
1 : one of two or more words or expressions of the same language that have the same or nearly the same meaning in some or all senses, I used the adverb "almost" to qualify the verb "is." And there is the issue of semantics. Perhaps you may argue that I did not need to use "almost" as a qualifier. But I did so since junk food is a much broader term than fast food, and not all fast food qualifies as junk food.
So in the end, I stand by my statement: Fast food is almost a synonym for junk food.