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June 12, 2008
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U.S. Life Expectancy Increases, Obesity Activists Show Desperation

U.S. Life Expectancy Increases, Obesity Activists Show Desperation

The most recent TIME magazine cover screams “How America's Children Packed On the Pounds,” less than subtly suggesting that the article pinpoints the culprit behind America’s bulging waistline. It does. Only a few paragraphs into the report, the TIME author proclaims that “our eating habits are clearly responsible for most” of our extra weight. Far from “clear,” the allegation is flat-out wrong. And today there's even some encouraging news that we're living longer despite our love-handles. Take that, TIME.

Research continues to suggest food is not what’s making us fat. Though most of us occasionally splurge at restaurants, a recent economic study shows that we tend to eat fewer calories elsewhere (snacks and other meals) on the days we eat out. Factoring that into the equation, dining out only increases our daily consumption by a mere 24 calories, or less than a single Hershey’s Kiss -- not quite the obesity-causing scourge that health officials have led us to believe.

This study is one of many in the growing body of evidence confirming that “healthy” doesn’t mean focusing on an exact number of calories or a few select foods.

Adding to that body of research, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has announced that life expectancy for Americans has reached an all time high (yet again). This flies in the face of unfounded forecasts that obesity would lead to premature deaths for our children’s generations. Even The Washington Post -- which featured a host of obesity scaremongers in its recent childhood obesity series -- noted that “the favorable trends appear to contradict reports of shortening life spans in some Americans.”

During the same years when our average weight has been increasing, deaths from heart disease and stroke have been plummeting. A 2007 study in JAMA found that physical activity levels, regardless of weight, determine morbidity. In short, it’s fitness, not fatness that determines our health. And sensationalistic magazine covers won't change that.

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Headlines


Michael vs. Michael (Fitness vs. Food)
Posted On: Thursday 8/14/2008

Fitness, Fatness, And Half-Baked Schemes
Posted On: Wednesday 8/13/2008

Do The (Obesity) Math
Posted On: Thursday 8/7/2008

100 Percent Fat, 100 Percent False
Posted On: Wednesday 7/30/2008

Same Old, Same Old ...
Posted On: Thursday 7/24/2008

Fried Foods Take The Blame For Obesity Bump
Posted On: Friday 7/18/2008

Regulation By Speculation
Posted On: Tuesday 7/15/2008

Countless Causes Of Obesity
Posted On: Monday 7/14/2008

Food Cops Get An 'F' For False
Posted On: Monday 6/30/2008


ActivistCash.com

Center for Science in the Public Interest
Background | Quotes | Financials
The Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI) is the undisputed leader among America’s “food police.” CSPI’s joyless eating club has issued hundreds of high-profile — and highly questionable — reports condemning soft drinks, fat substitutes, irradiated meat, biotech food crops, French fries, and just about anything that tastes good. read more here »

Op-Eds

Food only part of obesity problem
The cause of obesity isn't what you think. read more here »

Leave calorie counts off the menu; Nutrition is more complex than a few figures can convey.
Although The Times’ editorial was right that "laws that protect consumers from their own unhealthful habits have more than a whiff of the nanny state about them," its support for menu labeling is wrong. read more here »


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