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New York Plans to Ban Sale of Big Sizes of Sugary Drinks
I'm sorry you found out the world does not revolve around you. Here, let me pour you a tall glass of get over it.
♥
Forever on our star~ 6.22.12
Well-behaved women seldom make history.
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I like that they at least think they're making a step in the right direction. Of course, making sure these guys can't get an extra large soda with their 7 Big Macs isn't really going to solve much, and it's not even really the sugar you find in soda that's adding t obesity, it's just lack of activity. Also, rather than flat out banning this type of stuff, why not add an additional tax to it? I think if people had to choose between a 2oz. soda and a few more dollars, they'd actually choose the money pretty often.
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Originally Posted by
Sekwaf
I like that they at least think they're making a step in the right direction. Of course, making sure these guys can't get an extra large soda with their 7 Big Macs isn't really going to solve much, and it's not even really the sugar you find in soda that's adding t obesity, it's just lack of activity. Also, rather than flat out banning this type of stuff, why not add an additional tax to it? I think if people had to choose between a 2oz. soda and a few more dollars, they'd actually choose the money pretty often.
You have a point there.
But are you ok with that choice being taken away from you?
This could get ugly.
I'm sorry you found out the world does not revolve around you. Here, let me pour you a tall glass of get over it.
♥
Forever on our star~ 6.22.12
Well-behaved women seldom make history.
-
They'll just get more drinks than before. This is just putting a veil over the problem really, a very silly piece of legislature.
But maybe I missed something because I can't read the article, NY Times is being weird and doesn't recognise that my browser does actually accept cookies.

Originally Posted by
Sekwaf
it's not even really the sugar you find in soda that's adding t obesity, it's just lack of activity.
Lack of activity doesn't translate into obesity without high calorie diet.
Last edited by Sumpfkraut; 05-31-2012 at 12:48 AM.
Plutôt on verra l'onde contre mont reculer,
Et plutôt l'œil du monde cessera de brûler,
Que l'amour qui m'époint décroisse d'un seul point.
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Originally Posted by
Sekwaf
...and it's not even really the sugar you find in soda that's adding t obesity, it's just lack of activity...
True. Lack of activity is the biggest factor. I think that the majority of American society shuns physical activity or at least think it's "weird". Or I guess people are just lazy.
How about banning soft drinks outright?? Better yet, make bottled water free. Bottled water is 10x better than soft drinks, as a matter of fact water is the only thing we should actually be drinking as organisms. Soft drinks are synthetic and contains lots of shit in it that is bad for our health in general. I don't know why they make a 2 liter soda bottle $1 while a gallon of Poland Spring like $3.99. So much for defeating obesity economics...
Last edited by Blassreiter; 05-31-2012 at 12:45 AM.
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HOLY ****, IT'S "COULDN'T CARE LESS", NOT "COULD CARE LESS", OKAY?!
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As if this would change anything.
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Oh that's cool actually.
Now if they could shut down fast food restaurants, we'd be golden.
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Originally Posted by
Sumpfkraut
They'll just get more drinks than before. This is just putting a veil over the problem really, a very silly piece of legislature.
This, but also...
It is definitely not a step in the right direction and it's restrictive to a very basic freedom of choice. It would be silly to fight for some freedom and then be like, "well, except that freedom, because that freedom is stupid and you shouldn't do it."
The people around me were always joking about how they outlawed drugs, so cheeseburgers must be next as they can kill people too. If more things like this come along, the jokes might become a reality at least somewhere in America. And that's absurd.
I am not for anything where one person causes harm to another, but if both sides agree to something (the seller wants to sell it and the buyer wants to buy it) and are happy with it, and it doesn't harm anyone but themselves (an underground exchange of counterfeit money, for example, would harm the next person the money is used on), it should always be legal.
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As much as I dislike sugary drinks, I still don't like this law. Good health is achieved through personal responsibility, not legislation. And this piece of legislation will just be another useless, black market spawning waste of tax dollars.
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