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Food Deserts and Inequality in Access to Nutrition.
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Attachment 41961 Attachment 41963 Attachment 41960 Attachment 41964
(Maps courtesy of USDA.) Quote:
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Attachment 41966 i note that the first map especially is really closely correlated with the election results... Attachment 41967 |
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How did you determine the correlations between the maps? Even that they were "really closely correlated" --by what percentage would you estimate? |
The pawn shop is two doors down from a ghetto supermarket. I will have to take pics sometime to show their goods. There are freezers full of racks of ribs, with spices above them, in the same place where the produce section would be found.
This is an education problem. The ribs are not utterly cheap, but this is the food they demand, and are provided. Also available are snack foods 3-4 weeks past their sell-by date. I made the mistake once of buying a bag. The potato chips were chewy. |
hence the demand for leaded paint chips which retain their crunch. Please follow along, Mr. Tode.
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edit to add: so obviously I'm speaking in a political science mindset, not mathematical correlation. Just "eyeballing" it as it were. |
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Attachment 41968
Attachment 41969 you can seriously pick out the poor parts of cities - and the least white parts of them - going off just these maps alone. 'Course, in the west, a lot of that food desert is also actual desert. but there's some important stuff going on in the west, too, if you look for it. Attachment 41970 reservations are MUCH more likely to be food deserts than other land. |
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That said, I'm all for local sourcing - fresh, local food through coops, farmer's markets, etc. The more direct farm-to-table, the better. Walking, or the refusal to do it, is another cultural thing. Americans don't generally like to walk. American cities and neighborhoods aren't laid out to encourage walking (to walk to my local grocery is to take your life in your hands). If it isn't dangerous, though, 1/2 to 1 mile is NOT a long distance. My ex-mother in law walked a mile each way to her local grocery well into her eighties. She pulled a little wire grocery cart and bought what she needed that day. She came from a European tradition of daily marketing and never kept food in her fridge more than a day. I have relatives who walk five miles or more daily, in their seventies. When they go sightseeing (in Canada), people think they're nuts to walk 2 miles to see a local attraction. It will take major public health programs to address behaviors like these - encouraging people to choose walking, to choose local, healthy foods to eat, and so on. I think the funding needs to be provided; otherwise we're facing a public health disaster over the next ten to fifteen years. But it'll take time, because people have to internalize new attitudes and choices. |
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Just once, I'd like to see a study that ends "Yeah we've figured this out, we're done here, let's move on to something else." Seriously, this stuff is important. Before even long-term health, how can kids do well in school if breakfast was mostly a cupful of sugar and artificial chemicals? Quote:
The stores sell this because this is what sells. If it was profitable to be selling veggies in the ghetto, shops would. People just don't buy them. Why not? I cannot believe that poor people are completely ignorant of nutrition. Fine details maybe, but a general veggies-good-coke-bad idea must be around, surely? I guess (having spent many years researching US urban ghettoes ;) ) it is more to do with the primacy of immediate survival: I can get this Burger, fries and coke, now, that will keep me going for another eight hours, within my limited budget; rinse and repeat. Or maybe just not valuing long-term health over a short term sugar-fat-salt fix. As for country areas of food deserts, does this account for the fact that many people there have grow-your-own options? |
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1) Cooking time. If it's a one-parent household, or both parents work, possibly multiple jobs, it is extremely tempting to have a ready-to-eat meal, whether it's a frozen dinner or fast food. 2) Cost. Processed food is extremely high-energy for low cost. It's unhealthy energy, but it gets you more full for less money than many healthier alternatives. 3) Culture. Even in situations where the previous are not as true anymore as they were, you may have grown up raised by parents for which it was true. Your comfort food is often what you had when you were a kid. |
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Picture the people who come into UT's pawn shop every day. It's like them, only more widespread. |
Mmmmyeaahhh ... maybe I am kind of insulated ...
[thinks about some of the morons I knew who had gotten into university. Hmmm.] |
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For instance, which food maps show the "rings of white flight republicans surrounding southern democratic cities" or the "predominantly african-american areas"? I'm having trouble seeing this. By looking at the zoomed-in cities, it appears that the food deserts are in rural, or outlying areas. I can understand that, because where I live it takes 30 minutes to drive to a grocery store. |
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Here's what I'm seeing, flint. This is admittedly just a quick look, not a rigorous mathematical analysis, so you might not see the same trends I do - but to me the blue shades look to be a lot more desert-y.
Attachment 41972 Attachment 41973 |
Since when did Appalachia have a good diet? I thought Tennessee and Kentucky would just be one big food desert...
Or maybe I shouldn't buy into that stereotype as much? |
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