• Eq0@literature.cafe
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    10 months ago

    The two things are actually often related: junk food is faster, more accessible, stores longer, and is cheaper per calorie. So you can be hungry, skip a salad meal (that would need to be bought fresh and prepared) while having “mcdonalds”/microwave meal/high calorie meal for your leftover meal. Third has been the pattern, following US, where it is very common for the poor to eat more calories than the rich, while eating less healthy meals.

    • JubilantJaguar@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Yes sure, I know all that. There is a real problem. Fundamentally it’s about economic inequality, like so many other social problems.

      So people should stop using the damn word “hunger”.

      This has nothing to do with hunger. it’s dishonest and manipulative to talk about hunger when the problem has nothing to do with being hungry.

      Personally I’m fed up of being taken to be an idiot like this.

        • JubilantJaguar@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          Yes, your point is that “hunger” should be interpreted very loosely, meaning in a sort of addiction-psychology way.

          I think that’s a sophisticated re-rendering, and that most ordinary folks do associate the word “hunger” with famine, with starving, with terrible deprivation. Which is a real situation in a handful of desperate places in the world. I don’t think we should be conflating these two problems. One of them is far more urgent than the other.

          I see this as just another instance of disingenuously sensationalist language and I would prefer people used the correct terms for what they are in fact talking about.

          For the underlying substance, I agree with you and all the other censorious downvoters. I am just concerned about vocabulary and manipulation.

            • JubilantJaguar@lemmy.world
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              10 months ago

              So if “malnourished” is better, as you imply, let’s use that instead. The issue is not hunger by any non-academic definition of the word.

              You’ve made your case. Mine is that this is a clear example of sensationalist lexical inflation. Like calling everyone right of center a Nazi, it is intended to provoke engagement and emotion rather than to describe a fact.