At last, a brilliant idea and easy to implement
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JHizzle wrote:
I remember the urban myths taht floated around where it contained seaweed, pig and chicken fat.
The urban myth I heard was, styrofoam. Marc
That was the Burger, not the shake.
------------------------------------ I will never again mention that I was the poster of the One Millionth Lounge Post, nor that it was complete drivel. Dalek Dave
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Looks like a good initiative, but in the article it almost literally says: "Parents are not responsible". I think society should have a look at that direction first... after all, who pays for the kid's meal?
V.
V. wrote:
literally says: "Parents are not responsible".
And that's the whole point of this, if I eat every day at McDonald's, get fat, a heart attack, who's fault is it? McDonald's fault? they give out the nutrition facts of their meals... it's all my fault!! but it's so easy to point fingers blaming someone else. We know that junk food ain't healthy, but we still eat it and then blame the fast food chains for making me fat, if you want healthy food, eat at home, period. I like to read this kind of news, McDonald's is luring kids because the toys, the kids have no money!! the parents are the ones taking the kids to McDonald's, paying for the happy meal and now it's McDonald's fault, I'd say that McDonald's is a very successful company when using their marketing campaigns, they are not targeting kids, they're targeting parents. I remember my days when I was a kid "mom, can I have a happy meal today?" "NO, now eat your vegetables" and when mom said NO was NO, no way to get around of that, no way to negotiate a NO for a maybe or a yes, NO was NO, simple. I don't understand these days why parents are so afraid of educating their kids, to make them tough, how many of you remember those days when sitting at the table you mom made for dinner tomato soup X| , meat loaf X| and some green beans X| "I don't like it" "well, then go to your room, is this or nothing" what happened? either you went to bed hungry or ate whatever she gave you, now, everyone gets their own meal, if the kid only likes pizza, he gets pizza while the parents eat something else. Scared of child services? man, I grew up in a dictatorship and whenever I wanted to raise my voice, demand my rights a high heel shoe was used to remind me my rights and I grew up fine, I don't have any traumas nor feel abused, on the contrary I thank my parents for what they did to me So banning Happy Meals is not the solution, after that what they will ban, plastic swords because they make kids violent? cowboy hats because those give kids the sensation o been able to ride a horse?
I want to die like my grandfather- asleep, not like the passengers in his car, screaming!
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ahmed zahmed wrote:
I wish it where "California county bans McDonald's Happy Meal toys
ahmed zahmed wrote:
Fight Big Government
Hmmm. God forbid people should make thier own choices.
lol. BTW, in case you didn't get it, it was a tongue-in-check comment.
Fight Big Government:
http://obamacareclassaction.com/
http://obamacaretruth.org/ -
Wjousts wrote:
Irony is more delicious
absolutely. especially when it's tongue-in-cheek.
Fight Big Government:
http://obamacareclassaction.com/
http://obamacaretruth.org/ -
I can see it is a good idea in theory but will it change anything? If parents can't be bothered to cook for their children and want to bring them up on fast food then what will that change? As a child I would have loved to go to McDonalds all the time, a happy meal was quite tasty, I would get a nice shake with it and a toy to play with afterwards :omg: . There is a reason I wasn't an obese child though, and that is that my parents didn't mind saying no to me, they would cook me nutritious meals instead. On the rare occasion I would have a happy meal, it was a treat. I see far to many parents around these days that just give the child what they want when they ask for it and can't say no to them, that's what really needs to change. Just my 2p.
- Rob
I agree in theory. Sometimes "poor" (and I mean that in all senses of the word) parents have to make that difficult choice between feeding their kids well and that big-screen HDTV or Pink Cadillac or watching that reality show and spending the time it takes to cook a real meal. Wow, personal responsibility and personal choice. Whoever thunk? My kids, on their own hate McDonalds and would never choose to go there.
Fight Big Government:
http://obamacareclassaction.com/
http://obamacaretruth.org/ -
My kid won't eat the food; he only likes the play area.
What's he eat in the play area? ;P
Chris Meech I am Canadian. [heard in a local bar] In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is. [Yogi Berra]
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My kid won't eat the food; he only likes the play area.
PIEBALDconsult wrote:
My kid won't eat the food
There's "food" at McDonalds? :confused:
“Follow your bliss.” – Joseph Campbell
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That was the Burger, not the shake.
------------------------------------ I will never again mention that I was the poster of the One Millionth Lounge Post, nor that it was complete drivel. Dalek Dave
Dalek Dave wrote:
That was the Burger, not the shake.
Oh! I'd always heard it was the shake. :) Marc
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I'm not sure what kind of toys are included, I don't tend to go for happy meals. I miss the supersize megamac meals though and wish they'd bring those back - as it is I've got to get an extra big mac with my large big mac meal.
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PIEBALDconsult wrote:
My kid won't eat the food
There's "food" at McDonalds? :confused:
“Follow your bliss.” – Joseph Campbell
You bet. Yummy yummy food that slides right down my throat on a built-in coating of grease the way nature intended. :cool:
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peterchen wrote:
Making choices is hard - and with food, it is not a "once" choice, but this choice has to be made repeatedly, day by day, again and again.
I disagree, it's not that hard, there are thousands of inexpensive cookbooks with a seemingly infinte amount healthy alternatives. Generations before us seemed to have made these same choices every day.
peterchen wrote:
I wonder if you ever walked down the street with two kids, one permanently angry because it's growing a new tooth, the other obsessed with that shiny beautiful McDonalds logo, screaming his heart out because you said "no".
I have (well with one kid anyway), and saying no on occasion is a reality and a responsibilty. Yeah, my kid screamed until he was hoarse and boy was I getting the looks from everyone. However, he is my (and my wifes) responsibilty, one which we take very seriously. At this point he is seven, and if given the choice between brocolli and pizza, my kid will choose always choose the healthy alternate (it's actually a little scary). Why? because those are the kinds of things my wife and I gave him for the first years of his life, and no, making those choices was not that difficult.
jeron1 wrote:
Generations before us seemed to have made these same choices every day.
Generations before us HAD to make their own food. Twinkies may exist forever, but they haven't existed forever. And societies and responsibilities change... given the choice of leaving work early against the boss's wishes to leave early and make dinner and buying some pre-made meal while not rocking the boat, people may make the easier choice.
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jeron1 wrote:
Generations before us seemed to have made these same choices every day.
Generations before us HAD to make their own food. Twinkies may exist forever, but they haven't existed forever. And societies and responsibilities change... given the choice of leaving work early against the boss's wishes to leave early and make dinner and buying some pre-made meal while not rocking the boat, people may make the easier choice.
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As a child growing up in Pimlico, we would go to a Wimpy on a friday night, and I would get a knickerbocker glory. Ah the joys of childhood!
------------------------------------ I will never again mention that I was the poster of the One Millionth Lounge Post, nor that it was complete drivel. Dalek Dave
Do you mean to say you never sampled the ludicrously named 'Bender Meal'? :-D
Henry Minute Do not read medical books! You could die of a misprint. - Mark Twain Girl: (staring) "Why do you need an icy cucumber?" “I want to report a fraud. The government is lying to us all.”
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The upside of their food: i'm a vegetarian and i can eat everything they serve at Mc Donalds, cause i'm pretty sure none of their meals contains any meat
Yeah, but you are not sure where it grew and what stuff was sprayed on them while growing, not mentioning GMO's.
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ahmed zahmed wrote:
I wish it where "California county bans McDonald's Happy Meal toys
ahmed zahmed wrote:
Fight Big Government
Hmmm. God forbid people should make thier own choices.
jeron1 wrote:
Hmmm. God forbid people should make thier own choices.
Since when God wants people to make their own choices (unless I did not correctly understand the above sentence, English is not my first language).
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Care to provide a more diverse, more numerous, and less anecdotal sample? ;P
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F**'ing A, couldn't agree more. I'm glad to say I've never been to McD's in my life (they weren't omnipresent when I grew up, and since I've been aware of them I've courted their company to a similar degree as the plague. My 6 year old, though, tried by resistance (and patience) to the limit when they had a range of Star Wars toys last year though. The irony of it - being punted this rubbish by the evil empire itself.
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Care to provide a more diverse, more numerous, and less anecdotal sample? ;P
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peterchen wrote:
Making choices is hard - and with food, it is not a "once" choice, but this choice has to be made repeatedly, day by day, again and again.
I disagree, it's not that hard, there are thousands of inexpensive cookbooks with a seemingly infinte amount healthy alternatives. Generations before us seemed to have made these same choices every day.
peterchen wrote:
I wonder if you ever walked down the street with two kids, one permanently angry because it's growing a new tooth, the other obsessed with that shiny beautiful McDonalds logo, screaming his heart out because you said "no".
I have (well with one kid anyway), and saying no on occasion is a reality and a responsibilty. Yeah, my kid screamed until he was hoarse and boy was I getting the looks from everyone. However, he is my (and my wifes) responsibilty, one which we take very seriously. At this point he is seven, and if given the choice between brocolli and pizza, my kid will choose always choose the healthy alternate (it's actually a little scary). Why? because those are the kinds of things my wife and I gave him for the first years of his life, and no, making those choices was not that difficult.
jeron1 wrote:
there are thousands of inexpensive cookbooks with a seemingly infinte amount healthy alternatives.
Apparently, you didn't even understand what I wrote. Ah well, lucky you.
Agh! Reality! My Archnemesis![^]
| FoldWithUs! | sighist | µLaunch - program launcher for server core and hyper-v server. -
Do they need to be available most of the day? Assuming the kids are old enough to be at school, they would have some kind of meal at lunch time and then the parents would only need to prepare a meal for the evening instead of popping out to grab a McDonalds. :)
- Rob
I don't say parents have no responsibility. I just disagree with "It's easy, whatever life flings at you".
merridus wrote:
Assuming the kids are old enough to be at school
Depends on the school, the other pupils and the lunch they serve? I know parents - parents that I'd call amazing as an outsider - where it just doesn't work for one of their childs. Put a serious damper on my "good parenting can solve that" belief.
Agh! Reality! My Archnemesis![^]
| FoldWithUs! | sighist | µLaunch - program launcher for server core and hyper-v server.