Opinion: Fat People Don’t Need Government Sponsored Counseling



By Jasmyne A. Cannick

The federal government’s idea to “counsel” obese people on their eating habits is as backwards as the government’s war on drugs championing the D.A.R.E. program after the CIA supported the trafficking of cocaine into the U.S. to help finance the purchase of guns for the Contras.

The announcement that a federal health advisory panel recommended that all obese adults receive “intensive counseling” in an effort to rein in a growing health crisis in America is to me just another sign of our government’s “hero complex” and leads me to believe that maybe they are the ones in need of the counseling.

As someone who falls into America’s clinical definition of being obese, let me be the first to say that intensive counseling is not to going to tip the scales one weigh or another for me. Besides, if I wanted to be counseled on my eating habits, all I have to do is turn on my television to [insert the name of network here] and watch the latest craze in celebrity TV doctors.

America’s obesity epidemic wasn’t created overnight. It was methodically planned out and designed by the same people who are now overly obsessed with how much I weigh—but not necessarily what I eat and where I can exercise.

The same institution that wants to send people like me to “intensive counseling” co-signed the land use permits that paved the way for theproliferation of fast food restaurants we see today. It’s also the same institution that would rather see a 24-hour gym erected where taxes can be collected than design apark using taxpayer dollars where residents can exercise for free.

And what about the cost of food? Everybody who eats fast food doesn’t enjoy it. But when you can feed a family of 4 on a 10-piece bucket of chicken (with biscuits) for $5 verses spending $20 or more at the grocery store to buy the same ingredients to make the same meal—what are you going to do? The unemployed and those living on a tight budget will tell you that dollar menus start to look pretty good when you’re broke and hungry.

Even though I can appreciate the First Lady’s White House Kitchen Garden—a lot of the same obese people she’s targeting with her Healthy Food Initiative and Let’s Move program, don’t have a yard—let alone a garden to grow vegetables for their children to eat. I like a good farmer’s market as much as the next person, but urban communities plagued with obese children and adults still need a grocery store that offers more than lettuce, corn, apples, bananas, and oranges. A variety of fresh, affordable fruits and vegetables should be available all and not just the wealthier and healthier communities.

But alas, the plot thickens because almost seemingly in cahoots with the government and the fast food industry is Big Pharma. Thanks in part to Big Pharma, I ended up with a RiteAid, CVS Pharmacy, and Walgreens all in one block and I guess that wasn’t enough because now Kaiser is moving in.

So after I guzzle down my hamburger, french fries, 32-ounce soda, with a side of diabetes and stroke, I can just drive next door to the pharmacy and get my insulin prescription refilled, high blood pressure, cholesterol, and heart medicines. How convenient.

Obesity is big business. The more we eat, the fatter we are. The fatter we are, the sicker we are. The sicker we are, the more drugs we need and on and on.

At the end of the day, everyone cops a profit—right down to the clothing designers and manufacturers who are trying to keep up with ourdesire to fashionable and trendsetters coupled with our ever-expanding waistlines.

If the government really wants to put a dent in America’s fat problem, why don’t they commission a national study on the impact of price reductions on fresh fruit, vegetables, and other healthy foods in urban neighborhoods where obesity is an issue? What about the development of a taypayer-funded program targeting the clinically obese with free memberships to their local gym? Then the government could report back on whether or not access to cheaper healthier food and a gym free of charge resulted in better eating habits and living choices.

Offering or even mandating counseling as hope or a solution for the millions of obese people in America is just another one of those sound bites that sound good but means nothing. Eat on that.

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Author Jasmyne Cannick

Jasmyne A. Cannick is a political communications strategist after having worked in both the U.S. House of Representatives and the California State Legislature. She is also a radio and television politics, race, and culture critic. Follow her on Twitter @jasmyne and on Facebook at /jasmyne.

Student credits community activism for high graduation rate



By Lizette Tejeda, Fremont Graduating Senior

South Los Angeles is a community that was once associated with poverty and despair, pain and suffering and even hate and crime. All of the negativity isn’t gone just yet, however the community is slowly but surely getting rid of its bad reputation and creating a new and more positive name for itself.

imageI attended John C. Fremont High School in South Los Angeles, and I have been part of an organization called Community Coalition, which strives for change in South LA since my sophomore year in high school.

Thanks to this organization I was able to be part of the restructuring process that Fremont went through. I voiced my concerns as not only a student but as a resident of my community.

We had three main goals that we wanted the school administration to adopt: comprehensive mental wellness programs, a health career academy, and a dropout prevention and intervention program. We set high expectations for not only the school but for ourselves.

The students and staff at Community Coalition got organized and we set out to make classroom presentations, handed out surveys to students, made several speeches and gave it our all to make the most out of the opportunity that the restructuring process presented for our community.

We worked hard to turn Fremont around and make it a model for the rest of the high schools in South LA. The restructuring process seems to have been a success, but Fremont has yet to build a health career academy, which means our work is still not done. However, I am proud of the achievements we have made over the past two years and the results that we have had.

Along with over 750 of my peers, Fremont High School’s class of 2012 made our families, the school and us proud for graduating the biggest class in its history. This is just one of the many accomplishments we have made thanks to all the hard work and effort that was put into the restructuring process.

I graduated Fremont with high honors and it felt great to make my single mother proud. I am an only child and my mother’s biggest treasure. She has always told me “tu eres mi orgullo, mi razón de vivir, mi todo! Tu tienes que estudiar muy duro para salir adelante con una carrera y no tener que trabajar tan duro igual que yo.” In English this translates into, “You are my greatest pride, my reason for being, you are my everything. You have to work very hard to get ahead with a career so you don’t have to work as hard as I do.”

These are the words that have filled my earliest memories. I can still hear these exact words being spoken in my subconscious. My mother is my hero and the reason why I never give up on anything. I will be attending UC Santa Cruz this fall in hopes of returning to my community with a degree in hand and ready to work on the next South LA campaign.
I am an activist that wants nothing but peace and love in this world; however, I understand that it will be very difficult to achieve it. I am proud to be a part of a community that has gone through so much, from riots to everyday gang banging, and yet ,still has the ability to unite as one when the occasion calls for it.

I see the world in a different way than someone who lives in the suburbs. I know how cruel violence and poverty can be. The simple fact that I live here makes me so much stronger and makes me appreciate everything so much more.

I am proud to say that I am an activist for my community and the people who live in it. There has always been and will always be injustice everywhere as long as people allow it, but I will always fight for justice because of the people in my community have strived for so much and ahve yet to see the day when their hard work pays off.

Anything and everything that’s worth doing in life has its struggle and activism is one of those things that requires a lot of hard work and perseverance for any change to occur. Activism is more than a passion to me, it is the need to not only create, but to maintain a much-needed social change in a poverty-stricken community like mine.