Guest guest Posted September 29, 2004 Report Share Posted September 29, 2004 > (I also wonder about the >increasingly awful stuff soldiers are fed in the field -- diet sodas left >to bake in the sun, macaroni and " cheese " MREs, etc. It can't be all that >much healthier.) My dh and his brother are in the Naval Reserves (they were on active duty during the first Gulf War), and they call MREs Meals Rejected by Everyone else. They also joke about the name, Meals Ready to Eat, saying that the contents are in fact none of those things. Your tax dollars hard at work, folks! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 29, 2004 Report Share Posted September 29, 2004 You know, that's a very interesting question. I'm fairly certain that most of it is the microgravity (after all, plenty of people in the US eat far less nutrient rich material for much longer periods of time) but even something as simple a increasing the amount of animal fat in the food would make most of the nutrients in the food far more available and that might put off some of the microgravity effects. On the other hand, an improvement in the foods used to feed our soldiers (and students) is definitely called for. With greater nutrition and better food would come increased health, decreased carbohydrate obesity, greater lucidity of thought, and improved morale. Meals Ready to Eat (MRE's are less adaptable but there are still some tweaks that could be used to improve a food source to be relied upon in one of the most stressful situations known to man. Geoffrey Tolle Idol wrote: > Thought some of you might be interested in this. > > I've always wondered how much of the bone demineralization and muscle > loss > that afflicts astronauts in space is really because of the > microgravity, as > they say, and how much is actually because of the appalling food (if you > can even call it food) they're fed up there. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 30, 2004 Report Share Posted September 30, 2004 - >My dh and his brother are in the Naval Reserves (they were on active duty >during the first Gulf War), and they call MREs Meals Rejected by Everyone >else. They also joke about the name, Meals Ready to Eat, saying that the >contents are in fact none of those things. Your tax dollars hard at work, >folks! I read an article maybe a year ago about how much " progress " the military has made with MREs since the first Gulf War, making dishes like macaroni and cheese that troops actually (well, supposedly) want to eat, but reading about what the dishes were actually made from, it sounded like a recipe for ill health and nothing but. Interesting to hear they aren't (or weren't, anyway) actually ready to eat, though. I wonder whether that's still true. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 30, 2004 Report Share Posted September 30, 2004 Geoffrey- >I'm fairly certain >that most of it is the microgravity (after all, plenty of people in the >US eat far less nutrient rich material for much longer periods of time) Admittedly I'm not up on the latest in astronaut rations, but I'm not so sure about that. Literally nothing an astronaut eats while in space is unprocessed, not even semi-unprocessed. Even SAD eaters generally get some fresh meat in some form or other, even if it's a Big Mac made with the worst available beef. AFAIK everything an astronaut eats has to be reconstituted from powder and paste, and since foods processed into powders and refined as highly as that tend to be pretty toxic, it wouldn't surprise me if a major cause of their physical degeneration is in fact dietary. >With greater nutrition >and better food would come increased health, decreased carbohydrate >obesity, greater lucidity of thought, and improved morale. Not to mention less shell shock (or PTSD, or whatever they're calling it now) and more hardiness and fewer non-battle-related injuries -- and who knows, maybe fewer casualties, if the soldiers were in better health and thus able to be more on the ball. It's criminal, sending soldiers into harm's way and feeding them swill like that. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 30, 2004 Report Share Posted September 30, 2004 At 07:09 PM 9/29/2004, you wrote: >Not to mention less shell shock (or PTSD, or whatever they're calling it >now) and more hardiness and fewer non-battle-related injuries -- and who >knows, maybe fewer casualties, if the soldiers were in better health and >thus able to be more on the ball. It's criminal, sending soldiers into >harm's way and feeding them swill like that. > >- Course, if you want to get into how we treat our troops, you could also talk about depleted uranium, strange vaccinations, using them as guinea pigs, lack of armor-plated vehicles, extended tours of duty ... Actually in the old days I think they might have done better by the troops sometimes. Ghenghis Khan wasn't the model of humanitarianism, but his troops carried pickled cabbage, he travelled with the troops so shared the danger, and everyone got to pillage so there was hope of reward. Anyway, as far as health, I read somewhere that he is credited for coming up with better ways to feed his troops. I better shut up now or I'll have to add " POLITICS " ... Heidi Jean Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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