
these are replies to the same tweet - I think the third one is a weird troll, but the other 3 I think they really believe what they're saying.



I saw that too. Apparently that was from 2023 and the guy is now dead, which isn't surprising if you saw what he spent it on. I think you can eat out and eat pretty healthy, but he clearly wasn't. I think Chick-Fil-A was his top restaurant, Chili's was second, and he had spent $1300 between two doughnut places.
Once you look at the ingredient list of the so called “healthy” options I think you might reconsider. Most foods you’re going to get from a takeout place (unless you’re getting takeout from an expensive restaurant), is just highly processed garbage.I think you can eat out and eat pretty healthy
We'd probably have to get into what you consider processed or highly processed, but I'd bet we also likely have different risk tolerances. I don't take great pains to avoid processed food, but we only go out to eat once or twice a week so I don't worry about it much. I think eating at a sit-down restaurant even a few times a week is probably fine even if there is some processed food involved. Eating at McDonalds a few times a week probably isn't. I assume a cheeseburger from there has at least 3 what I'd consider highly processed ingredients. Generally I don't eat at chains, which I think probably helps, but i also think a steak with veggies and fries from Outback is probably mostly harmless. If they use seed oils to cook it, that doesn't concern me for example. I will also knowingly eat highly processed food at times if I like it enough. I love ice cream and I assume most of it is processed in some way that's not great for me, and it's inherently full of sugar, but I'm still going to eat it.cardinalkarp wrote: ↑July 25 25, 11:27 amOnce you look at the ingredient list of the so called “healthy” options I think you might reconsider. Most foods you’re going to get from a takeout place (unless you’re getting takeout from an expensive restaurant), is just highly processed garbage.I think you can eat out and eat pretty healthy
I see your point as far as location making it a potential issue, but NYC is one place, I would think most people whether they rent/own a home or apt have a full size fridge and a kitchen large enough to make a meal in.
Whether you like cooking or not (I happen to like it), it’s still a “chore” of sorts. It all comes down to whether a person wants to make that sacrifice for their health.
I don't find that's a huge problem, at least picking it up myself and bringing it home. I mean it's never as good when eating at home vs right at the table, but it's usually not cold either.IMADreamer wrote: ↑July 25 25, 11:47 amLiving out here in the hinterlands we obviously don't Doordash. We do eat out most Friday nights with friends. I admit I don't go to the grocery store often because we have a freezer full of meat, and try to have fresh veggies from our own garden as much as we can but I can't imagine Doordash is cheaper than eating at home. Even if you are figuring up washing dishes and all that.
My question is, isn't your food cold by the time it gets to you by Doordash? Let's say I order a steak, potato, and steamed broccoli which is my favorite meal ever. That has to be mushy and cold by the time some guy goes to get it from the restaurant where it's probably been sitting, then drives it to you.
Obviously most foods we eat are involved in some sort of processing for the most part, and unless you’re just eating the most basic of diets it’s impossible to avoid. I try my best to avoid high and ultra processed foods, but even I have my shortcomings.ghostrunner wrote: ↑July 25 25, 12:22 pmWe'd probably have to get into what you consider processed or highly processed, but I'd bet we also likely have different risk tolerances. I don't take great pains to avoid processed food, but we only go out to eat once or twice a week so I don't worry about it much. I think eating at a sit-down restaurant even a few times a week is probably fine even if there is some processed food involved. Eating at McDonalds a few times a week probably isn't. I assume a cheeseburger from there has at least 3 what I'd consider highly processed ingredients. Generally I don't eat at chains, which I think probably helps, but i also think a steak with veggies and fries from Outback is probably mostly harmless. If they use seed oils to cook it, that doesn't concern me for example. I will also knowingly eat highly processed food at times if I like it enough. I love ice cream and I assume most of it is processed in some way that's not great for me, and it's inherently full of sugar, but I'm still going to eat it.cardinalkarp wrote: ↑July 25 25, 11:27 amOnce you look at the ingredient list of the so called “healthy” options I think you might reconsider. Most foods you’re going to get from a takeout place (unless you’re getting takeout from an expensive restaurant), is just highly processed garbage.I think you can eat out and eat pretty healthy
I see your point as far as location making it a potential issue, but NYC is one place, I would think most people whether they rent/own a home or apt have a full size fridge and a kitchen large enough to make a meal in.
Whether you like cooking or not (I happen to like it), it’s still a “chore” of sorts. It all comes down to whether a person wants to make that sacrifice for their health.
I'm for taking steps to identify what's being done to food, but I think you really do need government to address that at any kind of scale, and I think we probably disagree on the specifics of how that should work.