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47 sats \ 18 replies \ @Undisciplined 13h \ on: How can we combat the obesity epidemic? AskSN
Product liability
You'll be amazed at how much would change if pharma and "food" manufacturers could be held liable for not properly disclosing known adverse health effects of their products.
Like this chocolate bar contains sugar, you can become obese or get a heart disease?
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"Excessive sugar consumption has been linked to heart disease and diabetes."
Something like that. I'm mostly thinking about the weird synthetic additives in American food, though. Lots of things that are illegal pretty much everywhere else.
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And linked to cancer.
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That didn't really stop smokers from smoking.
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Are you sure? Smoking rates have collapsed.
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People got priced out IMO and now tobacco has direct competition with vapes.
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Vaping came on much later and still the rates are way below the high.
Getting priced out is part of what happens with product liability. The product immediately becomes more expensive to produce, so producers can't afford to push as much product at the same prices.
You might want to counter with taxes being the cause of higher prices, but I'd argue those are also downstream of acknowledging the health problems.
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I never met a smoker that didn't know it was killing them. When I started smoking I knew it was bad for me. I'd argue the taxes came from a greedy government taxing a product because they knew users couldn't quit. I don't think the negative health effects had much to do with that.
If knowing the risks prevented people from doing unhealthy things, nobody would be unhealthy.
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I almost never make absolute claims. People do and will continue to do any stupid thing you can think of. What matters are changes on the margins.
Yes, smokers are aware of the health problems, but there are fewer of them, now that people know about the health problems. Some people stopped and now smoking is a much smaller problem than it used to be.
Imagine if sugary, highly processed foods were 10x as expensive as they are now. Lots of people would change their habits and producers would substitute for the cheaper healthier alternatives.
There would still be obese people, but the epidemic might end.