Showing posts with label unhealthful. Show all posts
Showing posts with label unhealthful. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 9, 2023

Employees EXPOSE McDonald's (video)

Spill, June 8, 2023; Sheldon S., CC Liu (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly

McDonald's employees EXPOSE what they do, TikTok goes viral
Namaste. Bring money.
(Spill) It’s not hard to see the appeal of fast food. It’s cheap, inexpensive, gross, budget-friendly, convenient, and if one is not expecting Michelin star quality, it can have a lot of [cancerous synthetic chemicals and] artificial flavors for taste. But appetizing and safe are two different things. People are suing some popular fast food restaurants, items are being recalled, employees are being forced to serve food gone bad, customers have been hospitalized, and some "ingredients" have no business winding up on a plate. Is eating fast food worth the risk?

Title card image by vecstock on Freepik (freepik.com/free-photo...). Music license codes: XVTQWYU2W3EVBF15, R7MERWLB2BTB1BPW, PF8EC92UPQZPTQ3S, DSXD24KUSA7KSRTD, TWWTY6M4AZ4L8459, 6EKMXVLVSHQANQWB, PNXADNQWT6XKEEQT, 5NJE5RENJMRXBXW9, 1QMWO3X1G1GBMIL5, 9K3DNGALW1WFSXDX.

Thursday, June 15, 2023

Vaxx and other COVID lies we were told

J. Dore (jimmydore.com); The Hill; Pfc. Sandoval, Seth Auberon (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly


Prepared for the COVID tsunami of deaths?

(Vejon Health) Streamed live on June 12, 2023. A recent discussion with authors Dr. Geert Vanden Bossche and Dr. Rob Rennebohm was very sobering. Predictions of a looming health disaster were made. Recent data from Mortality Watch supports the concern that deaths are rising across the Western world, and there are not enough attempts to mitigate the trend.

Tuesday, June 23, 2020

How sugar affects the brain (TED Talk)

Nicole Avena, TED-Ed Talk, Jan. 7, 2014; Sheldon S., Ashley Wells (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly


How sugar affects the brain
(TED-Ed) When we eat something loaded with sugar, our taste buds, our gut, and our brain all take notice. This activation of our "reward system" is how bodies process addictive substances such as drugs, alcohol, and carcinogens like nicotine (from tobacco leaves soaked or "cured" in sugar as an addictive preservative). An overload of sugar does a very unhealthy thing. It spikes dopamine levels and leaves us craving more of the dangerous substance. This TED presenter explains why sweets and treats should be abused in moderation, if at all. Lesson by Nicole Avena with animation by STK Films.

Friday, August 10, 2018

American thighs: I'm not FAT! (video)

The Conversation; Family Guy via Da Plug); Crystal Quintero, Seth Auberon, Wisdom Quarterly


"MilkShake Brings All The Boys To The Yard"
MilkShake, it brings all the boys to the yard and they're like it's better than yours. Lol. Content owned by Fox TV. No copyright infringement intended. FAIR USE Copyright Disclaimer: Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research.

Body shaming? Meghan Trainor: Fat and proud in "All About That Bass"

Why are we Americans so FAT?
TheConversation.com, "Our fight with fat: Why is obesity getting worse?"
Fat Happy Budai is not the Buddha
Gyms across the country will be packed in the new year with people sticking, however briefly, to our New Year’s resolution to lose weight.

Most of us do not know that the cards are stacked against us and that weight loss is much more complicated than working out and not eating dessert.
 
Years into the obesity epidemic, millions of Americans have tried to lose weight, and millions of us have failed to do so long term.

Don't look at me. I isn't fat no mo.
It’s so serious now that close to 40 percent of Americans are obese. The average woman in the U.S. today weighs about 168 pounds, or roughly the same as an average man in 1960.

Not that guys’ waists haven’t ballooned, too. Men have gained on average nearly 30 pounds since John F. Kennedy’s inauguration in 1961.
 
It's getting harder to keep off the blubber.
From 1976 to 1980, just under 1 in 7 American adults, or 15.1 percent, were obese.

Now, despite people’s concerted efforts, obesity is at its highest level ever, with about 40 percent of U.S. adults and 18.5 percent of children, considered obese.

This is itself an increase of about 30 percent, just since 2000 when roughly 30 percent of American adults were obese.

Don't worry. I'll just walk it off like before.
The U.S., and increasingly the world, is in the grip of a real epidemic -- the seriousness of which is lost in our obsession with [failed] diets. One study estimated an additional 65 million obese Americans by 2030, and increased medical costs between US $48 billion to $66 billion a year. More

Thursday, March 20, 2014

Choosing money over morality? (Scar Jo)

Amber Larson and Dhr. Seven, Wisdom Quarterly; BusinessInsider.com
What would Anathapindika do, which would Anathapindika choose? (AP/Business Inisder)
 
Scarlett Johansson sells sexy do-it-yourself fizzy pop for money. But Oxfam does not approve since (SodaStream) the Israeli-company's manufacturing base is in Palestine, the un-autonomous region of Israel, exploiting suffering Palestinians. It and the Gaza Strip are known as "the world's largest open-air prison." So after appearing in accused-pedophile and beloved American movie maker Woody Allen's movies, she's taking a stand: She dumped Oxfam, where she once held the title "Global Ambassador." Now she's just a pregnant shill out to destroy the Avenger's franchise. Shills sell sugary soda streams for profitable income streams. We liked her better naked and less obsessed with selling out to the highest bidder.
Early idea for Scar Jo's Avenger's costume

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Monks sickly on diets without work or yoga

CC Liu, Ashley Wells, Wisdom Quarterly
Theravada monks with alms bowls in hand (Damir Sagolj/Reuters)
   
Eating a decadent diet -- white rice, meats, burned and carcinogenic vegetable oils, sugar, synthetic flavorants and excitotoxins -- has long term consequences. Exercise keeps the aging (oxidizing) effects at bay for lay people, who color their hair, get false teeth, and endure various and sundry skin treatments. Monastics do not have it so easy. Their sedentary lifestyle, often missing the heart of a monastic's duty of meditating on a regular basis, is full of toxins, calories, and excess, the essence of craving. In ancient times there would also have been ample work duties and what we recognize as yoga postures (asanas) to keep the body limber and unconstipated. Now doctors are documenting the predictable results:

A research study indicates that almost half of Thai monks are overweight or affected by noncommunicable diseases
Thai monks (Markus Gebauer/flickr.com)
The study focused on the health concerns of Thai monks and how to offer them food during the upcoming Buddhist Lent [Vassa, the Rains Retreat when monastics refrain from travel].

The survey’s participants included 246 monks from the Dhammayuttika Nikaya [an ascetic strain of forest monks that comprises only 10 percent, as contrasted with most Thai monks who are members of the Maha Nikaya school] and Mahayana movements in 11 provinces. [Since there is next to no Mahayana presence in this overwhelmingly Theravada country, it is likely that the study authors or reporters are mistaking Maha Nikaya and Mahayana.]

Forty-five percent of the monks experience varying levels of obesity, while 40 percent of them face such diseases such as diabetes, high blood pressure and allergies, partly due to the rich, oily, and sugar laden foods offered to them by the Buddhist faithful.

The average monk’s only sporting activities is walking in the morning while on rounds seeking alms and sweeping temple courtyards. Only around 21 percent have annual health checkups.

According to the study, some monks have more than three evening drinks each day, for they must abstain from eating food. However, some of the drinks offered to monks are not healthy, as they are mostly soft drinks with sugar, leading to diabetes.

A dualtrack campaign is being prepared to teach monks to select healthy drinks and also to inform food donors about healthy food when offering alms to monks.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Meditating; Food-Mood Connection

If you're trying to meditate or feel better, SUGAR is your enemy.
.
Introduction to meditation with Jack Kornfield (Spirit Rock)

"Snacks Overpower Our Best Intentions"
LiveScience.com (9/16/08)

Despite our best intentions to eat something healthy, we often choose sugary snacks. Dutch researchers asked 585 participants to pick between four snacks: an apple, a banana, a candy bar, and a molasses waffle. About half of the participants indicated they would choose the apple or banana. But when presented with the actual snacks a week later, 27% of those who had said they'd pick a healthy one switched to the candy bar or waffle. And more than 90% of those who had initially made an unhealthy choice stuck with it.

Researchers figure that while we are in control of our intentions, our actual choices are often made impulsively, even unconsciously. "A substantial gap between healthy snack choice intentions and actual behavior was demonstrated," said study leader Pascalle Weijzen of Wageningen University in the Netherlands. "Despite that gap, the results suggest that individuals who plan to make a healthful choice are more likely to do so than those who plan to make unhealthful choices.

Because more than 50% of the population seems to have no intention at all of making a healthful choice, identifying tools by which this group can be motivated to choose a healthful snack is strongly needed." The study is detailed in the September/October issue of the Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior.