blutoski
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2006
- Messages
- 12,454
I was being a stats pedant, that's all.
But it looks like you've answered my question about whether or not people want to be fat. Plainly, they don't want to be.
Which brings me back to this part: Do we, as a society, then have a duty to help them achieve a better state, a state they say they want, and to help them quit harming themselves?
We could do it without necessarily withholding benefits or treatment, but in the game of "harder" there are two dials to tweak - make the thing you want to happen "easier" or make the thing you don't want (obesity) harder than it is now.
And there are two targets for the tweaking as well: the individual and the environment.
In both situations, there are challenges:
- Learning what tweaks will work
- Getting the tweaks passed. The opposition will argue that a) the tweaks will not work, and b) ok fine, fine, even if they will work, tweaks are unethical because they limit choice through coercion. Example: limiting the size of soda containers.