MEXICO CITY (AP) — A government-sponsored junk food ban in schools across Mexico took effect on Saturday, officials said, as the country tries to tackle one of the world’s worst
Mexico has a serious obesity and diabetes problem. Worse then the U.S. even, though only by a couple tenths a percent currently. Makes sense to try and rein it in.
Yeah but you can still offer healthy snacks, back in my school I could buy apples, bananas, other fruits in season. Sure, I would like that stuff to be free for kids, but in the meantime might as well sell it. If it’s really bad, you could set a limit of items per person.
Yeah but it’s more about “time” and money than availability.
People don’t have time to cook a proper meal due to work, eating healthy is also WAY more expensive than just eating whatever fills you the most.
Translated to kids, well there’s just enough time to get them dressed and run off to school, hope they pick what’s good for them and not something that they like with whatever little money they are given.
That aside, I could somewhat trust meals on private schools to be decent or to not get the kids sick… Not as much, at least. Now public schools… I fear for the poor kids as I expect these meals to become someone’s nepotism and not care at all about it being healthy, undercooked or expired.
If base meals are free I don’t see an issue with selling small snacks. At least that’s how it was for me, ymmv
Mexico has a serious obesity and diabetes problem. Worse then the U.S. even, though only by a couple tenths a percent currently. Makes sense to try and rein it in.
Yeah but you can still offer healthy snacks, back in my school I could buy apples, bananas, other fruits in season. Sure, I would like that stuff to be free for kids, but in the meantime might as well sell it. If it’s really bad, you could set a limit of items per person.
Yeah but it’s more about “time” and money than availability.
People don’t have time to cook a proper meal due to work, eating healthy is also WAY more expensive than just eating whatever fills you the most.
Translated to kids, well there’s just enough time to get them dressed and run off to school, hope they pick what’s good for them and not something that they like with whatever little money they are given.
That aside, I could somewhat trust meals on private schools to be decent or to not get the kids sick… Not as much, at least. Now public schools… I fear for the poor kids as I expect these meals to become someone’s nepotism and not care at all about it being healthy, undercooked or expired.