Darth Wong wrote:Ordering salads is generally a good way to reduce calories, for example, but not when your salad consists of 85% Caesar dressing, by volume. Do you tax the dressing?
You tax the whole salad, because the net product has high fat. You would also tax high-fat dressings in general, of course.
Better, I think, to tax the salad and not the dressing. If the salad is being given the customer without dressing and the Caesar dressing is added later, then taxing the whole salad would be an unfair penalty on people who use no dressing, or only a little dressing.
Also, taxing the dressing directly gives the restaurant a reason to stop putting dressing on the tables and make it available only on request, or substitute a low-fat dressing. Taxing any salad that happens to have the dressing put on top of it doesn't really help much at that point.
The junk food tax would simply be directly applied to buffet dining in general, which is also a significant cause of obesity...
Does this include salad bars which do not make high-fat foods freely available in large amounts? I can easily imagine a restaurant with a reasonable salad bar in that respect.
So I still think it makes more sense to tax fattening foods directly. That attacks the main problem of buffet dining, too. If buffet eaters are mostly taking a lot of fattening foods and fattening foods are expensive, the buffets will have to crank up their prices a lot to compensate... to the point where buffet eating is no longer competitive. The trick is to make food expensive enough that food is a large chunk of the place's operating costs relative to things like labor, which shifts the balance in favor of more labor-intensive but less food-intensive places. When food is cheaper than labor, self-serve food can outcompete served food more easily.
Or is that something you've already said, that I missed in the quote spaghetti? If so, I apologize.
Darksider wrote:How the fuck does someone get to the point where they need to eat that much food? I'll readily admit that I am far from fit, and that I need to loose about twenty pounds, but even I couldn't possibly eat that much in a day, let alone a single meal.
This guy must be a real anomaly; even the 300-pounder types I've known couldn't put away that much. And yes, I mean putting away
one sixth of that guy's order. I can't imagine any one person eating the whole thing in less than a week, either; that's got to be something like a cubic foot of food.
JointStrikeFighter wrote:Because a 375mm coke has 40grams of sugar whereas a coke zero has none. TURNS OUT ordering diet coke will make your meal half as unhealthy.
...Assuming your original portion was sane. Which this giant monster's wasn't. Also, you meant 375 mL, right?
Broomstick wrote:For restaurants, it might make more sense to tax large portions - anything over a certain number of calories, or with more than 6 ounces of meat, or some other defining characteristic to be taxed, to encourage smaller portions. Buffets, at which it is enormously easy to overeat, might need a little attention, too.
This. Many restaurant portions are gigantic, and training yourself to deliberately stop eating before you are seriously full is nontrivial. Possible, yes; nontrivial.
And yes, there should be some social pressure to encourage people to lose weight and get in shape. This needs to be humane - for someone morbidly obese simply walking a block or two can be overwhelming. Nonetheless, they should be encouraged to do that, because it's only by doing such things that they will become more capable of exercise. Obese people are people with a serious problem. Overcoming it will be hard. They should be encouraged to improve, but brow-beating them, humiliating them, or otherwise telling them to shape the fuck up will only work with a minority of them - in most cases it will probably only make things worse.
Broad agreement. I have actually teetered on the edge of "morbid obesity" territory, though not to the "walking a block is overwhelming" point. Nowhere near
that bad, thank God.
I've fought my way
part of the way back down from there to normal weight, and I want to make it really clear that I know from experience that it is NOT easy, especially if you've been that way since you were a child. Your entire sense of "normal" eating and activity levels gets so completely warped that the only way to escape is to consciously override your reflexes on an hour-by-hour basis. Your subconscious will keep kicking in with all sorts of dodgy justifications and half-measures. People being hard on you will not only fail to help, they will actively harm, by contributing to the same sort of general depression, humiliation, and shut-in behavior that leads back to comfort eating.
It is a really nasty pit to have to scramble out of. Slip and you end up right back where you started. To make matters worse, it doesn't do a damn bit of good to modify your behavior
slightly and lose, say, ten pounds; that may make you less miserable on the scale but it won't change your appearance or overall fitness much. You've got to go much farther than that, and at weight loss rates consistent with health you won't be back to normal without many months of sustained conscious effort.