• Menu
  • Skip to right header navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary navigation
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Before Header

  • Home
  • Reviews
  • About
  • FAQ
  • Links
  • Contact

CALL: (615) 269-8844

  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube

STEPS Fitness Logo

Nashville's Premier Personal Fitness Training Center

Header Right

  • STEPS Virtual
  • Programs
    • STEPS Fitness Presents Events
    • DR. Irv’s Perfect Exercise Minute
    • Training Packages
    • Group Classes
    • Corporate Wellness
    • Traveler’s Special
  • Personal Trainers
    • Dr. Irv Rubenstein
  • Blog
    • Dr Irv’s Fitness Blog
    • Exercise of the Month
  • Newsletters
    • Fit Happens
    • Real News Newsletter

Mobile Menu

Connect With Us!

  • Facebook
  • Instagram

Make an appointment, today!

(By Appointment Only)

CALL (989) 401-3616

Obesity, Kids, and School Lunches

February 4, 2011 By Irv Rubenstein

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Should the State dictate what you eat? nope. but if it’s paying for it, it has the right to lay out a menu that it believes is better for you than menus we know are unhealthy and promote obesity. hence, when I read this in the Times: Childhood: Obesity and School Lunches – I felt like laying out my public health philosophy. it goes like this:

Private health impacts public health. private health issues that cost lots of money to the health care system is not something you alone pay for, either in insurance premiums, cash, or otherwise. hence, we all pay for the actions, or as the dispute over the Obama-care plan would label, the inactions of others, and ourselves. thus, we are all liable, and responsible for the rising cost of health care and therefore all have a right to demand from others to alter behavior.

Now, what is ‘demand from others’?

Basically, if you wish to live a lifestyle that clearly increases your risk profile for disease, and injury, too, then you should pay higher premiums. If you have the means to do so, then your premiums should be waaaaaay higher since your actions, or inactions, increase my costs, too. But since most of those who have lifestyle-created chronic diseases that tap the system hard tend to be lesser educated, lower-incomed potential, or unemployed (statistically, not racially, ethnically, or other -ally), and we the people (who do pay taxes and generate our and others’ incomes via commercial activities) end up paying for these behaviors, then we have a right to demand changes in behavior. since we cannot impose physical activity, esp on the youngest, oldest, or sickest of these unhealthy folks, if you ask for food from us, we have the right to monitor that food in quality and in caloric quantity. Hence, given the choice Sugar, Hi Fructose Corn Syrupbetween providing french fries at 300 cals/serving or a turkey over lettuce salad with a piece of whole grain bread and an apple for the same number of calories, I vote to feed you the latter. if you have the money to cover the fries, and it’s not from any financial assistance I offer you, such as welfare or food stamps, then by golly eat fries. but if i give you financial assistance, it’s for shelter and decent food, not junk.

I know that sounds like a sean hannity/rush limbaugh prescription of harsh platitudes, but it’s the one area where we might actually concur; all others are out of the question. I do have a heart, and i’m very forgiving and accommodating for the most part. however, when i survey the landscape, i believe the most patriotic among us are not those who vote one way or another, but those who vote with their minds and bodies in support of what our nation needs: healthy, informed citizens. and i simply don’t countenance to those who choose otherwise. (excepting small kids raised by parents who don’t teach their kids right. that’s where I’m more liberal than my conservative friends.)

So the question arises, how about if I am rich enough to afford to eat like shit, not exercise, pollute the earth and destroy the health care system? are you going to impose your dictatorial mandates on me, too?

Well, yes. for if you think you have the right to take liberty with your body, your mind, and your earth, and think it won’t impact my world, too, including the system by which i stay healthy, then you’re an arrogant SOB. just because you can pay does not give you the right to abuse. Man’s history is full of upper class abuses that invariably are suffered by the masses. then, in some cases, rebellion occurs but only after many years of suffering said abuses. and when that occurs, guess who suffers most, during the rebellion? Right – the masses. sometimes the greedy bastards who abused the economic, political, ecological, and medical resources suffer the backlash, but, for the most part, after years of passing such attitudes on to others, these folks get the axe. historically, while tragic to any one individual, I take the more global view: that there are tens of thousands if not millions of others who have suffered the abuse of the few and the balance of justice is on their side, not that of the few.

Going back to my thesis, then, so long as the u.s. or state governments are providing food for the masses, which is an obligation with which i am in full concurrence, that food should be the most healthy and properly-distributed we can afford. and for those – the conservatives -who argue that the masses should eat cake, well, we know the result of that line of thinking, and I’m not supportive.

Comments

comments

Filed Under: Fitness Blog Tagged With: calories, diet, Exercise, fitness, obesity

Previous Post: « Whole Body Vibration, Bones….and FAT!!!
Next Post: Real Costs of Obesity »

Primary Sidebar

FREE Consultation!

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Reviews

Recent News

REAL-News --September-2021

REAL News – September 2021

September 2021 Do Common Clinical Measurements Predict Running Injury? Runners suffer injuries at a pretty high rate – 20%-80% have an injury at any point in time. Since running puts ~2.8 x body weight on …

Footer Widget Header

Affiliations

  • american-college-of-sports-medicine
  • american-council-on-exercise
  • biometrics
  • exercise-etc-inc
  • national-strength-and-conditioning-association
  • renewed-support

Footer

Company Info

STEPS Fitness
2424 21st Ave. S. Suite #100
Nashville, TN 37212
Phone: (615) 269-8844

About Us

STEPS was founded in 1986 by Dr. Irv Rubenstein, Exercise Physiologist. STEPS current location boasts a 8000 sq. ft. space, housing our state-of-the-art gym, management offices, and other related services, making STEPS one of the largest personal fitness training centers in the known universe!

Fitness Programs

  • STEPS Virtual
  • STEPS Fitness Presents Events
  • Personal Training Packages
  • Group Classes
  • Corporate Wellness
  • Traveler’s Special

Connect with Us!

  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube

Location

  • Home
  • STEPS Virtual
  • Programs
  • Personal Trainers
  • Testimonials
  • FAQ
  • About
  • Links
  • Contact

Site Footer

Since 1986. The first personal fitness training facility between NYC and LA.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google. Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Copyright © 2025 Nashville's Premier Personal Fitness Training Center · All Rights Reserved
Designed and Powered by Ponder Consulting ®

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.