Today, in this corner: The companies that bring us cookies and cola, potato chips and dip, super sizes and big bags and giant gulps.
In the opposite corner: None other than Michelle Obama, the first lady of the United States, who is determined to make a difference in childhood obesity.
Who are you betting on?
If you said the food companies, you wouldn’t be alone. They spend billions each year putting snacks and goodies that populate commercials, fill grocery aisles and school vending machines, and make their way into our homes – and stomachs.
And we buy it. Boy do we buy it. The country is in an obesity crisis, and now a third of our children have followed suit.
It’s not exactly going to be a smackdown. The Grocery Manufacturers Association put the welcome mat out and invited Mrs. Obama to speak at her science forum today. From the Associated Press:
“Welcoming the first lady and embracing her campaign for healthier kids, launched earlier this year, could have advantages.
“The industry is positioned to take some blows in the coming year, including a child nutrition bill about to move through Congress that could eliminate junk food in schools, digging into some companies' profits.
“The Food and Drug Administration is also beginning to crack down on misleading labeling on food packages, saying some items labeled "healthy" are not, and the Senate last year mulled a tax on soda and other sweetened drinks to help pay for overhauling health care.
“That tax did not make it into the health care bill, but it could be seen as an opening shot in a quietly growing effort to target food companies, especially as local, state and federal governments scrounge for revenue in a tight fiscal environment.”
This is the first time that the first lady will have spoken directly to food manufacturers. Previously, her audiences have been primarily schools and nutrition groups.
Newsweek, for one, is taking note. The magazine has a cover story by Michelle Obama, who writes directly to readers about childhood obesity, and how childhoods have changed since today’s adults were children. An excerpt:
“For many kids today, those walks to school have been replaced by car and bus rides. Afternoons playing outside have been replaced with afternoons inside with TV, videogames, and the Internet. And with many parents working longer hours, or multiple jobs, they don't have time for family meals around the table anymore.
“It's now clear that between the pressures of today's economy and the breakneck pace of modern life, the well-being of our kids has too often gotten lost in the shuffle.
“And let's be honest with ourselves: Our kids didn't do this to themselves. Our kids don't decide what's served in the school cafeteria or whether there's time for gym class or recess. Our kids don't choose to make food products with tons of sugar and sodium in supersize portions, and then have those products marketed to them everywhere they turn. And no matter how much they beg for fast food and candy, our kids shouldn't be the ones calling the shots at dinnertime. We're in charge. We make these decisions.”
In that meeting today with food manufacturers, I think my money’s on the First Lady. How about you?
The Associated Press story:
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5iFMWjYQVCvijrjWw469KY1Xd-5iwD9EFJ2MO0
Michelle Obama’s Newsweek cover story:
http://www.newsweek.com/id/234885
The webpage, which includes a video, for Let’s Move:
http://www.letsmove.gov/
Add a Comment2 Comments
Good move from Obama. But i think not a single person able to stop this one. I am not opposite from obama but think again...Can we leave without eat junk food.That's is not possible from my point of view.
personal injury Houston
May 9, 2010 - 11:11pmThis Comment
There’s an interesting post over at the Health Journal Club that makes the case that people should just not eat anything that wasn’t a food 100 years ago. Gets rid of the aspartame, bleached GM flour, high fructose corn syrup garbage they try to pass off as food these days. If interested you can read on it here,
March 16, 2010 - 11:47pmhttp://healthjournalclub.blogspot.com/2010/01/100-year-diet.html
This Comment