Guest guest Posted May 19, 2006 Report Share Posted May 19, 2006 EDITORIAL: Relieving us of need to choose 20.05.2006 Parliament this week debated the weighty subject of obesity. For anyone intent on managing our lives on our behalf, the question of diet offers rich pickings. The irony is that the more our MPs take on the role of public appetite (as well as conscience) the less reason there is for the rest of us to be troubled with tough decisions. It lends new meaning to spoonfeeding the public. During a debate on fat and diabetes Green MP and committee chairwoman Sue Kedgely, bellwethering the fight against flab, waved a box of Coco Pops which included a free CD, as an example of " bad food " being pushed on children. No mention of parental ignorance or of the virtue of moderation. No suggestion that even " good " food (presumably of the non-corporate kind) can, when taken to excess, cause the same nasty health problems that feed her campaign. The Obesity Action Coalition views as a national benchmark the inability of some parents to deny their children's desires when it says marketing is swamping society and parents struggle to make good choices when their children want products so they can enter competitions or get free gifts. Much of the problem with obesity is that many of those so afflicted, despite recognising the fact, are likely to cling to any reason that makes them eat to excess and neglect to exercise regularly. However quaint it might seem in an age of instant gratification, little comes without determination and effort. And the same goes for child-rearing. Self-deception, Ibsen observed gloomily, is the stimulating principle of life. The easiest course available, if we have a problem, is to externalise the cause of our misfortune and everything is made instantly tolerable. When our leaders attack the hidden persuaders who market the food fabricated by the evil multinationals, it endorses the belief that the obese are all simply victims of someone else's villainy. Why should those " victims " suppose otherwise? If our wrong choices can be blamed on someone else, then it relieves us of fault and the unpleasant feeling that we might have been responsible for messing things up. It is an unintended insult that relegates all to the status of sheep. It might have the virtue of boosting our shepherds' stocks but condemns the rest to perpetual childhood. The first step in combating obesity is to encourage overweight and unhealthy people to acknowledge - as should wheezing smokers - responsibility for their condition. That is not draconian, judgmental or unfair. It is humane and sensible. For children, it is essential parents are reminded of their responsibilities (a concept strangely absent whenever the government or its agencies address the fallout from inadequate parenting). Those who say " yes " too often need reminding they should reclaim the right to say " no " and mean " no " . Banning the promotion of certain foods as " bad " is like banning all sharp or breakable objects in an infant's world. An environment free of risk ensures we can never learn from our mistakes. The freedom to choose also means that we might make unfortunate choices. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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