• luciferofastora@feddit.org
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      22 小时前

      Well, there’s a free bonus in the fact that unhealthy people also require more healthcare. Probably not intended, but you’d have hard time convincing me that it’s an unwelcome side effect.

    • Dasus@lemmy.world
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      1 天前

      It’s not weird at all.

      A perfectly natural consequence of laissez-faire capitalism leading what should and shouldn’t be regulated.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_desert

      I find it incredibly weird to imagine that some people think it normal that you can’t walk to a grocery store with fresh vegetables etc.

      Never had Doritos or Funyons or Twinkies in my life. I tried Oreos once, but I’m more used to the equivalent we have here (copied and slightly altered by some decades and decades ago.)

      I don’t think there’s anything I prefer as the American version. Perhaps like if you use the word to encompass all American countries, maybe, ~authentic Mexican is pretty nice and usually gluten free.

      It’s a lot about food deserts and infra and regulation, but also using HFCS instead of some other sugars does have an effect.

      Even though we got very gluttonous people as well, somehow ours aren’t just ever as Michelin Man shaped. It’s more like a huuuuge belly with skinny legs and arms and head. Well some diabetic people do tend to swell up quite a bit but…

      Edit talking of nachos I fking got some and salsa, thank for the indirect reminder. Although I’m too bothered somehow that they’ve made the chips round instead of triangles.

      Edit 2 I’m changing my mind a little as these do get a nice amount of salsa if they’re a little bent

        • Dasus@lemmy.world
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          18 小时前

          But armies wouldn’t be made of rich people.

          Also also, it’s either diabetes or the HFCS, but Americans have a very distinct, plump look all around. Whereas here it’s often just a huge belly people have and maybe an extra chin or something.

          But not all all around Michelin man.

          My dad worked at a theme parn in Finland, driving the guests around in a sort of road-train. And he wasn’t a small man by no means, every gluttonous and always thirsty. Died at 70 that’s how healthy he was.

          Anyways, he was shocked and told me that he’d never seen “people shaped like that”.

          No offense.

          Well some probably.

          • Aljernon@lemmy.today
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            18 小时前

            I’m an American and both my parents are huge and in terrible health. Lugging hundreds of extra pounds (2.2 per Kilo) is hell on your body.

      • thatKamGuy@sh.itjust.works
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        1 天前

        Food deserts are such a weird concept to me; Australia has about the same land-size as the continental US and only ~8% of the population. Yet even for all their perceived faults, our two biggest supermarket chains are able to deliver fresh produce to pretty much all but the most remote communities.

        Meanwhile, sections of major US cities are somehow lacking access to fresh produce?! 🤯

        • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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          11 小时前

          So there’s two types of food deserts: rural and urban

          Rural food deserts are typically some small dying town populated by overworked commuters (who primarily work in an agriculture or agriculture supporting businesses, since that’s what exists near these towns) and tax- and price-sensitive retirees. It’s a small town of less than a thousand people and everyone just drives to the Walmart the next town over because that’s what they have for options now.

          Urban food deserts are typically in poorer sections of the city (areas whose poverty was reinforced by historical practices of redlining and broken window policing for example) so any businesses that do sell food tend to be dollar stores which due to their margins can’t afford non-shelf stable food, or gas station convenience stores which both can’t afford non-shelf stable food and might not have the space to dedicate to some fresh produce. Grocery store chains will generally aim for locations with some wealthier clients since they’ll spend more per trip, and they fear that opening locations in less affluent areas will lead to more crime.

          Some cities have responded to food deserts by directly subsidizing the opening of a grocery store, or subsidizing the availability of fresh fruit and vegetables at existing stores, but that requires a level of civic engagement that not all cities are willing to put in, and more affluent citizens may turn their noses up at such neighborhoods and just want them to decay out of existence (which isn’t going to work) or worse they try it and find that most of the people who could be supporting a small local grocery store still go to the big grocery store/Walmart that they have to drive to instead, so the local grocery store goes out of business despite the subsidy

        • Jerb322@lemmy.world
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          1 天前

          Because the ones that “have”, don’t care about the ones that “don’t have”.

          And the ones that do care ,can’t help everyone.

        • Dasus@lemmy.world
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          1 天前

          I prefer like a bent triangle, then you grab it by the tip and then put as much salsa on it as possible. The chip to salsa ratio is off the charts.

          Although these rounds ones have a bit more chip to salsa, their structural integrity is better and didn’t break as triangles often do.