The First Lady’s “Let’s Move!” program has had a lot of publicity lately. We have strange videos of the president and vice-president taking laps around the White House, and the First Lady and Will Ferrell holding a conference with kids about food. Then a few days ago, Michelle Obama got up and helped announce changes in food labeling that are designed to highlight the amount of calories (by making the print bigger) and added sugars. During the press conference, she said this:
“So there you stood, alone in some aisle in a store, the clock ticking away at the precious little time remaining to complete your weekly grocery shopping, and all you could do was scratch your head, confused and bewildered, and wonder, is there too much sugar in this product? Is 50 percent of the daily allowance of riboflavin a good thing or a bad thing? And how on Earth could this teeny little package contain five whole servings?
This stream of questions and worries running through your head when all you really wanted to know was, should I be eating this or not? Is this good for my kids or not? And if it is healthy, how much of it should I be eating? But unless you had a thesaurus, a calculator, a microscope, or a degree in nutrition, you were out of luck. So you felt defeated, and you just gave up and went back to buying the same stuff you always buy.”
Note to Michelle Obama – if I look “confused and bewildered” or feel “defeated” while I am grocery shopping, it’s because I have four children with me who are asking me several different questions all at once (mostly variations on “can we get that?”), or I’m trying to steer some behemoth of a shopping cart that we HAD to have because it is the “car” shopping cart and has steering wheels and THAT’S MY WHEEL and MOM HE’S TOUCHING ME and YOU STAY ON YOUR SIDE. So, my distractions and lack of temper while shopping have nothing to do with the food I’m buying, Mrs. Obama, and more to do with the people I’m buying for. I welcome you to try it sometime.
But let’s get back to the story. I do know how to shop properly and read labels. I had a mother who taught me how to cook and bake on a budget, and I have been through nutrition classes as an adult, and a forced diet change (thanks to having my gallbladder out two years ago), so I do know how to read labels. I agree that many people don’t know how to read the labels, but often times, they don’t care about them, either. The people that are wringing their hands and agonizing over the labels are already the people who know how to read them. Making the print bigger isn’t going to make the difference that Mrs. Obama says she wants to make.
So here are my two suggestions that the First Lady could advocate for and implement immediately as a part of her “Let’s Move!” program.
First, eliminate the use of EBT (electronic benefit transfer) cards and SNAP (supplemental nutrition assistance program) funds (aka “food stamps”) on all pre-prepared sweet foods, fast foods, and restaurants.
This is the current list of what the USDA allows for purchase with SNAP money. Per the “Food and Nutrition Act of 2008” :
Now, if you are like me, you are thinking “why should SNAP money go toward soft drinks, candy, cookies, ice cream and cake? Aren’t those the VERY THINGS the First Lady is trying to discourage people from consuming so much of?”
And along with that, there are sites devoted to keeping track of which fast-food restaurants and other stores take EBT cards. I’m pretty sure a bucket of Kentucky Fried Chicken isn’t on the First Lady’s list of approved foods… but it’s allowed by the USDA.
So, if Mrs. Obama was serious about changing how people eat, she would start with the money that the government already controls, and lobby Congress to eliminate processed sugars and fast foods from EBT and SNAP benefits.
Second, advocate for a return of home economics classes in public schools at the junior high and high school level.
What we do have in this country is a epidemic of people who feel defeated by cooking itself. If you don’t believe me, just catch an episode of Food Network’s Worst Cooks in America. My daughter, who is ten, and a budding chef herself, is already a better cook than these “worst of the worst.” And the sad part is, that when there are open tryouts for this show, the lines are HUGE. There are thousands of people in this country who have never learned how to properly prepare a meal from scratch, or who rely heavily on pre-prepared food, frozen foods, or other people for their meals.
I was fortunate enough to see a home ec class in action before they were eliminated from my junior high school, and then I took a combination health/PE class as a senior in high school that had cooking as a part of the curriculum. (And no one ever got stabbed with a sharp knife.) We can go into all the reasons why home ec was taken out of schools, but if the First Lady was serious about changing eating habits, then let’s start with teaching kids to cook. These skills, sadly, are no longer commonly passed down from parent to child, for multiple reasons. If we are to change kids’ minds about where food comes from – and it’s not out of a box – then let’s teach them something truly useful at school and have home economics brought back.
There, Mrs. Obama. If you are really serious about impacting how American families actually eat, try these things. Do you have the courage of your convictions to actually tell people using SNAP funds that they can’t buy ice cream or Domino’s Pizza with that money? Do you have the desire to teach kids how to prepare food for themselves with practical hands-on experience?
Or is it just easier to make cutesy YouTube videos and demand a larger font size on a label?
I guess I already have my answer.
Good job, Deanna! We were all cooking as children and had to do it on a budget because with 8 kids, we definitely had to budget! No SNAP funds should go for fast food places or for junk food, and yet they do. I can’t afford junk food, why am I paying for someone else to buy it?
And here I thought you were going to say she should ask for amphetamines and liposuction.
Seriously though, you’re right about the EBTs and the food education. In my opinion, kids should be required to work on a farm for a few weeks as a requirement to graduate from high school. They’ll learn where food really comes from and be exposed to a healthy lifestyle. Having basic skills like growing food, tending animals, and cooking should be a requisite right along with reading and writing.
But then, I think kids should have to attend an Army mini-boot camp before graduation too. Crazy I know.
Why would you want to torture innocent farm animals like that 🙂
Merle
Yes, Yes, Yes!!! And do you ever pay attention to the commercials on the Food Network? It’s all processed junk! I learned how to cook and sew in junior high and although I can’t make my own clothes I can certainly repair a seam or a button. I taught my kids how to cook simple stuff when they were young, but most important, they saw me cook dinner every night for all of us. It was a rare treat to eat out (still is) and I don’t cook with canned soups or boxes of prepared foods. They saw how easy real cooking is, and they appreciate it.
At one time, I could have qualified for “Worst Cooks” and that’s no over-statement. However, as time went by, I picked a few fundamentals. Now, I wouldn’t qualify for that program. It would be more like “Not that Bad of a Cook, but Don’t Make Him Your First Pick.”
For breakfast:
In a two (2) cup bowl,
1 cup All-Bran
1/2 cup Shredded Wheat (Bite-Size)
1/2 cup red grapes
1/4 – 1/2 cup blueberries
approx 1/2 doz whole almonds
approx 1/4 cup of walnut pieces
After pouring cereal into the bowl, might run a small amount of hot water to soften. Let set while washing fruit. Then, add fruit and nuts. Instead of milk, top off with 6 – 8 ozs of Ensure (I prefer the dark chocolate). Enjoy!
I hardly ever have that mid-morning energy slump.
“So there you stood, alone in some aisle in a store, the clock ticking away at the precious little time remaining to complete your weekly grocery shopping….”
Because we’re all on the clock when we go grocery shopping? Or is this just in her dream of a Sovietized Amerika where you have your 15 minutes in the store, then you have to leave so someone else can shop the bare shelves? Her and her husband don’t even sound like real people when they say crap like this.
And, I agree with your two points, Deanna. If we’re going to have the state (that is, you and me) subsidizing these people’s lives, then we should only allow raw ingredients and we should require they cook their own meals. If they don’t want to be told what to eat and how, then they can get their own money.
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