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Should junk food be taxed?

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Replies

  • Carlos_421
    Carlos_421 Posts: 5,132 Member
    I vote for regulating the food manufacturing industry. Tax them… make the m put clear prominent labels with calorie counts..fat counts.. and chemicals and preservatives. Then the problem would fix itself.

    Also, In Europe they do this.. regulate the food industry strictly. You don't see fat folks in Europe.. and i know they walk a lot..but the food matters too.

    Oh look, my Splenda appears to have some sort of label on it. HUH--wonder what that could be? y4vqviiwzdoa.jpg

    Yeah, but they should have to list the chemicals too!!
  • Russellb97
    Russellb97 Posts: 1,057 Member
    VegetaSKJ wrote: »
    Russellb97 wrote: »
    VegetaSKJ wrote: »
    Russellb97 wrote: »
    Carlos_421 wrote: »
    Russellb97 wrote: »
    Russellb97 wrote: »
    VegetaSKJ wrote: »
    VegetaSKJ wrote: »
    I guess the question is would we agree to tax it if there is impact on obesity / weight? The link isn't particularly strong, despite people's opinions.
    From pure correlation, if we want people to lose weight, we should be subsidizing soda, sweat snacks, and salty snacks. Sweat snacks in particular.
    foodpsychology.cornell.edu/discoveries/junk-food-blame
    651

    Though it does say for 95% of Americans there is no relationship between eating those foods and BMI

    Yes, but the thing they're most linked to - if anything - is underweight, rather than overweight. So move away from being overweight to being normal weight by eating more sweat and salty snacks, but stop before you hit underweight. Makes sense, doesn't it?

    I found that odd too

    A couple of thoughts;

    1. Underweight people don't have a messed up RMR from years of dieting like us and so can eat more.
    2. In the past when I'd restrict the foods I craved, I would often eat several "healthy" things trying satisfy my craving and ate more calories than if I just had the darn donut to begin with.


    Most under weight people have lower RMR than overweight people. It's quite difficult to maintain underweight status. I'm normal weight (bmi20) and my bmr is 1300 which isn't super high and i have to eat less calories to maintain than someone who weighs more than me. Bmr lowers as your weight lowers. I don't know why you think underweight eat more than overweight?

    Well on paper they should but total weight isn't as important as LBM for RMR and also many studies have shown that dieting can drop RMR far beyond was predicted with weight loss and can stay damaged even after the weight has come back.
    I eat more calories in an average week now at 200lbs and maintaining then 13 years ago when I was 300lbs and gaining.
    In fact I never adjusted down my calorie goals which I originally based on my RMR at 300lbs.

    Metabolic damage like that isn't typical and has really only been demonstrated in cases of extreme (and rapid) weight loss the likes of what is seen on Biggest Loser.

    The BL was quite extreme but it does happen to most dieters.
    The study below is a less extreme example but the MA drop in calories burned through resting metabolism would compute to about 10-15lbs of fat annually. That's just using the first 6 months of MA and I'm 99.9% sure that the rate of RMR drop is gradually increasing every week and month while dieting. The point is, food is still not the cause of obesity.

    Intervention Participants were randomized to 1 of 4 groups for 6 months: control (weight maintenance diet); calorie restriction (25% calorie restriction of baseline energy requirements); calorie restriction with exercise (12.5% calorie restriction plus 12.5% increase in energy expenditure by structured exercise); very low-calorie diet (890 kcal/d until 15% weight reduction, followed by a weight maintenance diet).

    Main Outcome Measures Body composition; dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEAS), glucose, and insulin levels; protein carbonyls; DNA damage; 24-hour energy expenditure; and core body temperature.

    Results Mean (SEM) weight change at 6 months in the 4 groups was as follows: controls, −1.0% (1.1%); calorie restriction, −10.4% (0.9%); calorie restriction with exercise, −10.0% (0.8%); and very low-calorie diet, −13.9% (0.7%). At 6 months, fasting insulin levels were significantly reduced from baseline in the intervention groups (all P<.01), whereas DHEAS and glucose levels were unchanged. Core body temperature was reduced in the calorie restriction and calorie restriction with exercise groups (both P<.05). After adjustment for changes in body composition, sedentary 24-hour energy expenditure was unchanged in controls, but decreased in the calorie restriction (−135 kcal/d [42 kcal/d]), calorie restriction with exercise (−117 kcal/d [52 kcal/d]), and very low-calorie diet (−125 kcal/d [35 kcal/d]) groups (all P<.008). These “metabolic adaptations” (~ 6% more than expected based on loss of metabolic mass) were statistically different from controls (P<.05). Protein carbonyl concentrations were not changed from baseline to month 6 in any group, whereas DNA damage was also reduced from baseline in all intervention groups (P <.005).

    Conclusions Our findings suggest that 2 biomarkers of longevity (fasting insulin level and body temperature) are decreased by prolonged calorie restriction in humans and support the theory that metabolic rate is reduced beyond the level expected from reduced metabolic body mass. Studies of longer duration are required to determine if calorie restriction attenuates the aging process in humans.

    Effect of 6-Month Calorie Restriction on Biomarkers of Longevity, Metabolic Adaptation, and Oxidative Stress in Overweight Individuals
    A Randomized Controlled Trial FREE
    Leonie K. Heilbronn, PhD; Lilian de Jonge, PhD; Madlyn I. Frisard, PhD; James P. DeLany, PhD; D. Enette Larson-Meyer, PhD; Jennifer Rood, PhD; Tuong Nguyen, BSE; Corby K. Martin, PhD; Julia Volaufova, PhD; Marlene M. Most, PhD; Frank L. Greenway, PhD; Steven R. Smith, MD; Walter A. Deutsch, PhD; Donald A. Williamson, PhD; Eric Ravussin, PhD; for the Pennington CALERIE Team
    [+] Author Affiliations
    JAMA. 2006;295(13):1539-1548. doi:10.1001/jama.295.13.1539.

    This isn't completely applicable to overweight and obese people losing weight. This is using people that are at a normal weight and getting them to live below their set point. If it is the Ravussin study I'm familiar with, none of the participants were allowed to start the plan with BMI greater than 28.5.
    Studies have shown metabolic adaptations and not shown it, and on review, it seems to kick in when dieting below certain body fat levels.

    There's studies showing MA happens in obese, overweight and normal weight and none of us have a *set-bodyfat that's hogwash. The "set-point" refers to energy homeostasis and metabolic adaptation at some degree happens when we are constantly under-feeding our bodies. The good news is leptin the hormone that is the driver for MA can be manipulated with daily energy balance.

    *It is more difficult to lose bodyfat at low bodyfat percentages. I can easily maintain my BF between 10-12% however the few times I dropped to 8-9% it was like "dieting" again to maintain and not fun at all.

    If there's a study that shows strong evidence for metabolic adaptation (not just adaptive thermogensis while dieting) for dieters at above 25% body fat, please post it instead of people who are intentionally living on in calorie reductions to force them below their normal weight.
    Human beings do have set points and settling points. You just said we don't, then proceeded to list the mechanisms that govern them. If you want to contradict yourself, go ahead, but don't pretend you're discussing what I said by assuming some definition of set point I didn't give and then saying that thing doesn't exist.
    And leptin is one mechanism in set point. It is a very strong one, but calling it the driver is oversimplifying things.

    Sorry Vegeta "hogwash" wasn't directed at you or your statement. Just the general notion of what set-point is. I know for a fact that I don't have a set weight becasue I've been over 300lbs and lost, plateau'd and regained dozen of times which would look like a set-weight but when I purposefully manipulated daily energy balance I lost 100lbs without a single plateau. The only times in the past 12 years I've struggled is when I get my BF% under 9% which is more about very low bf% then weight.
  • French_Peasant
    French_Peasant Posts: 1,639 Member
    Carlos_421 wrote: »
    I vote for regulating the food manufacturing industry. Tax them… make the m put clear prominent labels with calorie counts..fat counts.. and chemicals and preservatives. Then the problem would fix itself.

    Also, In Europe they do this.. regulate the food industry strictly. You don't see fat folks in Europe.. and i know they walk a lot..but the food matters too.

    Oh look, my Splenda appears to have some sort of label on it. HUH--wonder what that could be? y4vqviiwzdoa.jpg

    Yeah, but they should have to list the chemicals too!!

    They should be forced to put it in a bigger bag so they can list everything in 72-point font. Maybe THEN people would stop being fat!

    Personally, I would find it to be very appropriate if only the people who can't pronounce the ingredients would be taxed at a 100% rate. That would solve a lot of problems (health and education) in one fell swoop. If we're going to be inflicting our personal weird preferences on the population as a whole, I think everyone who hasn't passed a college level chemistry course and received an A should be taxed.
  • bigrednewfie
    bigrednewfie Posts: 6 Member
    A bottle of water should not cost more than a can of pop (chemicals & sugar). Its cheaper for families to eat crappy processed food than actual whole foods.......and then we wonder why so many are over weight and unhealthy. So then the government spends more money to do studies and educate us. Just make what we need available and reasonably priced.
  • viren19890
    viren19890 Posts: 778 Member
    Educate them masses! That's what I vote for.

    I have family members who until recently didn't even realize that eating "simple" biscuits with their tea during brunch and supper time (not including regular meals) was throwing them off 400-500 cals a day. Let alone the days a pizza is ordered with individual dip for each person.

    Damn, people still think that green tea will make them lose weight if they have it after pizza. What the heck is in green tea? hydrochloric acid that would just dissolve everything and make you lighter?
    How about them "cleanse" threads lol ?

    Ignorance should be taxed not the foods. Although most just never got a chance to see/learn things properly so once again Educate them.
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  • CSARdiver
    CSARdiver Posts: 6,252 Member
    A bottle of water should not cost more than a can of pop (chemicals & sugar). Its cheaper for families to eat crappy processed food than actual whole foods.......and then we wonder why so many are over weight and unhealthy. So then the government spends more money to do studies and educate us. Just make what we need available and reasonably priced.

    A 24 pack of water costs $5. Price is not a driver.
  • Jleigh225
    Jleigh225 Posts: 49 Member
    Nah I'd prefer the government stop subsidizing corn, wheat, and sugar and those savings should go to tax cuts for local small farmers.
  • French_Peasant
    French_Peasant Posts: 1,639 Member
    A bottle of water should not cost more than a can of pop (chemicals & sugar). Its cheaper for families to eat crappy processed food than actual whole foods.......and then we wonder why so many are over weight and unhealthy. So then the government spends more money to do studies and educate us. Just make what we need available and reasonably priced.

    Water doesn't cost more than soda. You can fill an entire bathtub for just pennies. If someone is paying as much for water as they are for soda, they are an idiot.

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  • ndj1979
    ndj1979 Posts: 29,136 Member
    A bottle of water should not cost more than a can of pop (chemicals & sugar). Its cheaper for families to eat crappy processed food than actual whole foods.......and then we wonder why so many are over weight and unhealthy. So then the government spends more money to do studies and educate us. Just make what we need available and reasonably priced.

    Your inability to grocery shop isn't my problem. We have no issue buying reasonably priced healthy foods. I've seen post after post on here about people complaining about how hard and difficult this is. It's not. People are just lazy and want it handed to them. Just like everything else in life. Go figure it out. It's not that difficult.

    but if we let government run our lives everything will be better!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
  • sunnybeaches105
    sunnybeaches105 Posts: 2,831 Member
    Jleigh225 wrote: »
    Nah I'd prefer the government stop subsidizing corn, wheat, and sugar and those savings should go to tax cuts for local small farmers.

    As opposed to tax cuts for people who actually pay taxes?
  • queenliz99
    queenliz99 Posts: 15,317 Member
    ndj1979 wrote: »
    A bottle of water should not cost more than a can of pop (chemicals & sugar). Its cheaper for families to eat crappy processed food than actual whole foods.......and then we wonder why so many are over weight and unhealthy. So then the government spends more money to do studies and educate us. Just make what we need available and reasonably priced.

    Your inability to grocery shop isn't my problem. We have no issue buying reasonably priced healthy foods. I've seen post after post on here about people complaining about how hard and difficult this is. It's not. People are just lazy and want it handed to them. Just like everything else in life. Go figure it out. It's not that difficult.

    but if we let government run our lives everything will be better!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    They have done such a spanking good job too!
  • Packerjohn
    Packerjohn Posts: 4,855 Member
    A bottle of water should not cost more than a can of pop (chemicals & sugar). Its cheaper for families to eat crappy processed food than actual whole foods.......and then we wonder why so many are over weight and unhealthy. So then the government spends more money to do studies and educate us. Just make what we need available and reasonably priced.

    A bottle of water costs more that a bottle of pop simply because marketing has convinced some consumers that it's better than what comes from most faucets.
  • Yourkindagirl
    Yourkindagirl Posts: 100 Member
    No. However, healthy choices and organic foods should be affordable.
  • Packerjohn
    Packerjohn Posts: 4,855 Member
    edited September 2016
    Jleigh225 wrote: »
    Nah I'd prefer the government stop subsidizing corn, wheat, and sugar and those savings should go to tax cuts for local small farmers.

    Everyone gets all warm and fuzzy about the small local farms. Nothing wrong with this but fact is the small local farms cannot feed the US not to mention our contribution to feeding the rest of the world.
  • kingdomtech
    kingdomtech Posts: 24 Member
    Worst. Idea. Ever!
  • CSARdiver
    CSARdiver Posts: 6,252 Member
    Jleigh225 wrote: »
    Nah I'd prefer the government stop subsidizing corn, wheat, and sugar and those savings should go to tax cuts for local small farmers.

    ...or stop subsidizing altogether.
  • kanebrewer88
    kanebrewer88 Posts: 21 Member
    edited September 2016
    In the UK where every nationals health is paid for by the Tax payer YES Absolutely!!

    Unfortunately people are too ignorant to understand the importance of a healthy diet, ussually those people are the ones on benefits or in low wages. Make foods that as a product as a whole, add up to HALF or MORE of your daily calorie intake more expensive, and use that to subsidize or reduce taxes on healthier foods. This will increase incentive for family to buy healthy and reduce the likelyhood of requiring NHS treatment.

    EDIT: How ignorant of me, id like to further add, its not just ignorance that pushes poorer familys to unhealthier foods. Its time, when both parents are working flat out, its far easier to stick a pizza in the oven then it is to cook properly. pre-made meals arent much help either as they're full of sugar and salt. :/ which causes diabetes and heart problems when not used in moderation.

    If my country wants to be able to maintain our precious Free Medical Treatment for ALL policy, this is something we need to consider to combat BALLOONING costs. :)

  • DeficitDuchess
    DeficitDuchess Posts: 3,099 Member
    edited September 2016
    A lot of people here (including me), is favoring education but how'd this be implemented? Obviously children ought to be, taught in schools but what about adults (whether they're parents or not)? I propose a class, rather than a seminar because with a class, a test'd be administered & thus'd ensure, that they were paying attention; instead of just attending for an incentive. I believe that the incentive should be, lower health insurance cost. Possibly some extras to get them started, like a food scale/gym membership. Also this should be mandated, when courts're involved in a child's well being. Like when a parent's ordered to take a parenting class, anger management & CPR.
  • French_Peasant
    French_Peasant Posts: 1,639 Member
    Packerjohn wrote: »
    Jleigh225 wrote: »
    Nah I'd prefer the government stop subsidizing corn, wheat, and sugar and those savings should go to tax cuts for local small farmers.

    Everyone gets all warm and fuzzy about the small local farms. Nothing wrong with this but fact is the small local farms cannot feed the US not to mention our contribution to feeding the rest of the world.

    Sure they can. As long as the same amount of acreage is being farmed and the most productive techniques and crops are being used. It's an extremely hard way to make a living, and there is so much abusive cultural propaganda against farmers (hicks, hayseeds, rubes, boobs, yokels, hillbillies, rednecks, sh*tkickers, etc.) that it has driven a lot of kids off their family farms over the past few generations. Here in Indiana, a scandalous amount of good farmland is sitting fallow and full of weeds, or having horrible McMansions crappifying the landscape. Fortunately we have a booming Amish population spreading over more of the land and keeping agrarian traditions and practices alive. It would be in our best national interest, from both an economic and military/defense perspective, to have a robust, diverse mix of large AND small farms. Our agricultural capabilities are a national treasure and deserve to be treated as such. Foreign speculators sure know how valuable it is, and they are snapping up a lot of acreage at high prices. It's hard to grow affordable food on $15,000/acre land.
  • Aesop101
    Aesop101 Posts: 758 Member
    edited September 2016
    I say no. However I think they are already exposed to sales tax. In many states you pay taxes on any grocery item, good or bad.

    I just recently quit drinking sodas, 130 days ago.
  • ndj1979
    ndj1979 Posts: 29,136 Member
    In the UK where every nationals health is paid for by the Tax payer YES Absolutely!!

    Unfortunately people are too ignorant to understand the importance of a healthy diet, ussually those people are the ones on benefits or in low wages. Make foods that as a product as a whole, add up to HALF or MORE of your daily calorie intake more expensive, and use that to subsidize or reduce taxes on healthier foods. This will increase incentive for family to buy healthy and reduce the likelyhood of requiring NHS treatment.

    EDIT: How ignorant of me, id like to further add, its not just ignorance that pushes poorer familys to unhealthier foods. Its time, when both parents are working flat out, its far easier to stick a pizza in the oven then it is to cook properly. pre-made meals arent much help either as they're full of sugar and salt. :/ which causes diabetes and heart problems when not used in moderation.

    If my country wants to be able to maintain our precious Free Medical Treatment for ALL policy, this is something we need to consider to combat BALLOONING costs. :)

    maybe your costs would go down if you had a free market healthcare system....
  • CSARdiver
    CSARdiver Posts: 6,252 Member
    A lot of people here (including me), is favoring education but how'd this be implemented? Obviously children ought to be, taught in schools but what about adults (whether they're parents or not)? I propose a class, rather than a seminar because with a class, a test'd be administered & thus'd ensure, that they were paying attention; instead of just attending for an incentive. I believe that the incentive should be, lower health insurance cost. Possibly some extras to get them started, like a food scale/gym membership. Also this should be mandated, when courts're involved in a child's well being. Like when a parent's ordered to take a parenting class, anger management & CPR.

    These are all just shifts from the overburdened medical system to the overburdened legal system. You would still be treating symptoms rather than addressing the root causes.

    1. Fix medical costs by removing insurance/government involvement.

    2. Institute tort reform.

    Medical costs moved with inflation until insurance became more and more invasive.
  • jdhcm2006
    jdhcm2006 Posts: 2,254 Member
    edited September 2016
    CSARdiver wrote: »
    A bottle of water should not cost more than a can of pop (chemicals & sugar). Its cheaper for families to eat crappy processed food than actual whole foods.......and then we wonder why so many are over weight and unhealthy. So then the government spends more money to do studies and educate us. Just make what we need available and reasonably priced.

    A 24 pack of water costs $5. Price is not a driver.

    This. And a 12-pack of soda is generally $4-5, so water is not more expensive than soda. Now if you're purchasing Evian then sure it's more expensive, but if you're purchasing the grocery store brand of water it's the same price, if not cheaper, than soda.
  • Jleigh225
    Jleigh225 Posts: 49 Member
    Jleigh225 wrote: »
    Nah I'd prefer the government stop subsidizing corn, wheat, and sugar and those savings should go to tax cuts for local small farmers.

    As opposed to tax cuts for people who actually pay taxes?

    I guess if you dont care about the enviroment or the food supply or the purpose of taxing junk food in the first place, then sure it could go back to the tax payers instead!
  • jdhcm2006
    jdhcm2006 Posts: 2,254 Member
    Packerjohn wrote: »
    Packerjohn wrote: »
    For those that don't think this stuff should be taxed, ho do you propose paying the medical costs ot the 30% of the population thst will have diabetes by 2050 or before?

    Remember this stuff.is a prime contributor to the situation.

    This is what is wrong with people's thinking. Lets punish everyone because some people can't be responsible. Why don't we outlaw alcohol because there are alcoholics? The way America s going it will soon be easier to pot that it will be to get a snickers. WTF

    Nobody said anything about outlawing junk foods, just some sort of tax. Similar to the excise tax that has been on alcohol for years.

    The point of a tax like this is to discourage use. If you can't make it illegal just make it hard to get. I just don't understand why people want the government to tell them what they can/can't/should eat.

    Right. I know I don't. If I want to buy a tub of cookie dough along with my sparkling water, I should be allowed that without having to pay an additional fee. Plus, it's not like people can't become overweight by eating "healthy foods." Eating an avocado or 2 a day can easily throw someone over their calorie goal.
  • WinoGelato
    WinoGelato Posts: 13,454 Member
    A bottle of water should not cost more than a can of pop (chemicals & sugar). Its cheaper for families to eat crappy processed food than actual whole foods.......and then we wonder why so many are over weight and unhealthy. So then the government spends more money to do studies and educate us. Just make what we need available and reasonably priced.

    Sigh... Do you live in Flint, MI? No? Drink tap water...
This discussion has been closed.