• Bizarroland@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    You say to solve obesity eat less. What you’re actually saying is that people should starve.

    And not starve on a calorie basis, you’re fine with meeting the calories they need to function, you’re telling them to starve nutritionally.

    You’re telling them to ignore their bodies number one desire, which is to live, in order to meet an aesthetic.

    I’m telling you that that will not work.

    That will not work because the food that is available in the caloric amounts available is nutritionally insufficient to survive on for many people.

    And you ignore the mind body connection, assuming that it’s simply a matter of thought to tell your body that no you have eaten enough food and you’re not going to eat anymore that’s all you fucking get when your body is telling your mind that it is starving and it needs more food and it’s not going to function until you provide it for me

    The human diet is not a solved equation.

    If all food were the same then how can you starve to death with a full belly of rabbit meat?

    If all food were the same, how can you die of malnutrition eating only fish?

    I’m telling you the root cause of modern-day obesity is that obese people have either a natural predisposition or a genetic requirement for a different nutrient profile than the foods that are commonly available in the western diet provides.

    The foods of the last 80 years are vastly different than the foods of the hundred thousand years available prior to that.

    The crops that we grow have been optimized to grow quickly and to provide a lot of calories. Our grandparents would get one crop of corn per year. Modern Farmers May grow two, three or four crops of corn in the same field per year.

    It takes time for plants to absorb nutrients from soil.

    Even when you supplement with fertilizers, not every fertilizer is optimized to perfectly recreate ideal soil substrates.

    Fertilizers typically prioritize nitrogen as nitrogen causes plants to grow quickly.

    So the fast food that is grown in the soil does not have the same nutrient profile as the slow food grown in the soil.

    We then feed our cows and chickens the fast farmer food and then we eat those cows and chickens and the fast farmer food but we further break those down and reconstitute them into things that do not spoil easily.

    Canned foods, for instance, we’re developed so that the beans that you harvested in October could be eaten in February. Now, canned foods are meant to be one of the primary Staples of the western diet. Everything about whatever was put into those cans has been sterilized and optimized for shelf longevity.

    • Bizarroland@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I’ll stop that rant to start a different one and this one will be quicker. The best meal I’ve ever had in my life was at a farm to table restaurant.

      I was out visiting this place with my girlfriend at the time and she saw this little restaurant by the side of the road and we decided to stop in.

      It was fairly pricey but reading their menu they mentioned that all of the food that they were serving there that day that could be grown locally was harvested this morning and prepared for you today.

      I spent $100 for the two of us to eat. I had meatloaf with mashed potatoes and green beans and it was $40.

      I thought that for $40 I would get a gargantuan portion and instead it was actually a very small portion compared to what I would normally eat. The serving of meatloaf was about the size of a deck of cards. The mashed potatoes were about the size of my fist, and I probably got maybe 25 green beans.

      I was somewhat upset because my expectations based off of my normally available foods would say that a dinner of meatloaf would cost less than $20 and would fill the plate but there was a lot of plate available and visible on this $40 serving.

      But, I said fuck it we ball worst case I can go and get some other fast food elsewhere if I still feel hungry afterwards.

      And let me tell you, I honestly cannot remember the last time I was so satisfied with a meal. The taste was not twice the price worth but when I finished eating I kind of felt tingly.

      My stomach was sending waves of pleasure through my body, it was a sensation that I have never felt before.

      My stomach was telling my entire body that I was full, and I was satisfied, and that I had eaten exactly the right amount of food and that feeling continued for the remainder of the day.

      We had this meal at like 1:30 in the afternoon on a Saturday and I did not want to eat again for the rest of the day.

      The freshness of the food. The nutritional quality of that meal was so far above the available nutritional quality of any other food that I can personally locate that I got physically high off of eating fucking meatloaf.

      I am not rich.

      I cannot afford to eat $40 meals for every meal. I do not have access to a farm to provide me with fresh vegetables to eat every single day.

      But that one experience highlighted to me how important nutrition is when fighting obesity.

      That is why I feel confident in saying that obese people are not obese because they just love eating so much and they are fat little piggies that can’t control themselves.

      I feel confident in saying that the grand majority of obese people who eat the Western diet are obese because the food that they have available does not have the nutritional profile that their body is craving, and because of that, their bodies compel them to continue eating until they meet their nutritional baselines.

      If that is the case the best solution for obesity is to first nourish the body and then allow them to eat whatever they want on top of that.

      And you can say it’s all calories in calories out that you want but not every calorie is the same because once again, if they were, how can you starve to death with a belly full of rabbit meat?

    • Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      No, you are saying people should starve, and pretending I am saying it.

      And then you say people should ignore their bodies and pretend that I am saying it.

      You then try to talk about ascetics, I guess? Which no, you eat a healthy amount of healthy food, and not more. Have a treat, it’s fine.

      Don’t eat much more than you need to and you will not be obese.

      You’ve already stated that ingesting more calories then you burn causes obesity. This is correct.

      Nobody is arguing that all food is the same either, this is another thing only you have brought up.

      You’re making all these facetious arguments you’re shooting down yourself, so be sure to pat yourself on the back for surmounting the obstacles you constructed.

      And no, the root cause of modern-day obesity is not body type and metabolism. Everyone has minutely different nutritional requirements, not just obese people, their nutritional requirements are not the root cause of their obesity, that claim is absurd on its face.

      People are obese at different relative weights, and it’s natural to have different body types, and it’s equally natural to carry too much extra weight because you eat too much.

      You know how to make fat ducks and geese? Feed them more calories than they need. Know why some dogs and cats are way fatter than the others? They get way more food than the skinny dogs and cats. Know why humans get fat? They eat more food than they burn.

      As you’ve already stated.

      It’s good that you’re learning about nutrition, but try expressing your nutritional tidbits to someone who asked you about them.

      None of your anecdotes are related to the direct cause of obesity, which is eating too much.

      As you’ve agreed to.

      • Bizarroland@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Let me ask you this, if it’s so easy for you to solve it and your solution is the absolute correct solution, then why is it still a problem?

        • Bizarroland@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Remember, you’re saying obese people are obese because they eat too much.

          I’m saying obese people eat too much because they are nutritionally deficient.

          I think that you think that I’m saying that obese people are not obese because they eat too much. I agree with you that obese people are eating too much.

          However, my argument is the “why are they eating too much” argument. You have not touched on nor addressed any portion of my argument.

          You are stuck in the “calories in calories out is the entire equation and everything else is irrelevant” portion of the argument, which is the ABCs of human nutrition.

          I’m telling you that LMNOP is also part of the human nutrition alphabet and that it is an important portion of the conversation that is often overlooked.

          Can you debate me on the topics I am mentioning, or are you still stuck in the ABCs?

        • Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          The solution to obesity is simple, but not easy.

          My solution to obesity is correct(as you’ve stated, we can all agree on it); obesity is still a problem largely because of an overabundance of available food coupled with a lack of personal discipline, seasoned with capitalist production and marketing.

          • Bizarroland@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            I believe this will mark the end of this particular conversation, not because I won, and not because you won, but because we cannot debate on the same level.

            If you ever do learn about what I’m calling the LMNOPs of the human nutrition alphabet then definitely feel free to express your new thoughts to me anytime you want to.

            • Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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              1 year ago

              Since the article in question is discussing obesity and I named the root cause of obesity and then you immediately agreed that nobody can argue with that root cause(consuming more calories then you burn), we’ll say I “won” for the sake of accuracy.

              Following your concession , you propped up unrelated tangential anecdotes about nutrition that you quicotically argued against.

              It is not a matter of debate; you are bringing up and answering your own straw man arguments that I have not engaged with because they are your own questions and answers you have made up in your meandering monologue unrelated to the undisputed fact that obesity is caused by eating too much food.

      • kevin@mander.xyz
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        1 year ago

        The problem with poverty is easily solved: people just need to earn more. Easy!

        The problem of depression is easily solved: people just need to be happier. Easy!

        The problem of obesity is easily solved: people just need to eat less. Easy!

        I can solve war too - people just need to fight less! And death: people just need to age less!

        Man, someone get me a McArthur genius grant already!

        • Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          Your third point is largely correct(cheers), but it’s not as easy to solve poverty, depression, or war as you think it is.

          If you want to lose weight, all you have to do is stop putting food in your mouth, or put less food in your mouth each day. Simple, but not easy for many people.

          Clinical depression, on the other hand, is caused by various complex chemical imbalances influenced by various environmental and social factors, so you can’t simply disentangle yourself from those chemicals and circumstances the same way that you can choose to stop putting food in your mouth.

          • kevin@mander.xyz
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            1 year ago

            Wait, you’re saying that there are nuances and subtleties that my simple solutions don’t take into consideration?!?

            /s (I didn’t think this was necessary, but given your response…)

            Clinical depressionObesity, on the other hand, is caused by various complex chemical imbalances influenced by various environmental and social factors, so you can’t simply disentangle yourself from those chemicals and circumstances

            Yep, exactly!

            Do you seriously think that eating - arguably one of the most fundamental and instinctual things that living things do - is not subject to complex chemical, environmental, and social factors? Really?

            The solution “don’t eat so much” really is as naive as telling a clinically depressed person “just be happier” or telling a poor person “just go earn more” or telling Israelis and Palestinians “just don’t fight do much”.

            Yes, the solutions really are that simple, at one level, but pretending like the knowledge of this solution gets us anywhere in terms of actually addressing the problem is just silly.

            • Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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              1 year ago

              Misattributing your own false arguments to others doesn’t prove you any less wrong.

              I’m not talking about eating, I’m talking about the solution to obesity.

              They are not the same.

              The difference between eating less food is much simpler and has fewer steps(one, if you are having difficulty counting) than the solutions to a war or depression.

              The solutions for war and depression are not as simple as that of obesity.

              Obesity? Eat less.

              War? Stop selling Israel weapons from the US. But where does Palestine get their weapons? Issue a UN resolution. But nobody is bound to follow that resolution. Declare two states. But does each country agree to that? What about boundaries? And on and on. Every proposed solution comes with multiple various considerations that you haven’t taken into account.

              Obesity? Eat less.

              The facetious solutions you’re proposing to stopping a war or ending clinical depression are not as simple as you imagine, are actually impractical and will not work, while eating less is a practical and simple solution to obesity.

              • kevin@mander.xyz
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                1 year ago

                Misattributing your own false arguments to others doesn’t prove you any less wrong.

                And continuing to push your facile argument doesn’t make you any more right.

                War?

                Fight less.

                The facetious solutions you’re proposing to stopping a war or ending clinical depression are not as simple as you imagine,

                Of course not! That’s what makes them facetious! But “fight less” is as useful a solution to war as “eat less” is a solution to obesity. Which is to say it’s trivially right, but not actually a solution at all.

                are actually impractical and will not work

                Right. It’s the same with obesity. Do you honestly think that obese people don’t understand the link between eating and weight gain? Do you think that they don’t spend their entire lives with people admonishing them for their weight?

                • Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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                  1 year ago

                  If you’re aware that you’re making facetious arguments, then stop being facetious and implying false equivalents and try a practical solution.

                  Eating less will solve obesity.

                  You’re wrong in equating war with someone carrying extra weight, they are not the same situation at all.

                  War is often a very complex problem without a simple solution.

                  Eating less is a practical and simple solution to obesity that unarguably works.

                  What obese people understand and whether they get admonished is immaterial to solving their obesity.

                  Eating less is a practical and simple solution to obesity.

                  • kevin@mander.xyz
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                    1 year ago

                    Eating less will solve obesity.

                    Not fighting would solve war. Wouldn’t it?

                    You’re wrong in equating war with someone carrying extra weight, they are not the same situation at all.

                    War is often a very complex problem without a simple solution.

                    Right. Exactly! And obesity is a complex problem without a simple solution. Eating less is a trivially correct solution to obesity just as not fighting is a trivially correct solution to war. Please see https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/reasoning-analogy/

                    What obese people understand and whether they get admonished is immaterial to solving their obesity.

                    My point is that if it were actually so easy, it wouldn’t actually be a problem, would it?

                    If you’re aware that you’re making facetious arguments, then stop being facetious and implying false equivalents

                    I’m not implying anything, I’m offering analogies. And the sarcasm is a rhetorical device that seems to have flown right over your head. I’m sorry about that. I didn’t think you would actually believe I thought that the solution to war and poverty and depression was easy. They’re not. I’m trying to get you to see (argument by analogy, check the link again) that the solution to obesity is not either.

                    If your response is just “yes it is,” if you think that the trivial solution hasn’t been tried over and over again by millions of people who have desperately wanted to lose weight and keep it off, but have failed, you’re being willfully ignorant.

                    Hunger is a primal urge. It’s governed by a complex series of hormonal and neurological feedback loops. It’s influenced by sociological and psychological factors as well as the non-caloric nutritive content of available and tolerated foods. Those factors are shaped by culture and economics and history etc etc

                    When I say all this and you say “eating less is the solution”, it sounds just as silly and naive as when you talk about war being the result of historical factors, religious animosity, geopolitics etc, and I say the solution is not fighting. Which is to say, very silly and naive.