Don T Blame The Eater Analysis

730 Words2 Pages

Jennifer Rotz
Professor Killingsworth
English 101
5 October 2015
The War on Food Poverty In David Zinczenko’s “Don’t Blame The Eater”, he writes about a vulnerable behemoth in the form of the fast food industry, correlating an increase in obesity and Type II diabetes with a skyrocketing increase in health care costs. As these costs increase, we are left to wonder where public responsibility ends and personal responsibility begins. Who is really to blame when a person is so addicted to eating at McDonald’s that they file a lawsuit against the food giant, claiming that fast food caused their obesity? Is it the company themselves, who, many claim, purposely add so many artificial ingredients to their food to cause an actual physiological craving? Or is it the consumer, who ostensibly has a selection of choices of where to eat and has no need to indulge in fast food every day for weeks, months, or even years on end? My aim in this paper is to call attention to another source of culpability: food poverty. What is food poverty? Food poverty is a bad diet, impeded access, marginal health, a higher …show more content…

Local stores may not stock healthy options, such as fresh fruit or whole grains, due to lower profit, a shorter shelf life, a shortage of storage space, or a seemingly obvious lack of interest. By comparison, a consistent menu of food options available at a nationwide chain of restaurants gives the consumer a standard by which all other food choices are compared. Minor logistic and supply issues aside, when a consumer enters a McDonald’s, they will always be able to order and receive a cheeseburger, whereas a grocery store may be out of strawberries or kale for the week, or may only have a more expensive brand of tomatoes

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