The Family – Review

This book, by Jeff Sharlet, is a sobering look into the fundamentalist Christian organization that works at the heart of much of our government in this country to impose its views. You can read much about it in this Wikipedia entry - The Fellowship.

It’s a very good book, though rambles a little bit of “Good Calories, Bad Calories” in that sense. The author spent time in the Family himself, and did years of research on this book. Not only that, but the history of the organization, and the ways they’ve worked their agenda into our government’s politics, are very circuitous, and require a lot of tangents.

If you’re at all interested in US government, or the workings or “power,” you should definitely read it!

A Most Revealing Pyramid

Another great post from JR prompts a follow-up piece by me.

This one is about food subsidies by the Federal government, the Farm Bill. It comes from The Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine. Hopefully, I’m not violating anything in reproducing this chart they created:

These Pyramids Weren't Built By Aliens!!!!

As PCRM’s post points out, the Farm Bill not only provides food subsidies, but also decides much of what will constitute school lunches.

With a Food Pyramid like that, who needs enemies?!

The most recent post on the Neuroanthropology Blog discusses Obesity and family medicine – and the fact that some family physicians are starting to recognize family and environmental factors as decisive in treating childhood obesity.

I point this out in my comment on their site, but the author (and the physicians) forgot to include governmental subsidization of different food products (and governmental leadership, generally) in their factor-analysis.

As I’ve said before, the body follows the head. This is true in organisms, cultures, and governments.

In cultural/organizational terms, the Federal government is often the “head” of the social-body. It leads via policy (such as subsidies, land-usage policies, etc.), and also by example (accruing massive amounts of debt, etc.).

Further, much of what constitutes “popular” media takes its cue from the Federal government. “Truth in advertising” relies on governmental moderation. The nullification of the Radio Fairness Doctrine in 1987 had serious repercussions as to what type of messaging has dominated radio advertising since (see my post on the anti-smoking campaign of the early ’70′s and how the Fairness Doctrine was a decisive part of that movement).

I’m happy that MD’s are not as “isolationist” in their thinking as they may have been in the past, but the issue needs to be sussed out in its full depths – which includes holding governmental bodies, and the bodies (i.e., people) who make up those “bodies,” responsible for the way food is produced and marketed in our country.

Federal Grant to States for Physical Activity

A news release on the Department of Health and Human Service’s website says:

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) today awarded more than $119 million to states and U.S. territories to support public health efforts to reduce obesity, increase physical activity, improve nutrition, and decrease smoking-the four most important actions for combating chronic diseases and promoting health.

Good news, right?!

But where does it go, and how do we know?

The article mentions

  1. Statewide policy and environmental change. All 58 applicants will receive funding for efforts in nutrition, physical activity, and tobacco control. The state, Washington, D.C. and Puerto Rico award amounts range from $335,801 to $2.2 million. Territory award amounts range from $99,980 to $100,000.
  2. Competitive special policy and environmental change. Thirteen states were funded to implement 15 projects. The award amounts range from $1 million to $3 million per state.
  3. Tobacco cessation through quitlines and media. CDC received applications-from all 50 states, Washington, D.C., and Puerto Rico. 53 applicants will receive funding to expand tobacco quit-lines in concert with expanded cessation media campaigns. The award amounts range from $50,000 to $2.5 million.

It says we should check out the “Putting Communities to Work” website.

That site has a lot of information, but it’s hard to track down exactly what’s going on with the funds.

I contacted a friend in the San Francisco city government, and she told me that the Shape Up SF program had applied for funding through this award, and hasn’t heard yet.

I hope they do!

I think it’s great that our President is putting physical fitness back into “play” so to speak (har har har)…but I wish there were more transparency through the process.

The Shape Up SF Team!

The Dominance of Culture. Or – Why the Healthcare Debate is Silly

My friend JR Atwood recently posted about the synchronous increase in American waistlines, and decrease in American intellect.

He was responding to an article by David Rock, called “Are Our Minds Going the Way of Our Waists?

David’s point is that new technologies are providing distractions (mental calories) in much the same way that industrial agriculture has provided physical calories – in abundance, and with little concern for quality or nutritive value.

Are we becoming fat-heads?

In the end, David asks us to consider evaluating new technologies for their effect, before embracing them wholeheartedly.

While it’s a useful exercise to do personally, no group will ever do this, and if they do, they will never successfully enact changes to behavior based on their findings.

The nature of life is to expand.  People will always seek the newer, better, faster, crazier thing out there.  Depending, I think, on how their culture defines those terms.

What “causes” obesity?  Is it simply “overeating,” or “an overabundance of cheap calories?”

I don’t think so.  Many “indigenous” peoples throughout history have had access to an overabundance of cheap calories all the time (fruits, grains, etc.), yet didn’t tend toward obesity.

Similarly, what causes “fat-headedness?”  Is it the availability of blogs, tweets, commercial television, etc.?

While I can’t think of an historical corollary here (a time when information was overabundant), there’s probably one to be had – and one where the individuals didn’t turn into snippet-junkies, but used that abundance of information to create wonderful new things.  Maybe the Renaissance, following Gutenberg’s printing press, would be a good comparison.

The common denominator underlying these attitudes or approaches – the things that guide action – is the cultural context that the individual identifies with.

Identifies with – not that they are “within.”  There are sub-cultures within every larger culture, and there are “iconoclasts” within every culture – people who do not go along with the larger push of that culture.

The distribution of individuals’ cultural-adherence within their culture probably follows the bell curve.  Most people most likely tend to follow the status quo within the culture (hence the existence of the culture…if they didn’t, it wouldn’t exist!), and then there are people on either end of the spectrum, fewer and fewer the further away you get from the culture’s main mores and values.

Most of the modern “healthcare debate” fascinates me for precisely this reason.  None of it addresses the creation of a culture of physical health.

Why is that?  I asked this recently, following another author’s lead.  Why is America terrified of physical education?

I’m not sure what the answer is to that question.

When you consider the power of culture, however, it becomes clear that any other action, any action that doesn’t seek to create a culture of physical health/education, is merely lip-service…it’s just talk.

Examples of cultures that valued physical strength, health, or education (in an “external” fashion…cultures that valued the above in an “internal” fashion are even more numerous, but because they never explicitly stated their mores with regard to the subject, it’s much more difficult to pinpoint why they valued physical health, etc.):

  • Ancient Greece
  • Ancient Rome (pre-Republic)
  • Sparta
  • Viking culture
  • Soviet culture

These are mostly totalitarian-type cultures.  Or at least, cultures that demand a high degree of self-sufficiency from their populace.

Is there a link?  Does “Democracy” breed fatness?

I’m interested to find out.