Archive for March 4th, 2010

Obesity … a disease, or a right ?

March 4, 2010

I can live with higher tanning salon taxes, but closing fast food outlets is going way to far … this guy seems to agree … passionately.

Pro-choice advocates represent the sensical notion that it is not the government’s prerogative to legislate what women do with their physicalities.

It goes without saying that the freedom to abort ones’ fetus should not be the only choice that our country protects. Yet, in recent years, federal, state, and local governments nationwide … have legislated to limit our freedom to chose to smoke cigarettes, gamble our money, bag groceries, borrow cash, drink booze, enjoy tanning beds and anger our girlfriends by getting lap dances.

And just this week, under the leadership of First Lady Michelle Obama, the federal government has launched a new program to limit our freedom to get fat.

While the program is being sold as an attempt to limit childhood obesity, the policies it proposes will affect the lives of all Americans.

As I’ve argued previously, obesity is a physical manifestation of our country’s greatest and most laudable triumph: its defeat of hunger and want.

But, more than that, obesity is a manifestation of personal freedom: if ones enjoy eating hamburgers, then may he chomp away.

Contrary to the infantalizing notion that obesity is a “disease,” an expanding waist line is simply the result of free actors choosing to eat foods that they enjoy.

Indeed, the linguistic decision to label it an obesity “epidemic” reduces dynamic, free individuals into victims and disease carriers, unwittingly transmitting pathogens of obesity. It’s as if they “caught” obesity when they were sneezed on by a fat person.

Realizing that free people will often chose to get fat, anti-obesity crusaders are now actively seeking to limit our choices.

The city of Los Angeles has attempted to impose a moratorium on the construction of new fast food outlets.

Most troublingly, the Obama Administration’s new initiative will seek to change the culinary and commercial makeup of neighborhoods across the country, and potentially mandate the availability of “healthier” options.

All of this is designed to limit our ability to eat what we want, when we want. In other words, it’s about eliminating choice. The thing is: a lot of people like eating jelly donuts, pepperoni pizza, and chocolate cake.

Let them eat cake.

Source blog: Epstein’s Razor
http://trueslant.com/ethanepstein/2010/02/13/im-pro-choice-on-obesity/

Frogs threatened by “gender bending” chemical castration … Kermit frets, Miss Piggy squeals.

March 4, 2010

The good news: Scientists not sure if atrazine affects humans in a similar way.

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Excerted from USA TODAY, Tap water contaminant ‘castrates’ frogs, March 3, 2010 

An herbicide that contaminates the tap water consumed by millions of Americans has been found to produce gender-bending effects in male frogs, “chemically castrating” some and turning others into females.

Frogs in an experiment were exposed to amounts of the weedkiller atrazine that are comparable to the levels allowed in drinking water by the EPA.

The atrazine caused male frogs to begin growing eggs in their testes … nearly all of the other males had low testosterone and sperm levels … 10% of the males actually changed sex … some were able to breed and lay eggs. 

The experiment can’t tell scientists whether atrazine affects humans in a similar way. 

Full article:
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/science/2010-03-02-1Aatrazine02_ST_N.htm

Thanks to LKJ for feeding the lead …

Blockbuster: Dead man walking ?

March 4, 2010

Question: when was the last time your were in a Blockbuster?

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Excerpted from Business Week: Blockbuster Plots a Remake, Feb. 24, 2010  

With its traditional video-rental business under assault, Blockbuster  has brought in restructuring advisers, looking to buy yet more time to remake itself in the face of new rivals and technologies.

Blockbuster’s plight comes amid major shifts in how people rent and watch movies. Consumers are now getting movies through Redbox, a unit of Coinstar  that operates $1-a-night movie-vending machines in grocery stores and McDonald’s outlets.

Netflix mail-order and online rental service has also stolen Blockbuster customers. Consumers are also watching movies and TV shows through on-demand cable services and electronic gadgets such as Apple Inc.’s iPod.

Blockbuster has adjusted its business, outlining plans to close nearly 1,000 stores out of roughly more than 5,000 world-wide.

As the movie-rental business has evolved, Blockbuster has moved into other video-watching services, such as its own mail-order service, DVD rental kiosks and a digital on-demand service, but it remains far behind its major competitors in those areas.

Blockbuster reaps licensing fees from NCR Corp., which rolled out about 2,500 Blockbuster Express branded vending machines last year and plans to have up to 10,000 DVD kiosks by the end of this year. Blockbuster’s kiosk presence is much smaller than that of Redbox, which has more than 22,000 vending machines.

Blockbuster’s mail-order service has about 1.6 million subscribers, compared with Netflix’s roughly 12 million.

There’s skepticism whether Blockbuster can realize enough value from new business offerings in time to offset declines at its traditional brick-and-mortar outlets.

“If they can’t build a profitable stores operation, then there is no Blockbuster. It’s real simple. If traffic doesn’t pick up by mid-year, we may just kiss this whole story good-bye. We got a dead-man-walking situation here.”

image

Full article:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703503804575083792463467472.html?mod=WSJ_hps_LEFTWhatsNews