Guest guest Posted June 14, 2005 Report Share Posted June 14, 2005 What America Really Eats Are we really the 'pigs at the trough' the diet experts say we are? http://www.breadandmoney.com/docs/eats2005.html Soda has replaced milk as the drink, or drug, of choice among children and teenagers. Given the amount they consume, it's a wonder they don't slosh when they walk. " For years we've been scolded, like errant children, for not exercising enough, eating enough fruits and vegetables and for getting fat. The diet experts berate us with the disapproving scowl of a parent who's caught her child sneaking candy. We humbly accept responsibility for our personal failings and vow that the next diet, the next fad, will be the one that we finally stick to. For most of my life, I believed the message that we are all nutritional sinners, wallowing in a hedonistic orgy of junk food and sloth, but more recently a closer look at the eating habits of Americans tells a different story. The following statistics come from the USDA Food Consumption, Prices, and Expenditures report. Except where noted, the report covers the period between 1970 and 1997. Meat, Poultry and Eggs Although per capita consumption of meat reached near record high levels in 1994, the proportion of fat in the American diet, from meat, declined from 35 percent in 1970 to 25 percent in 1994. Saturated fat consumption fell from 37 percent to 26 percent. In 1960, beef producers began raising leaner beef by moving away from the traditionally fatter and tastier breeds, like Herefords and Angus. Pork consumption was changing too. While overall consumption increased slightly, from 1970 to 1998, the meat was much leaner, reflecting the consumer trend toward low fat eating. In total, per capita meat consumption, including red meat, poultry, and fish was up about 13 pounds, but this change was due mostly to an increase in poultry consumption while consumption of red meat, which was significantly leaner and contained much less saturated fat, declined. Shell eggs, once considered a perfect food, saw a per capita decline from 276 to 173 eggs from 1970 to 1997. This decline was driven by an unnecessary fear of cholesterol and the dietary fat. Curiously, between 1970 and 1994, per person consumption of cholesterol declined 13 percent, from 470 to 410 milligrams. Dairy In the dairy category, whole milk consumption decreased by two-thirds between 1970 and 1997. This decrease was offset by America's love affair with cheese and fluid cream products. Average consumption of cheese increased 146 percent! Lest you think Americans inexplicably evolved into connoisseurs of fine gourmet cheeses, think again. Most of that cheese, up to two-thirds, came packaged as convenience food in the form of pizza, snack foods, fast food sandwiches, chips, bagel spreads, etc. While cheese is a high fat item, it should be noted that when it comes as convenience food, it comes accompanied by prodigious amounts of starches and sugars. Even with the increase in cheese consumption, overall milkfat consumption declined by 37 percent. Fruits and Vegetable In 1997, Americans, on average, consumed 57 pounds more fruit and 87 pounds more vegetables than they did in 1970. Given all the finger wagging from health experts, you would never guess that produce consumption has been on the increase. Grains and Sugar The most startling figures in the report come in the grain, sugar and fat categories. Americans went from 136 pounds of flour and cereal products in 1970 to a whopping 200 pounds in 1997. That's a lot of dough. Much of it came in the form of fast food and snack food such as pizza, pasta, crackers, chips and the mother of all grain foods, ready to eat cereals. Breakfast cereal consumption between 1980 and 1997 increased by 41 percent to 17 pounds per person! Much of that cereal was consumed with mounds of sugar. In fact, in 1997, our consumption of sugars, table sugar and high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS), rose 28 percent, equaling 34 pounds, for a total of 154 pounds of the sweet stuff on average. That's 53 teaspoons per day! A far cry from the 6 to 18 teaspoons (based on 1,600 to 2,800 calories) recommended by the last Food Guide Pyramid. The use of corn sweeteners like HFCS, skyrocketed due to favorable government agricultural policies toward corn growers and an overabundant supply. One place this sugar wound up was in beverages. In 1986, the average American swilled 28 gallons of carbonated soda. By 1997, that number had increased to 41 gallons, a 47 percent increase. Soda has replaced milk as the drink, or drug, of choice among children and teenagers. Given the amount they consume, it's a wonder they don't slosh when they walk. Fat Finally, lets look at fats and oils. Unless you live in a whole foods commune, it's unlikely that you know anyone who cooks with lard, coconut or palm oil. Even the use of butter is a rarity today. Between 1970 and 1997, consumption of animal fats declined by a fourth while consumption of polyunsaturated vegetable fats increased by two-fifths. During this same period, consumption of polyunsaturated salad and cooking oils jumped from 15 to 29 pounds per capita! It should be noted that polyunsaturated vegetable oils can become oxidized quite easily, contributing to atherosclerosis in humans. Unfortunately, health experts have been advising us to consume polyunsaturated oils as a preventative measure against heart disease for some time. These rancid oils, are in fact, more likely to create health problems than prevent them. We are also advised to eat the fabricated vegetable fats, engineered to behave like saturated fat. These fats, in the form of margarine and shortening, are practically brimming with harmful hydrogenated trans-fats. Trans-fats were found in a variety of baked goods, including cookies, cakes, crackers and peanut butter, as well as in fried foods, soups and cereals. Salad dressings are another source of harmful fat. A USDA survey showed that between 1989 and 1991, the average woman between the ages of 19 and 50 obtained more vegetable fat from salad dressing than anything else she was eating. Obesity and Heart Disease It is interesting to note the changes in the health of Americans over the same time period as the food consumption survey. According to the 1999-2000 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey conducted by a division of the Centers for Disease Control, rates of obesity increased more than 50 percent between 1976 and 2000. On another health front, heart disease continues as the number one killer in America, racking up 945,836 lives in the year 2000, according to the American Heart Association. While deaths from heart disease have declined, due to improvements in treating the disease, Americans continue to be stricken by this killer in astounding numbers. If the consumption of dietary animal fat leads to obesity and causes heart disease, how is it possible that even after reducing the amount of animal fat in our diet, and even after increasing the amount of fruits and vegetables we consume, our levels of obesity have increased and heart disease has not abated? It should be clear, by the above statistics, that it is the increase in the consumption of sugar (from soda to pineapples), refined grains, and non-animal fats that have contributed most to our health problems. A casual stroll through any grocery store where 75 - 85 percent of the foods feature sugar, grain or both as primary ingredients proves this. What about exercise? Isn't the reason so many of us are fat and sick is because we're all basically lazy and don't get enough exercise? Exercise is very important for good health, but in today's politically charged, economically driven healthcare marketplace, exercise is a distraction from the root cause of the problem: poor diet. The belief promoted by the healthcare industry that we should get fit so we can eat whatever we want is wrong, wrong, wrong. You can't get fit without the right food. What we should be doing is eating right first, so that we can get fit. Exercise is secondary to diet just as driving your car is secondary to fueling up. As a people, Americans really do believe in sensible eating, good health, exercise and the work ethic, but we live in a world overrun by commercial interests at the expense of individual health. Those we look to for guidance, our government and the health experts, have for the most part, failed us. We have become the victims of our own success, through excess. Read, think and learn, so that you may eat will and live a more fruitful life. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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