If your objective is to try and provide people with the lowest hanging heuristic for how to avoid unwanted weight gain, avoiding high fat foods is a pretty good candidate, since fat has the highest caloric content per gram (9) when compared to protiens and carbs (4). This appears to be the traditional view that the crazy government is trying to shove down our throats, so to speak.
Seems to me that this strategy is vulnerable to munchkinism (haha) by the food industry. Which sells “low fat” this and “reduced fat” that. Although fat content used to be a pretty good proxy for unhealthy food, it may be only a proxy.
What’s unhealthy about ice cream (assuming you’re not lactose-intolerant)?
Basically it tastes too good. There is something about foods which taste really good which (for many people) messes up their internal system for eating urges. This is my lay conclusion, resulting from nearly 2 years of informal research into obesity and diet.
Seems to me that this strategy is vulnerable to munchkinism (haha) by the food industry. Which sells “low fat” this and “reduced fat” that. Although fat content used to be a pretty good proxy for unhealthy food, it may be only a proxy.
“Although fat content used to be a pretty good proxy for unhealthy food” examples? Do you mean used to as in the 1980s or used to as in the 1880s?
Doughnuts, french fries, ice cream
1980s
What’s unhealthy about ice cream (assuming you’re not lactose-intolerant)?
The fat, which is debatable, the sugar, which may also debated, and the ability to eat quart of it without being hungry.
Basically it tastes too good. There is something about foods which taste really good which (for many people) messes up their internal system for eating urges. This is my lay conclusion, resulting from nearly 2 years of informal research into obesity and diet.