In Pollan’s article, he exclaims
that carbophobia is the most recent food fad to hit the American population.
Pollan expresses, “America's
food industry, more than happy to get behind any new diet as long as it doesn't
actually involve eating less food, is still gung-ho on Low Carb.” Basically I
see this as him saying that we as Americans will try to find anyway to
rationalize how much we eat. It seems like in todays society, it is not the
portion size that matters (portions keep getting bigger and bigger) but rather
what is in the food that matters. This is basically what carbophobia is,
Americans have this idea in their head that if we avoid eating carbs than
portions do not matter. Which in my opinion is completely false. What I really
find most interesting is how amongst this health craze in America; portions
keep going up. A great example is the sizes of soda that we drink. Everyone
knows that soda is not good for you but by companies putting on the label, “no caffeine”
and “zero calories” we have this false notion in our minds that we can have as
much as we want. These companies advertise that their products are healthy but
in the process of making “zero calories” and “no caffeine” they are putting
other harmful and unhealthy ingredients into their products.
For me personally, I do not really
pay to much attention to what is in the food that I eat. Growing up, whether
this is right or wrong, my parents had this belief that as long as we ate a
wide variety of foods and stayed active than there is nothing to worry about.
To this day, this method has worked for me. They could be completely wrong but
after eating this way for 19 years it seems to be working just fine for me.
You give a great example to show how food label influences our decision. "No caffeine" and "zero calories" are implicate words of healthy. However, many people may ignore that there maybe other harmful ingredients have added to their food.
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