Government Regulation

bigbillyrocka

Well-Known Member
No one ever talks about the guy who lost weight eating only mcdonalds food.......:roll:

Its not what you eat, it is how much you eat.
youre correct, no one did. But a big mac with 60+ grams of fat, it only takes on to have your daily allowance at one sitting and with something that wont get you satiated. :roll:
 

Mindmelted

Well-Known Member
youre correct, no one did. But a big mac with 60+ grams of fat, it only takes on to have your daily allowance at one sitting and with something that wont get you satiated. :roll:
Shows how much you know smart ass someone did.......:roll:




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By REED WILLIAMS
TIMES-DISPATCH STAFF WRITER

Chris Coleson was a surfer, a hiker and a two-time most valuable player on his high school soccer team.
He weighed about 185 pounds when he got married in 1998.
"After the kids came, she lost her pregnancy weight, and I kept mine," said the 42-year-old New Kent County businessman.
During the next decade or so, the 5-foot-8 Coleson ballooned to about 300 pounds. He gained 45 pounds from last August to November.
Frustrated by a number of false starts with losing weight, he made a bold prediction to his wife, Tricia Sumner -- that he could lose weight and do it by eating only at McDonald's. He chose the fast-food chain in part because its locations are convenient for his busy schedule.
"There was a level of fear after I said that," said Coleson, who has no affiliation with McDonald's other than eating almost every meal there during his diet. "At that point, I had to stick with it."
He eats mostly salads, wraps and apple dippers without the caramel sauce, and he has the occasional cheeseburger without the bun. He generally eats two meals a day and tries to keep his daily intake at 1,200 to 1,400 calories.
Mary-Jo Sawyer, a registered dietician at VCU Medical Center at Stony Point, praised Coleson's discipline but said an average man should be eating more calories -- 1,500 to 1,800 -- or his metabolism could slow down. She also said Coleson's diet doesn't include enough variety of nutrients and that he should be eating breakfast.
"A year from now, he will probably not want to look at a salad or a wrap or apples," Sawyer said.
Coleson dropped from 278 pounds when he started the diet Dec. 3 to 199 as of yesterday, the last time he weighed himself.
He is a partner for NEIE Inc., a provider of environmental, industrial and engineering clean-up services. The company is based in Massachusetts but has offices in Henrico County. He and his family live in Quinton.
Coleson said the stress of a busy work schedule and raising a son and daughter left no time to exercise. After someone stole a large amount of money from his company last year, his gorging spun out of control.
"I was a stress eater," he said.
He would eat straight from the refrigerator, sometimes consuming enough for a family meal in one evening. And sometimes, his wife said, she would make school lunches for the children and he would scarf them down.
Coleson said he got to where he couldn't fit into a booth at restaurants, barely could tie his shoes, and had to sleep sitting up to be comfortable. His children, James and Meghan, would call him old and fat and pound on his belly as a joke. He put "OLD-NFAT" on the license plates of his car..
Coleson said he was inspired to change his life after hearing about a blind war veteran who rode cross-country on a tandem bicycle. He also wanted to improve his health so he'd be around for his children.
He kept receipts from his nearly daily visits to McDonald's and taped them on the pages of four journals that also include regular entries.
At his request, the Chickahominy Family YMCA started a program called Mission Possible that's modeled after the TV show "The Biggest Loser." As many as 100 people participate in the program, said Celia Givens, executive director of the Chickahominy YMCA. Coleson is a member of the YMCA's board of managers.
For his wife's 40th birthday in April, Coleson spent $274.18 on McDonald's food, which he catered at the YMCA for about 35 people (the receipt's in one of his journals). But the big present for his wife came when he put on his wedding ring, which he had removed from a painfully swollen finger seven years ago.
The license plates on his vehicle now say "MCFIT." His waist size has dropped from 50 to 36.
He became something of a celebrity in New Kent after a local paper profiled him this year. His wife, with some embarrassment, recalls someone yelling "Mrs. McFit" across a softball field at their daughter's game.
Sandra Hillquist, who works with Coleson, joined his Mission Possible team.
"It kind of inspired me to kind of get a grip on my own weight issues," Hillquist said, although she added there was no way she could eat only McDonald's.
Coleson said he plans to quit the McDonald's diet June 19 -- Day 200 of his diet -- but continue to eat healthier and keep portion sizes under control.
Day 200 comes two days before his 10th wedding anniversary. He's hoping to weigh 185 by then, his weight when he walked down the aisle. He's got some work to do between now and then.
"I've got a lot of running to do," he said. __________________
:finger::finger::finger::finger::finger::finger::finger::finger::finger:
 

canndo

Well-Known Member
Even if my children do happen to see an advert for such companies as McDonalds or similar, i as a parent dont give in to their "needs" as long as those needs are fast food. sure maybe once in a while when its convenient and were pressed for time (which is hardly mind you) then yes sure, McD's and toons. However, my kids are just that, kids and cant just drive a couple miles to our nearest fast food eatery. Kids dont get fat on their own whim, its the parents that allow their own children to become lazy, game addicted, no sun seeing drones that they have been come to be known as in todays society. Dont like the facts? well, im sorry but it is just that...fact.

An extraordinary parent extrapolating that by virtue of the fact that THEY are extaordinary, all other parents must be.
What you are saying is that parents have grown progressively weaker through the decades. I maintain that the fundamental elements of humanity do not change over decades. If a child is exposed to more Ronald time than a parent can compete with, then how might they counteract the marketing?
 

canndo

Well-Known Member
In the interest of openness of debate here, I need to share something I found - I am presuming that we have an obesity epidemic based on measurements that may not be as telling as I once thought (and, frankly, I base some of my understanding on anecdotal evidence - observations at walmart for instance).


"Studies have repeatedly pointed out internal problems with the method used for calculating obese and overweight individuals. Both are determined based on the Body Mass Index, which takes into account only a person’s height and weight. Because the BMI fails to measure body fat, muscular and athletic individuals often fall into the categories of overweight or obese. For example, critics of the standard have pointed out that according to the BMI, Brad Pitt, Tom Cruise, George Clooney and a majority of professional athletes are either overweight or obese. On the other end of the spectrum, elderly people with decreased muscle mass may fall into a "healthy" weight category despite obvious nutrition deficiencies. Further, at least some portion of the recent increase in "overweight" Americans is undoubtedly a product of the government lowering the BMI standard in 1998.
Others question whether weight is a reliable indicator of health in the first place, because it fails to account for an individual’s activity level. Some doctors argue that overweight individuals with strong cardiovascular and aerobic endurance are healthier than thinner individuals who get no aerobic exercise.
Not all Americans are buying into the "obesity epidemic." One law school professor, Paul Campos of the University of Colorado, is scheduled to release a book this spring examining America’s obsession with obesity and weight. The book also promises a deeper look into the imprecision of widely-quoted obesity statistics. Accusations that fast food restaurants are "coercing" children into unhealthy eating have recently been challenged as well. A New York-based marketing consulting group conducted a survey last year on children’s attitudes toward food and found that most children surveyed knew what made foods healthy or unhealthy, preferred home cooked meals to fast food, and deferred to their parents on when and what they were allowed to eat."

I am presuming that because this statement is contrary to my base argument, that I needn't post a source? (I lost it and don't feel like looking again)
 

MuyLocoNC

Well-Known Member
An extraordinary parent extrapolating that by virtue of the fact that THEY are extaordinary, all other parents must be.
What you are saying is that parents have grown progressively weaker through the decades. I maintain that the fundamental elements of humanity do not change over decades. If a child is exposed to more Ronald time than a parent can compete with, then how might they counteract the marketing?
I don't think it takes an "extraordinary parent" to simply do what is in the child's best interest. Plus, this ain't England, we aren't supposed to be getting this involved in how parents raise their children. YOU may think it's in the child's best interest, but that ain't your call to make in the first place. The "you" being any busybody progressive that thinks the government should be "helping" parents raise their children "correctly".

Yes, parents have definitely grown weaker through the last couple of decades. I would contend it's so obvious, it shouldn't even need to be stated. I could list dozens of examples but I'm high on percs and I'm tired. Merry Christmas. Ho Ho Ho

As to your last question about counteracting the marketing... that's easy... you simply say "No". Works like a charm every time.
 
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