Jerry Eichenberger
Serious Thumper
   
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2006 S40. OEM windshield, saddle bags, Sportster
Posts: 2919
Columbus, Ohio
Gender:
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Star - Being "lazy" has nothing to do with Southern obesity. You are correct that poor people tend to have yet poorer eating habits. It's not because a poor person can't eat healthy; it's because most don't know how to, or don't care. A healthy breakfast of oatmeal costs a whole lot less than eggs, bacon, sausage. Oatmeal and pancakes cost about the same, but the calorie count, fat calories, and glycemic index are nowhere near the same. My point was simple - rural people generally don't walk as much as big city folks do. In Chicago, for instance, I'll walk from my hotel to the courthouse, about 15 minutes each way, or 30 minutes round trip. That alone is sufficient for the 30 minutes of walking each day that a person should do. Why spend $10 - $15 for a cab ride, in heavy traffic, when the walk doesn't take that much longer? Sure, I'll cab it in the rain, or on the bitter cold winter days, but most of the time, I walk. It's about the usefulness of walking - if you go to big cities very often, you see people from all walks of life hoofing it far more than in the rural areas, where folks get into a car or a pickup to drive a couple of miles, or less. Why do we have a Boston Marathon, and a New York City Marathon? I've never heard of a marathon in Hattiesburg, Mississippi or in Plains, Georgia; have you? Again, "lazy" has nothing to do with it - it's about culture, and what's perceived as important. Poor people generally have shoes - in fact, come with me to court some time and see the $150+ fancy athletic shoes on the feet of some of the poorest kids in town as they stroll by the courthouse. All it takes to walk is normal attire ( pants up around your waste, not your butt ) and a pair of shoes, and my bet is that most fat people own both. Culture and habits are what need to be changed to get this obesity epidemic under control. The is a Golden Corral not far from my office - I eat lunch there now and then. They have boiled cabbage, lima beans, broccoli, and cauliflower on the buffet, as well as broiled fish and fairly lean pot roast. I like those things; I'm not much into "yuppie food ". I'll fill my plate with the aforementioned veggies, and take a piece of pot roast about the size of a deck of playing cards, or similar sized piece of fish or roasted chicken. Frankly, I'm probably the best dressed person in the place. The fat ones have the salad loaded with sour cream, mayo based dressings like ranch or blue cheese, then for their entrée they hit the mac and cheese, pizza, pasta, loaded baked potato, and then go straight to the desert section and load up on cake, pie and ice cream. The fat ones act like it's a contest to see who can eat the most quantity of high fat, high calorie and high glycemic foods. I pay the same price they do, and I come out of there having had a very healthy meal - they come out 2500 calories later, and wonder why they are fat. It's all about choices, not monetary status.
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