gravitas said:
However, with this logic how can the government continue to allow (and greatly profit from) the sale of tobacco or alcohol which are both arguably responsible for more health problems then TFA's.
Try not to use the words "logic" and "government" in the same sentance. Attempts to combine the two will always end in frustration.
wolverine said:
Easy solution here: just like there are tobacco taxes and alcohol taxes, why not have transfat taxes and junk food taxes?
From a purely selfish standpoint, I don't want to see this happen because there's a lot of junk food out there that I really like. From a more reasonable standpoint, however, you've hit the nail on the head, and if it was put to a vote, I would vote for this solution. Unless I happened to have the munchies at the time that I was voting
wolverine said:
Junk food is cheaper than healthy food in most cases, which results in welfare moms feeding their kids with McDs every day.
That's not quite true. If you're willing to prepare everything from scratch, and if you know what you're doing, healthy food will usually be cheaper than junk food. The problem is that the majority of people either don't have the time to prepare all of their food from scratch, or don't have the know-how to do it (or both). If you want healthy food
without preparing it from scratch, then junk food will usually be cheaper.
This problem is especially pronounced in the poorer segments of the population because those who do work usually have to work long hours just to get by, which prevents them from having enough time to buy fresh foods every day, and spend several hours preparing them. Those who don't work, and just collect welfare, are usually just too lazy to prepare their food from scratch. The problem is compounded by the fact that the children of the lazy people, and of the hard-working but strapped-for-time people, will grow up with the same eating habits that they learned from their parents, and usually won't even know how to prepare a healthy meal.