I, for one, am happy that some of these low-carb convenience foods are
appearing. If this world were ideal, I would be eating organic, home-grown,
pesticide-free, cruelty-free, no-hormone, no-nitrate, grass-fed food. I
would also be able to casually lounge around all day, free for hours to
prepare my food, or at least be able to take the time to go shopping. I
envy those who have this, but this is not my reality.
Sometimes I am stuck hungry, without food or a way of making food, and need
something easy. Yes, the easy way out is the American way, but that's the
way it is for me. Grabbing a low-carb burger from Hardee's (which, by the
way, is actually fairly tasty as far as fast-food burgers go--they've upped
the quality of their beef, I think!) is a much better choice than nachos
from Taco Bell. Or I may (gasp!) want to enjoy a beer while socializing.
Knowing which beers have fewer carbs is useful information to me. Do I
think that drinking beer and eating bacon all the time is a healthy diet?
Of course not! But I certainly don't think it is a bad thing that more
information about this is out there.
Michelle
> It really boggles the mind that someone could convince themselves
> that bacon and beer is the healthy choice because it is "low carb."
>
> A person can lose weight with chemo therapy, too. And sadly,
> if people keep shoveling in the bacon, chemo might start looking
> like the healthy alternative. I don't know. Pretty scary.
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