Dr. Cultural Sensitivity wrote:

"One characteristic of the American personality is the ambivalence about
values especially as it pertains to choice and environmental influence.
One the one hand we yield to environmental influences like fast food
asnd the other advertising gimmicks but we say that we are free to
choose what we want to be because of an array of presentable choices."

Funny talk coming from the list's self-proclaimed culture-meister. Culture plays a 
substantial role in dictating what we like to eat. Fast food is the American diet of 
this era. The food industry is as manipulative as the cigarette and alcohol 
industries. I think it takes more strength than we like to admit to resist these 
persuasions.

"Lets face it we do not have to eat fast foods.Nither do we have to succumb to
smoking. It is true that environmental conditions do influence behavior,but
it is also true that if the environment stimuli
fails to elicit behavior,it could be rendered ineffective."

I supposed that we don't have to become aroused when we look at pornography 
either...but we do, and we often act on that arousal because nature put these 
mechanisms in place for survival purposes - to keep us alive and reproducing. 
Americans are surrounded and bombarded by this stuff. The stimuli (advertisements) are 
very effectively designed. It is so easy to get holier-than-thou about it but it is 
not JUST a matter of "insufficient willpower." One would have to isolate themselves 
quite radically to avoid the pressure.

BTW I for one have no problem labeling the nicotine pushers what they are - drug 
dealers who just happen to have the government's blessing. They do the same thing that 
the fast food industry does.


"I am sick and tired of people blaming companies for their lack of
personal control.My suspicion is that those people seek some sort
of realistic as well as imaginary vicarious reinforcement that emanates
from a culture that extols the values of freedom without boundaries."

Another part of the problem is how sedentary we are relative to humans through most of 
the history of the species...it is not just "lack of will" - it is complex and 
multi-causal.  It is easier to point fingers at those who suffer the most from it 
(i.e. people who suffer from morbid obesity) than to think about how we can work to 
change some of the conditions that promote weight-related health problems.

Nancy Melucci
LACCD






---
You are currently subscribed to tips as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to