MyQul
Chairman of the Bored
Stop eating fatties!!
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/ban-food-on-trains-says-top-doctor-2ld07sfhz
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/ban-food-on-trains-says-top-doctor-2ld07sfhz
Agreed. But also because I despise the sound of people who can't eat or drink quietly, it infuriates me.
Oh I know. But it's not yet a 'real' medical condition. However, my boss does allow me to work from home because of it when I need to. It's genuinely a horrible emotion.
Have one, but pay the tax which will cover the NHS costs of obesity related diseases.
Which has been shown to be zero. Those who indulge in unhealthy lifestyles statistically, die younger than those who do not. The economics of healthcare are such that the greatest demand, and therefore costs to a system such as the NHS, come at the end of a statistically average life. Fatties and ciggy smokers by and large never reach this same age bracket (again, statistically speaking) so cost the system lees when looked at as a whole life cost. This doesn't mean I advocate smoking, eating and drinking oneself to death, but there doesn't need to be a tax on pies from an NHS cost perspective (from a neo-puritan, we want to boss you about, perspective, maybe if that floats your authoritarian boat - such as the appalling retiring CMO).
Best solution to this obesity crisis is to allow all families easy access to safe outdoor play spaces (this includes us adults who spend 40 hours per week sat at a desk) and make the price of food realistic. Think back 30 years, I bet chocolate and sweets were a treat afforded once per week, not realistically picked up on a daily basis.
As a teenager, I got £1.50 per day to spend on lunch. I could have bought a sandwich at the school canteen with that or I could buy 2 packs of maryland cookies and 50p worth of penny sweets. guess what I did?!
I was also playing sport almost daily and cycling 4 miles per day as well so I all balanced out.
go back to the Daily Mail if that's your reasoning
I removed my additional post as I thought the same. I got unnecessarily agitated, sorry dude.I was going to respond to your post with some reasoned argument, about personal choice and the place of the state in peoples life, and also the flaw in your purely economic argument (complete with lovely links, and things) but then I read the above and took a deep breath a remembered that life is too short to argue with people who get all aggressive on internet fora and forget their manners. It would therefore be pointless.
For everyone else, if you say smoking costs an additional £11b pa in healthcare cocts; direct tobacco taxes are £12bn pa, that's a net positive before we even look at whole life care.
I take into account what you say that adding a health tax may not be necessary, I will read, and if you have any links please do post them.maybe if that floats your authoritarian boat
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