The obesity era
As the American people got fatter, so did marmosets, vervet monkeys and mice. The problem may be bigger than any of us
by David Berreby
Years ago, after a plane trip spent reading Fyodor Dostoyevskys Notes from the Underground and Weight Watchers magazine, Woody Allen melded the two experiences into a single essay. I am fat, it began. I am disgustingly fat. I am the fattest human I know. I have nothing but excess poundage all over my body. My fingers are fat. My wrists are fat. My eyes are fat. (Can you imagine fat eyes?). It was 1968, when most of the worlds people were more or less height-weight proportional and millions of the rest were starving. Weight Watchers was a new organisation for an exotic new problem. The notion that being fat could spur Russian-novel anguish was good for a laugh.
That, as we used to say during my Californian adolescence, was then. Now, 1968s joke has become 2013s truism. For the first time in human history, overweight people outnumber the underfed, and obesity is widespread in wealthy and poor nations alike. The diseases that obesity makes more likely diabetes, heart ailments, strokes, kidney failure are rising fast across the world, and the World Health Organisation predicts that they will be the leading causes of death in all countries, even the poorest, within a couple of years. What's more, the long-term illnesses of the overweight are far more expensive to treat than the infections and accidents for which modern health systems were designed. Obesity threatens individuals with long twilight years of sickness, and health-care systems with bankruptcy.
And so the authorities tell us, ever more loudly, that we are fat disgustingly, world-threateningly fat. We must take ourselves in hand and address our weakness. After all, its obvious who is to blame for this frightening global blanket of lipids: its us, choosing over and over again, billions of times a day, to eat too much and exercise too little. What else could it be? If youre overweight, it must be because you are not saying no to sweets and fast food and fried potatoes. Its because you take elevators and cars and golf carts where your forebears nobly strained their thighs and calves. How could you do this to yourself, and to society?
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http://aeon.co/magazine/being-human/david-berreby-obesity-era/
DamnYankeeInHouston
(1,365 posts)SheilaT
(23,156 posts)going on with the overweight/obesity epidemic.
I often think of the ulcer problem, where for many years ulcers were attributed to diet or stress, and treated by diets. Some researcher started looking into the possibility that a bacteria might be involved. He was ridiculed but was eventually proven correct.
Yeah, we have a lot more food available, and lots of people really do eat too much, but I keep on thinking there's something else going on.
fasttense
(17,301 posts)Then something's going on around here.