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<blockquote data-quote="FireDragon76" data-source="post: 77569624" data-attributes="member: 330042"><p>In some points in the video, it implies that activity of people in the past didn't matter much. Also, it isn't accurately portraying the fact that people who ate a 1950's diet were gaining weight over time, just at a lower rate than since the 1970's.</p><p></p><p>After WWII, the US government's food policy was obsessed with malnutrition- especially people being too thin (since this was a problem during the war, some men were not heavy enough to be acceptable as soldiers in WWII), so they focused on high calorie foods like butter. Not to keep people thin- quite the opposite, they wanted people to not be underweight, and butter was a relatively cheap, calorie dense food.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="FireDragon76, post: 77569624, member: 330042"] In some points in the video, it implies that activity of people in the past didn't matter much. Also, it isn't accurately portraying the fact that people who ate a 1950's diet were gaining weight over time, just at a lower rate than since the 1970's. After WWII, the US government's food policy was obsessed with malnutrition- especially people being too thin (since this was a problem during the war, some men were not heavy enough to be acceptable as soldiers in WWII), so they focused on high calorie foods like butter. Not to keep people thin- quite the opposite, they wanted people to not be underweight, and butter was a relatively cheap, calorie dense food. [/QUOTE]
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