dsgrue3 said:
Price is of no consequence to what I eat. Not sure about others. Food isn't taxed at all in most states. Never really thought about layout and I have to say it's a bit contrived. I walk down nearly every aisle, save the ones I don't need to like baking stuff and shampoo and what not. It seems a bit silly to ask restaurants to label that. Most fast food would have the entire menu marked as such. It's common sense that fast food isn't healthy - adding a sticker won't solve anything. I know quite a few sit down places that started offering "healthy" options as a special menu section. I think that's a good idea for people who care; the rest of us are eating out to enjoy ourselves and probably can't be damned to care about the nutritional value. |
Well I know the high price of junk food does work as a deterant for me, but I hear that's not common.
LOL, well what about restaurants. Most items would not be labeled high fat/salt/sugar, but a few things would. Would it not help guide people to healthier alteratives? As for fast food, this still helps quite a bit. You know how places like McDonalds, or Wendy's have those cheap "healthy" snack wraps? Guess what, the amount of salt in them greatly exceeds that of a big mac. I didn't know that until I took a good look at the nutrition menu, and I'm sure most don't.
For fast food, I think extreme cases should be labeled. e.g. Sweet Onion Chicken Teriaki and Subway. It's salt content is above the daily recommended intake for a 6 inch. lol.
Eating Nutritionally doesn't mean you don't enjoy your food LOL. There are plenty of burger joints which taste much much better then McDonalds and are a lot healthier.
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