Kefass,

It’s often cheaper to buy fastfood than healthy food

Gigan,
@Gigan@lemmy.world avatar

I wouldn’t say cheaper, but it’s definitely easier.

CaptainSpaceman,

If time is money, than fastfood and processed foods are way cheaper than healthy options that require preparing and cleaning of pots/pans etc

Kusimulkku,

Stopping to buy fast food vs making food in one go for several days would make the difference a lot smaller. If you order online, especially if you have a recurring order, then fast food again gains a lot.

Imgonnatrythis,

Fast food implies prepared food. What healthy prepared food are you thinking of? It’s generally much cheaper. Ops post makes no sense. Poverty is not inversely proportional to weight at all

Mercival,

It is a fair point, being obese and poor can definitely be a a horrific feedback loop to get out of.

In developed countries anyways, you don’t really see it in places where food is scarce, of course.

stoy,

This is just wrong, the tiny island nation of Nauru have a huge obesity problem as the only food they can get in any decent quantity are preprocessed food with very low nutritional value.

driving_crooner,
@driving_crooner@lemmy.eco.br avatar

Jamie Oliver’s War on Nuggets: youtu.be/V-a9VDIbZCU

IWantToFuckSpez,

You can still lose weight if you eat unhealthy shit. Like I know people that eat McDonald’s everyday yet they ain’t fat. While you don’t get all the necessary nutrients from fast food being unhealthy but not overweight is still better than being fat.

Kase,

being unhealthy but not overweight is still better than being fat.

Why do you say that? I guess that “unhealthy” isn’t very specific and could mean a lot of things. But health issues that are caused by malnutrition can certainly be worse than being fat. It just depends on the individual situation, I would think.

Alenalda,

I don’t know about that. A combo meal at McDonald’s is inching closer to 15$ in a lot of places. You can go down to the grocery store and get a good amount of food for that much. Healthy doesn’t necessarily mean only the expensive organic, free range, non GMO whatever foods are worth eating.

Daxtron2,

It’s more than just the monetary investment though. It’s time and energy spent creating healthy meals, that if you’re working 12-14 hr days just becomes too much to handle.

Alenalda,

It takes roughly 5 min and 1$ to scramble up a few eggs. It doesn’t need to take an hour to prepare a decent affordable meal at home.

lady_maria,
@lady_maria@lemmy.world avatar

It takes much more effort to make a healthy well-rounded meal than just scrambling up “a few eggs”. I’m happy you have enough time, energy, and physical ability to spend an hour making dinner, but a lot of people don’t.

Some have multiple jobs, kids, disabilities, ect. Others live in food deserts where it’s impossible—or at least very difficult—to find cheap, healthy food. Not to mention the people who were never taught how to cook, and would have to spend even more time, energy, (and very possibly wasted food) on learning how.

This is coming from someone who can and does cook cheap, healthy meals all of the time.

Alenalda,

I’m not claiming to spend an hour making dinner. I haven’t ate fast food in a year mainly because it takes 20min waiting in line and costs way too much for junk unhealthy food. I often eat just scrambled eggs for meals because it is fast and easy. You sure as hell aren’t getting a balanced meal at a fast food chain. You can make excuses for eating that unhealthy junk all you want.

lady_maria,
@lady_maria@lemmy.world avatar

Gee, straw man, you somehow wrote an entire paragraph while ignoring literally all of my points 👍

Alenalda,

The points keep changing. Went from cheaper to buy fast food to takes more effort to make food to it needs to be well rounded. The goal posts keep moving. It’s been my experience that it takes less time and money to make a healthy meal at home. I don’t know why that’s a problem to you.

lady_maria,
@lady_maria@lemmy.world avatar

The fact that I had several points (in a single comment, mind you) does not mean that they keep changing. I suggest you revisit what moving goalposts actually means.

It’s been my experience that it takes less time and money to make a healthy meal at home. I don’t know why that’s a problem to you.

That’s been my experience, too. Like I’ve already said, I frequently cook cheap, healthy meals at home. I rarely eat fast food.

But my original points aren’t centered around my—or your—personal experience; we’re not the only two people who exist. Everyone has varying degrees of resources and ability.

Alenalda,

My comments are in reply to it’s cheeper to buy fast food than healthy food. I pointed out that’s not always the case. I’m not the one using the disabled as a strawman to attack anyone’s point.

lady_maria,
@lady_maria@lemmy.world avatar

TIL that merely mentioning the struggles and limitations that disabled people face—as a disabled person—within a seemingly cordial discussion about peoples’ access and ability to cook healthy meals means I’m literally ATTACKING the point of the person I’m replying to.

Alenalda,

Please discuss that under a comment relating to the poor overworked disabled peoples access to food. The topic at hand was is it cheaper to buy fast food or healthy food before you railroaded it. Blocked.

scottywh,

I’m about to eat my fourth or fifth McDonald’s free double cheeseburger so far of this month just because someone on the local baseball team got a double and they give away a free one in the app to anyone who claims it in the state the next day.

With promotions and deals (which are pretty much always going on) it’s actually tough to get cheaper than eating fast food a lot of the time.

idunnololz,
@idunnololz@lemmy.world avatar

That and food deserts. A lot of poor places in the US lack easy access to nutritious food.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_desert

Kusimulkku,

I’d be surprised if that was actually true. I think what really matters is how much time and effort making your own food takes vs the speed and simplicity of buying fast food.

Price, time and effort can be minimized by making a large amount of the food in one guy that you eat for some days, but apparently some people hate eating the same food two (or more) days in a row, which, okay(?), I guess that’s one reason not to do it.

db2,

Not really, because it’s easier to get high carb crap food. Most of what food shelves have that isn’t produce is carbs and sugar.

Ibaudia,
@Ibaudia@lemmy.world avatar

Extreme poverty definitely, but if you’re just below the poverty line then sugary foods are typically still cheap enough to buy.

Blackout,
@Blackout@kbin.run avatar

Crack works too

set_secret,

most poor people have higher BMIs than wealthy people on average. Poverty is far more likey to make you fat…in USA anyway

feedum_sneedson,

No, it makes you fat on a nice white carb and grease diet. Let’s be realistic, we have calorie sufficiency in the developed world, it’s malnutrition in the face of excess calories that is the problem.

volvoxvsmarla,

I remember detoxing from alcohol and I could not even stand the smell of food for days and weeks. I felt like it will always be like that and I would never be able to eat more than 3 spoons a day. It felt like I would never have problems with my weight again.

So my weight loss tip is to just become an alcoholic and then stop drinking alcohol, you’ll lose a crapton of weight, problem solved!

key,

Where can I get a prescription for this “poverty”?

SharkEatingBreakfast,
@SharkEatingBreakfast@sopuli.xyz avatar

I’ve got some! Real high-quality stuff. Wanna trade?

Batting1000,

I’ve had this experience; the poverty, not ozempic. I didn’t have a job first year of college and basically starved. My BMI was under 18. Everyone said my eyes looked sunken.

ReluctantMuskrat,

I takes abject poverty to lose weight though. Carbs are cheap and highly addicting. Poverty often brings a high bmi but poor nutrition.

Sterile_Technique,
@Sterile_Technique@lemmy.world avatar

I got fat af when I was piss broke. When I could start to afford things other than carbs, the lbs starting going away.

I get there are people even more broke who can’t even afford rice, but don’t assume that being fat and being poor run contrary to each other. Shit food is cheap.

assassin_aragorn,

Not really. The cheapest food is often loaded with fat and sugar

gedaliyah,
@gedaliyah@lemmy.world avatar

Poverty is strongly correlated with obesity.

Kusimulkku,

It’s easy to get. Healthy and nutritious food can be more costly, and being poor you have very limited amount of funds. It can take more effort to make and being poor, you might have much less time for yourself and have a physically or mentally pretty crushing job so less energy to prepare food. It might not be as satisfying for the brain as unhealthy food, and being poor thing might suck balls so you might not want to give that up and just want something good in your life that makes you a bit happier, even if it is not great for your body.

Last part is true for beer related weight gain too. And lot of it goes for having active and healthy lifestyle.

surely_not_a_bot,

This.

Also, food deserts are a thing. Poor communities often don’t have access to good food, at all.

It’s expensive to be poor, and in this case the price is in one’s health.

hperrin,

You have to be really poor to lose weight because of it. Cheaper food is usually high in calories and low in nutrition.

Atin,

I’m diabetic and cannot get the ozempic I am prescribed with because there isn’t enough because of people that want to lose a few kg

PhlubbaDubba,

Not really true, in fact starvation is so rare that for the first time in human history more people are dying of obesity related maladies than of starvation or deficiency of some kind.

The poor have never been so well fattened up in history, we’ve some the fuck how overcorrected, they’re not failing to find bread anymore, they’re taking to well note that the twinkies are cheaper for the calorie and more available at quantity for a standard sized family.

Kase,

True that. My health fucking skyrocketed after getting approved for food stamps.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • lemmyshitpost@lemmy.world
  • fightinggames
  • All magazines