Into the Strenuous Briefness

Teacher, scientist, avid reader, observer Creative Commons License
This work by iamlittlei.tumblr.com is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Recent Tweets @TeachSciLove
Posts I Like
Who I Follow

alithea:

canisfamiliaris:

Is Junk Food Really Cheaper?

The answer is NO.

The “fact” that junk food is cheaper than real food has become a reflexive part of how we explain why so many Americans are overweight, particularly those with lower incomes. I frequently read confident statements like, “when a bag of chips is cheaper than a head of broccoli …” or “it’s more affordable to feed a family of four at McDonald’s than to cook a healthy meal for them at home.”

(via sunfoundation)

this bullshit fills me with a very specific kind of rage. so, TIME TO DEBUNK!

  1. that meal from mcdonalds takes virtually no time to acquire AND is available almost anywhere.
  2. the second meal? that “salad” is lettuce … with nothing else, not even dressing unless its just olive oil or some milk i guess? gross.
  3. also thats the price of each serving, not an entire loaf of bread, a bottle of olive oil, etc. that stuff adds up which means you have to have a lot of money at one time to buy it all.
  4. that meal probably took an hour and a half to make, which is a long fucking time when you work multiple jobs or are caring for a lot of people or dont have help! seriously, if you are a single parent of three who works, is spending an hour and a half every night preparing a meal a likely option?
  5. same with beans and rice! also, you know whats a fucking bummer? eating beans and rice every night because you are poor. ask any person who has done it and they will tell you (you can start with me).
  6. there is a “nutrition” argument here that lacks a follow up: poor people are more likely to be doing physical labor and need more than 571 calories per meal.
  7. you know who is less likely to know how to bake or prepare a chicken? people without access to the internet, or libraries, or who werent taught how to by their parents because their parents worked all the time. access to healthy foods is a classist issue and classism is cyclical, you fucking morons.
  8. seriously, these sorts of infographics make me want to fucking flip tables. do you know why people don’t eat more fresh fruits and vegetables? because fresh fruits and vegetables are expensive, because they take a long time to prepare, because they dont live near a grocery store that has a decent produce section, because they dont have reliable transportation to get groceries to and from the grocery store, because they dont have the energy to plan all of the shit that is involved in making healthy, intentional, filling, balanced meals. basically: poor people get fucked, and then we get BLAMED for being lazy.
  9. eating “healthy”, aka access to fresh fruits and vegetables, is a privilege, first, foremost, always. so fuck you new york times and your ignorant goddamn infographic.
  10. there are SYSTEMATIC REASONS that we do not have equal access to fresh fruits and vegetables. they are very REAL problems. besides, you know, systematic poverty in america, the total mis-distribution of farm subsidies is a perfect place to start. read about that, then either get bent or start working on the actual problem.

I have reblogged this before and will reblog again.

(via quixoticandabsurd)

  1. atheoryofmind reblogged this from ad1ffffa0b5aca344b060fd5ad88cc9c
  2. preetkiran1016 reblogged this from hammer-and-sicklekind
  3. xy-kudugka reblogged this from gabbunny
  4. fuuturetense reblogged this from speakofmeinpresenttense
  5. speakofmeinpresenttense reblogged this from wantthepharaohs
  6. ice-sparks reblogged this from hyrulecastledreaming
  7. ad1ffffa0b5aca344b060fd5ad88cc9c reblogged this from fattastic-and-finally-happy
  8. carry-on-my-wayward-prince reblogged this from fattastic-and-finally-happy
  9. fattastic-and-finally-happy reblogged this from theslavbarbarian
  10. tomcatbranson reblogged this from pure-morning
  11. aworldofthoughts reblogged this from insideonemind
  12. ninjakiwibat reblogged this from whostarkidpotter
  13. ostensiblymisha reblogged this from bobbiebomber
  14. sourwolfwrangler reblogged this from pure-morning
  15. pure-morning reblogged this from bobbiebomber
  16. whostarkidpotter reblogged this from bobbiebomber
  17. bobbiebomber reblogged this from mishaswhore
  18. mxiixi reblogged this from thedirtyvirgin
  19. kakuteru reblogged this from usbdongle
  20. ohholybeni reblogged this from ratchets-nurse
  21. rachel-will reblogged this from musingslostinspace and added:
    But part of this post to remember is also that it’s looking at costs per families. I know you and I were talking about...
  22. mssheather reblogged this from tinytinydoctors and added:
    I like this. I’d also like to add that if you’re as broke as we usually are, we don’t get meals at fast food places...
  23. melapis reblogged this from forgive-----and-----forget and added:
    Well, huh.
  24. musingslostinspace reblogged this from booksandotherdrugs and added:
    I COMPLETELY disagree with this commentary. Can’t you see how wrong this is? When you are low on money you save money...
  25. vitamin-c-u-t-e reblogged this from alittleunknowing
  26. meiloslyther reblogged this from thetenfootlongscarf
  27. darkangelkarasu reblogged this from ellowyn
  28. deluxeyellowflower reblogged this from nooby-banana