From Deseret News archives:
Body-weight management is not the government's job
Today, 17 percent of children are overweight.
By the time they reach adulthood, that number climbs to 66 percent.
It's a common political refrain that America faces a childhood obesity epidemic that's turning us into a nation of blubbery diabetics.
Underlying this is the premise that we're helpless before gingerbread cookies and honey-roasted hams unable to resist these and other foods and incapable of putting down our forks. We can be cured, it seems, only by government intervention such as the banning of trans-fats and sodas from public schools.
But is it the food, or is it us? Is it a proper role of government to tell us what we can or can't eat? And are we really as fat as the NIH numbers suggest?
Before we let Uncle Sam into our kitchens, at school or at home, these questions deserve some exploration.
For starters, government data about what constitutes "overweight" and "obese" are misleading.
If you believe the BMI tables, most of the best players in the NBA and NFL are "overweight," including superstar athletes Kobe Bryant and Tom Brady.
Many Hollywood heartthrobs also qualify as fatties Brad Pitt, Matt Damon, Tom Cruise and George Clooney, to name a few.
What's more, the acceptable BMI continues to be ratcheted downward transforming those who were considered perfectly healthy yesterday into "overweight" and "obese" today.
Before 1998, a "healthy" BMI was anything less than 27. Then, suddenly, the government changed the "healthy" number to anything less than 25. Overnight, more than 25 million people who were previously considered to be a healthy or normal weight were reclassified as overweight. Looked at another way, the government artificially manufactured an obesity crisis by moving the BMI goal posts.
This raises the question: Are supposedly overweight people in fact heavier than they ought to be?
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