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
And pointing out that if this were the motivation, they wouldn’t have put starches at the bottom.
Why not? The pyramid says basically “avoid added fats and sugars”, and then suggests a diet thats 4 servings of meat and cheese, 5 servings of fruit and vegetables and six servings of starches.
If their motivation for telling people to avoid fats was simple that fats are highly caloric, one would expect them to not tell people that they should eat a lot of starch, which by the way was up to 11 servings (not just 6 servings).
I was responding to Brillyant’s claim:
And pointing out that if this were the motivation, they wouldn’t have put starches at the bottom.
Why not? The pyramid says basically “avoid added fats and sugars”, and then suggests a diet thats 4 servings of meat and cheese, 5 servings of fruit and vegetables and six servings of starches.
I don’t see how this contradicts Brillyant.
If their motivation for telling people to avoid fats was simple that fats are highly caloric, one would expect them to not tell people that they should eat a lot of starch, which by the way was up to 11 servings (not just 6 servings).