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Sun, 5 Feb 2006 12:27:26 +0000 |
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On Feb 04, 2006, at 12:45 pm, Everyone @ As If Productions wrote:
> They think "It's BAD for me but it feels good," so they try to
> limit their intake to as low a number as they can live with while
> still mooing happily in their pens.
Haha - I will have to remember that one. It's a good description
though. People like diets that don't rock the boat. I've heard "Oh
this is a good diet - it's really balanced. You eat one thirds each
of protein carbs and fat". I wonder if their idea of a nice brew is
one third tea, one third milk, and one third sugar.
> In fact, thanks to TV commercials claiming sugar-water (like
> Gatorade) and candy bars (like Snickers) are "good sources of quick
> energy," I'd wager that the average "civilized" person believes
> sugar is the lesser of two evils compared to fat.
Actually I was in the other office at work and I saw a girl eating
"energy tablets". I asked her what was in them, and said it was
probably all sugar. She looked really shocked and said "they better
not be!" The name (Dextro-aid or something) should have been the
giveaway. And yes, they were 82% sugar (dextrose funnily enough).
Not that she stopped eating them of course. But at least she knows.
> I think a reframing is in order. The word "fat" has too many
> meanings. We should start calling them "Lipid Fuels". Ask your
> mum: "Have you had your lipid fuels today?"
I can just see the reaction: "so do you think I should replace all
the fat in my diet with lipids?"
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