quiddities and agonies of the ruling class - a rolling new york times thread

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when I go home, and my parents cook meat, it's usually from meat that's been frozen for a few months, bought at the last time that ground pork was on sale at the local shoprite. still tastes great!

dayo, Sunday, 29 January 2012 16:19 (twelve years ago) link

yeah... well you're right, dayo, but a lot of what you're talking about boils down, more or less, to education. to understand how to season and cook things... that really takes effort to educate yourself and a lot of ppl, even ppl my age w/o kids or much responsibility after finishing work, aren't interested in that. it sucks because it's a great way to live in many respects, but it's just not something that tons of families get into. idk, i got lucky, my dad went to culinary school, but i don't know many ppl my age that understand, like, how to cook on a nightly basis or even want to. let alone actual families.

J0rdan S., Sunday, 29 January 2012 16:21 (twelve years ago) link

still missing the point d. the bigger point is 'people should be able to spend their meager incomes however they like, even if it's fried chicken or drugs.'

'I know how to eat well for less money' or 'people *should* be buying this instead of that' is just sorta self-congratulatory

iatee, Sunday, 29 January 2012 16:22 (twelve years ago) link

I think that's kind of where we went wrong with food: Stuff like fried chicken was at one point a treat, then we reconfigured the system so that the supply is able to give us fried chicken daily, and then we put foods like that in mass-market pre-prepared overly-preserved and salted versions for fast food and tv dinners. So now we have a sometimes-food that is even worse for you than the original version, that you can eat daily.

― mh, Sunday, January 29, 2012 11:15 AM (2 minutes ago) Bookmark

yeah... something related to this is that big box supermarkets almost all have premade things that you can pick up and take home but it's like... fried chicken and macaroni and cheese and shit like that. i don't think many places are making take-home shit that's anywhere near healthy.

J0rdan S., Sunday, 29 January 2012 16:23 (twelve years ago) link

true, that c-p

mh, Sunday, 29 January 2012 16:24 (twelve years ago) link

I mean, x-p to iatee

mh, Sunday, 29 January 2012 16:24 (twelve years ago) link

yeah I agree j0rd, which is why I find american food culture to be very problematic!

iatee, I don't know if I can fully get behind that - some kinds of behavior are pretty self-destructive and I wish people would stop doing them. but I do agree that people should be free to spend their money however they like, but that doesn't mean I can't tsk tsk at them.

dayo, Sunday, 29 January 2012 16:26 (twelve years ago) link

I was just trying to point out that eating healthily and tastily on a budget doesn't mean always going to whole foods and buying organic produce. but if you want to strawman me as being paternalistic saying that people should eat less fried and fatty food, I'm okay with that, because I believe that! nobody - people with meager, adequate, good, or obscene income levels - should eat fried food all the time!

dayo, Sunday, 29 January 2012 16:33 (twelve years ago) link

self-destructive is in the eye of the beholder. I'm sure you can find some responsible fried chicken eaters or drug users on ilx. I think it's pointless and sorta in bad taste to judge people for not being more like you (exception: not owning car). instead it makes sense to talk about what the best policies would be to achieve the best outcomes (vegetables should be subsidized, etc.) xp

iatee, Sunday, 29 January 2012 16:34 (twelve years ago) link

i don't have any way to prove this, but i do get a sense that companies have figured out ways to make frozen dinners easier and better... like you can make a generally good and healhy-ish meal if you go went to the frozen food section at any big store, grabbed a bag of frozen meat and veggies, and went home and cooked a quick pot of rice or noodles or something

J0rdan S., Sunday, 29 January 2012 16:36 (twelve years ago) link

I think it's pointless and sorta in bad taste to judge people for not being more like you (exception: not owning car).

iatee very much in character

mh, Sunday, 29 January 2012 16:37 (twelve years ago) link

is blowing up every mcdonalds and burger king considered "policy"

J0rdan S., Sunday, 29 January 2012 16:37 (twelve years ago) link

trader joe's has definitely figured out how to make good frozen food that's not pumped full of fat - well, it's still salty... but you look at the list of ingredients on an average TJ prepared food box and it's actually pretty reasonable!

dayo, Sunday, 29 January 2012 16:38 (twelve years ago) link

I think if someone wants to live their life eating crappy foods and understands the health consequences I can't see why they shouldn't be allowed to. no different from legalizing drugs or w/e

iatee, Sunday, 29 January 2012 16:39 (twelve years ago) link

I think it's pointless and sorta in bad taste to judge people for not being more like you (exception: buying tons of records)

Literal Facepalms (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 29 January 2012 16:41 (twelve years ago) link

self-destructive is in the eye of the beholder. I'm sure you can find some responsible fried chicken eaters or drug users on ilx. I think it's pointless and sorta in bad taste to judge people for not being more like you (exception: not owning car). instead it makes sense to talk about what the best policies would be to achieve the best outcomes (vegetables should be subsidized, etc.) xp

― iatee, Sunday, January 29, 2012 11:34 AM (3 minutes ago) Bookmark

yeah - I agree with the larger push, but unfortunately it's easy ammo to point out ways in which benefactors of government assistance don't use that assistance in acceptable ways. and going back to my original point, if the goal is to write a piece that tries to strip away the stigma of government assistance, you shouldn't leave landmines in your article for the other side to point out. or at least do more to defuse them (maybe, as you suggested, by pointing out that access to fresh and/or organic produce should not be a luxury good.)

dayo, Sunday, 29 January 2012 16:42 (twelve years ago) link

I think if someone wants to live their life eating crappy foods and understands the health consequences I can't see why they shouldn't be allowed to. no different from legalizing drugs or w/e

― iatee, Sunday, January 29, 2012 11:39 AM (2 minutes ago) Bookmark

this is where I diverge - I'm paternalistic, prescriptivist, and probably fascist in this sense!

the big problem in this sentence is the 'understands the health consequences' part - which means changing the culture. which is a hard thing to do! I don't think people fully understand the harm associated with going to 7-11 every day. (hi markers!)

dayo, Sunday, 29 January 2012 16:45 (twelve years ago) link

this is like, Asia vs America, man

I find this interesting but Jennifer is getting mad at me cause she wants to leave the house so I gtg

my overall point is that people should be allowed to do whatever they want to do within their given constraints. a good way to argue w/ this is by pointing out that 'whatever they want to do' is partially an illusion and people are easily influenced etc etc

iatee, Sunday, 29 January 2012 17:05 (twelve years ago) link

I can't imagine how huge the supporting-old-ppl problem would get in 30 years (not that it isn't going to hasten the End, anyhoo) if so many of u fuckers weren't still killing yourselves with smoking. Flame on!

Literal Facepalms (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 29 January 2012 17:09 (twelve years ago) link

heh yeah - secretly I think that people will follow the shiny piece of tinfoil, the red laser light on the walls. even if that means jumping off a cliff. and that's easy to do in america. I refrain from making that argument because it makes me seem like a giant cynic and misanthrope*. which I guess I just revealed myself to be. oh well!

*NB I also kind of believe that a good way to guard against this is by establishing good habits at a young age - an issue of culture, or of 'hygiene' - like in the same way that people are taught that taking a shower every day or brushing your teeth is good for you, so should people be taught from a young age that there is other good food besides mcdonalds. the problem is I think more young kids are being taught the value of brushing their teeth than the value of not going to mcdonalds. oh well!

dayo, Sunday, 29 January 2012 17:11 (twelve years ago) link

I think if someone wants to live their life eating crappy foods and understands the health consequences I can't see why they shouldn't be allowed to. no different from legalizing drugs or w/e

― iatee, Sunday, January 29, 2012

What about the effect on what we are all paying and will be paying for Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security disability and health insurance

curmudgeon, Sunday, 29 January 2012 17:15 (twelve years ago) link

yeah that is true. some 'self-destructive' behaviors like playing video games all day have relatively few external effects, some like a habit of poor eating directly put a load on other services of society.

dayo, Sunday, 29 January 2012 17:21 (twelve years ago) link

"I think it's pointless and sorta in bad taste to judge people for not being more like you (exception: not owning car)"

still catching up but this is one of the dumbest things I've ever read on ILX

Euler, Sunday, 29 January 2012 17:51 (twelve years ago) link

guys plz cultivate rekkanizing winks btwn the lines on the intranets

Literal Facepalms (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 29 January 2012 17:53 (twelve years ago) link

I do believe that everybody should be more like me and I will judge you for not doing so

dayo, Sunday, 29 January 2012 17:54 (twelve years ago) link

haha I don't see any winking there, besides the car bit, unless iatee is just trolling, in which case there's no further point in engaging here.

Euler, Sunday, 29 January 2012 17:55 (twelve years ago) link

i don't think it's misanthropic to say that people will follow the laser light off a cliff if the laser light is really spectacular and sophisticated and physically addictive. you can only expect so much from us. and it's a tricky question, what to do with our natural impulse to allow people choice when over time the machine built to provide choice starts to remove it. after a few decades of success selling people food pumped full of stuff they like, when it turns out that the mere physical presence of this food in a neighborhood or town helps destroy nearby attempts to sell food without the benefits of a global distribution network or a vast advertising budget or a system of obscene hyperefficient mechanized deathcamps for chickens or a whole lot of pandering to humans' most basic fat/salt pleasure+addiction centers, and when it turns out that hey pace how you feel when you're eating it this food is not actually that good for you, the companies selling it quite reasonably point out that it is of course Your Choice to eat it! we didn't make you eat it. we just loaded it with pleasurable chemicals, and made it cheaper and easier than everything else, and spammed your towns and cities with it, and hired anthropologists to help us convince your children to eat it, and came into your homes every day to smile at you and play music and tell you how delicious and cheap it was, and watched as all the other available options gradually became less available -- but we didn't put it in your mouth and make you chew. you did that! we're only here because you want us to be. you made us, with your wanting! and if you -- as a species thrown in the space of less than a century into a world where friendly machines who won't leave or shut up are constantly offering to satisfy your immediate sensual desires -- find it kind of difficult to make successful choices about what is actually best for you, or worry that the bodies and minds that evolved for scarcity and hardship aren't very good at dealing with abundance and ambient manipulation... well, we can't be responsible for your personal failings. and we know you certainly wouldn't want any kind of authority to restrict your choice, because your entire culture is designed around that never happening unless you're gay or a girl! so idk. seems like you are in kind of a predicament? collective prisoners of your ids or something? go ahead and let us know if you've decided what should be done; we'll just be over here making money.

the "intenterface" (difficult listening hour), Sunday, 29 January 2012 18:28 (twelve years ago) link

i know you guys already know all that though

the "intenterface" (difficult listening hour), Sunday, 29 January 2012 18:28 (twelve years ago) link

lol @ eis taking car joke seriously

iatee, Sunday, 29 January 2012 18:34 (twelve years ago) link

iatee, you should think of cheap fried and salty and fatty food as being like cheap gasoline

;)

dayo, Sunday, 29 January 2012 18:35 (twelve years ago) link

tho I'm not trolling when I say that judging poor people on how they spend their money is prob 'a bad thing' xps

iatee, Sunday, 29 January 2012 18:37 (twelve years ago) link

According to George Orwell, the British poor used to live on little more than strong tea and bread with margarine.

Aimless, Sunday, 29 January 2012 18:39 (twelve years ago) link

that's just bullshit paternalism of its own kind, iatee: "those people are poor so we shouldn't judge them".

alternately, it's bullshit relativism: "don't judge anyone"

Euler, Sunday, 29 January 2012 18:45 (twelve years ago) link

iatee, you should think of cheap fried and salty and fatty food as being like cheap gasoline

;)
--dayo

sure, which is why they should be treated in a similar manner (made more expensive)

when driving to mcdonalds becomes more difficult and expensive than walking to a food co-op, peoples' preferences will change.

iatee, Sunday, 29 January 2012 18:48 (twelve years ago) link

taxes aren't the only way of solving things, iatee!

dayo, Sunday, 29 January 2012 18:48 (twelve years ago) link

if judging people is paternalism and not judging people is paternalism I'm not sure how you avoid paternalism, Euler

iatee, Sunday, 29 January 2012 18:49 (twelve years ago) link

and in a lot of these places, people aren't driving to the mcdonalds, they're walking! dictating people's behavior through taxes is its own form of prescriptivist paternalism

dayo, Sunday, 29 January 2012 18:49 (twelve years ago) link

I'm a paternalist for everyone, not just for the poor.

Euler, Sunday, 29 January 2012 18:50 (twelve years ago) link

Taxes are only one way to raise costs/influence people's buying. The first other thing that comes to mind would be legislation that internalized costs that are now externalized. Which is basically the same thing as subsidization.

one little aioli (Laurel), Sunday, 29 January 2012 18:53 (twelve years ago) link

and in a lot of these places, people aren't driving to the mcdonalds, they're walking! dictating people's behavior through taxes is its own form of prescriptivist paternalism
--dayo

you're not dictating behavior, you're changing the environment in which they make whatever decisions they want. if someone wants to pay $5 for a coke, they can pay $5 for a coke. there are points in my life where I'd be willing to pay $5 for a coke, tho I'd certainly buy fewer overall. I don't accept that the only reason I like sugar and caffeine is cause I've been brainwashed.

iatee, Sunday, 29 January 2012 18:58 (twelve years ago) link

laurel otm also

iatee, Sunday, 29 January 2012 19:01 (twelve years ago) link

coke's are really expensive these days, damn inflation

dayo, Sunday, 29 January 2012 19:02 (twelve years ago) link

xp

There must be a way to distinguish between paternalism and using power to propagate what is good. The alternatives would be either to define doing good as being invariably bad, or (god forbid) to allow that paternalism can often be a source of good in the world.

On a slightly more serious note, the raps against paternalism would seem to be twofold, that it can result in unintended consequence (which failing applies to any attempt to do anything) and more damningly that it can only operate in a relationship of unequal power and therefore contains the seeds of such evils as serfdom and tyranny.

The very existance of power and the predictable fact that power does not exist in absolute equality (which would also amount to perfect entropy) clearly means you're never going to solve either of those problems of paternalism. But it doesn't stop there. Those problems are potential in every form of government, every manner of society and in anarchy as well.

My conclusion is that just labelling something as 'paternalism' or as 'prescriptive' says nothing about its moral or practical value. It is an empty criticism, or what Dr. Johnson would have called "cant".

Aimless, Sunday, 29 January 2012 19:12 (twelve years ago) link

why does morality have to even play a role here? I don't think eating kale is a morally good or bad thing. it's prob good for our overall social welfare to have fewer people in the hospital and more people eating vegetables will contribute to that so we should do what we can to create a world where vegetables seem cheap and appealing. beyond that, what's left? this whole debate started w/ a poor person who eats vegetables, just...the wrong ones? those he doesn't deserve as a poor person? how does this kinda thinking benefit us beyond feeling good about our own budgeting skills?

iatee, Sunday, 29 January 2012 19:33 (twelve years ago) link

eating kale is morally good, is the thing - proven by kant!

dayo, Sunday, 29 January 2012 19:57 (twelve years ago) link

please read the critique of cruciferous vegetables

dayo, Sunday, 29 January 2012 19:58 (twelve years ago) link

When someone dismisses a proposal on the grounds that it is paternalism, they usually aren't making a critique of its practical value, but castigating it as morally wrong.

Aimless, Sunday, 29 January 2012 20:43 (twelve years ago) link

kale sux

mookieproof, Sunday, 29 January 2012 20:48 (twelve years ago) link

i don't think it's misanthropic to say that people will follow the laser light off a cliff if the laser light is really spectacular and sophisticated and physically addictive. you can only expect so much from us. and it's a tricky question, what to do with our natural impulse to allow people choice when over time the machine built to provide choice starts to remove it. after a few decades of success selling people food pumped full of stuff they like, when it turns out that the mere physical presence of this food in a neighborhood or town helps destroy nearby attempts to sell food without the benefits of a global distribution network or a vast advertising budget or a system of obscene hyperefficient mechanized deathcamps for chickens or a whole lot of pandering to humans' most basic fat/salt pleasure+addiction centers, and when it turns out that hey /pace/ how you feel when you're eating it this food is not actually that good for you, the companies selling it quite reasonably point out that it is of course Your Choice to eat it! we didn't make you eat it. we just loaded it with pleasurable chemicals, and made it cheaper and easier than everything else, and spammed your towns and cities with it, and hired anthropologists to help us convince your children to eat it, and came into your homes every day to smile at you and play music and tell you how delicious and cheap it was, and watched as all the other available options gradually became less available -- but we didn't put it in your mouth and make you chew. you did that! we're only here because you want us to be. you made us, with your wanting! and if you -- as a species thrown in the space of less than a century into a world where friendly machines who won't leave or shut up are constantly offering to satisfy your immediate sensual desires -- find it kind of difficult to make successful choices about what is actually best for you, or worry that the bodies and minds that evolved for scarcity and hardship aren't very good at dealing with abundance and ambient manipulation... well, we can't be responsible for your personal failings. and we know you certainly wouldn't want any kind of authority to /restrict/ your choice, because your entire culture is designed around that never happening unless you're gay or a girl! so idk. seems like you are in kind of a predicament? collective prisoners of your ids or something? go ahead and let us know if you've decided what should be done; we'll just be over here making money.

I am saving this

i love pinfold cricket (gbx), Sunday, 29 January 2012 20:48 (twelve years ago) link

BTW I also mentioned a detail that no one seems to have honed in on which is that the guy just got back from India -- this has to have cost at least a couple thousand dollars even if it was a short trip. Regardless of where you draw the line for food quality as a right, foreign travel?

I mean maybe I'm reading too much into his article but what I see is actually privilege masquerading as poverty -- a hip lifestyle, travel, non-lucrative but "interesting" work, inherited money from grandma (I don't know how much, but still) etc. Again, I don't really care whether he gets food stamps as a result or not, I just think he sounds like someone who actually DOES have other options and doesn't want them.

frogBaSeball (Hurting 2), Sunday, 29 January 2012 21:35 (twelve years ago) link


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