As
Mitt Romney comes under fire for dissing Planned Parenthood, Michelle Obama is
on a campaign that also strikes close to home and, below the surface, has its
own aspects of division by social, ethnic and economic class.
Obesity
researchers long ago found that, beyond the question of cost, poor people tend to
subsist on starchy diets—-beans and rice, pasta, potatoes—-for psychic reasons
as well, the immediate rush of satisfaction that comes with them.
In
recent years, fast food and sugared drinks have augmented those traditional
ethnic sources, creating an overweight problem among the least privileged
Americans.
As
today’s Downtown Abbey crowd dines fastidiously on expensive meat, fish and
baby vegetables, secure in its own sense of importance, millions are still
filling their stomachs with nutritionally inferior stuff that is available cheap
and fast.
The
First Lady’s effort to bridge that gap is commendable, but older observers will
recall a classic cartoon in the New Yorker of a mother saying “It’s broccoli,
dear” and a bratty kid exclaiming “I still say it’s spinach and I say to hell
with it.”
That
was in 1928. Some things never change.
Update: In New York, the city’s
Mayor is taking steps to do what neither of the Obamas has the power to do,
banning the sale of large sugary drinks in nearly all restaurants, movie
theaters and street food carts. But Bloomberg is a billionaire and an
Independent, and he isn’t running for president this year.
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