Posted on 10/20/2019 6:52:31 AM PDT by MtnClimber
No, this is not from the Babylon Bee. It actually comes from the Oprah Winfrey Network, and a segment featuring Professor Britney Cooper, who sports a PhD from Emory University and who currently is an associate professor in the Department of Womens and Gender Studies at Rutgers University. With that sort of background, perhaps it isnt surprising to eternalize blame for obesity on racism and seem to indict President Trump for it. In fairness, she only mentions Trump before launching her indictment of racism as the cause of black female obesity.
Here are few screen grabs of her subtitled rant, followed by the entire segment embedded in a tweet, I case you want to hear her, the moderator, and the audience all enthusiastically accept the theory that white people in general and President Trump in particular are what make a disproportionate number of black women obese.
(Excerpt) Read more at americanthinker.com ...
Hi.
It’s not president Trump, Brittany it’s the Spork Weasel.
Once you control him, you will lose weight.
You can trust me on this, Brittany.
5.56mm
Sorry, it’s Britney. My bad.
5.56mm
True story:
I was born a poor black child.
I don’t, however, blame othere for my station in life.
She must like eatin more than she likes sex.
Cuz, ain’t no one gonna climb that mountain for a piece of ass from some porcine marshmallow...
You would...
LOL
"White People Food" Is Creating An Unattainable Picture Of Health:
Tanisha Gordon doesnt see what white people love so much about cottage cheese. Or salads, especially when theyre topped with fussy ingredients like candied almonds, pickled carrots or Brussels slaw.Gordon is a 37-year-old employee at an IT company in the Washington, D.C. area, and until recently, her diet was deeply saturated with fast food - McDonalds, Taco Bell, you name it. When her doctor diagnosed her last year with pre-diabetes and prescribed her a CPAP machine to help her sleep through the night, she began working with a nutritionist to clean up her diet. But the lifestyle change she sought would require more than cutting out Chicken McNuggets.
As a black woman, Gordon battled the perception that most of todays healthy food is white people food.
A lot of the time, when you go to restaurants now, they have these extravagant salads with all these different ingredients in it, like little walnuts and pickled onions - like the stuff Panera sells, Gordon told HuffPost. For me personally, thats like a white persons food. A lot of the mainstream stuff thats advertised comes across as being for white people.
[snip]
Healthy food has historically been less accessible to black Americans in a number of ways. So, does eating healthy have to be equated with eating like white people? According to a new generation of chefs, nutritionists, academics and patients, the answer is no.
Charmaine Jones, a Washington D.C.-based dietician who is black, penned a short paper earlier this year called Do I Have To Eat Like White People? that shared the dietary struggles of her clients, whom she describes as primarily low-income African-Americans on D.C. Medicaid.
The majority of her clients seek nutrition strategies to treat obesity, Type 2 diabetes, heart disease or high cholesterol, a set of challenges that are particularly prevalent in the black community. Gordon was one of her clients.
Jones describes white people food as salads, fruits, yogurts, cottage cheeses and lean meats - the standard low-fat, heart-healthy foods promoted by the U.S. Dietary Guidelines.
[snip]
African-Americans are at a much higher risk for a number of genetic predispositions and health issues, many of which are strongly influenced by diet. The numbers speak volumes.
Black Americans face a significantly higher risk of diabetes than white Americans, particularly for Type 2 diabetes: The prevalence is 1.4-fold to 2.3-fold higher in African-Americans.
The prevalence of high blood pressure in African-Americans in the United States is among the highest in the world. That high blood pressure is often attributed to higher rates of obesity and diabetes in the black community, as well as a gene that potentially makes African-Americans more salt sensitive.
African-American adults are nearly 1.5 times as likely to be obese as white adults. While approximately 32.6 percent of whites are obese, the rate for African-Americans stands at 47.8 percent.
[snip]
Few, if any, cuisines are more firmly attached to African-American culture than soul food, which took on an especially political meaning in the 1960s.
Williams-Forson explained that when writer Amiri Baraka coined the term soul food in the 60s, he was very specifically responding to a criticism that the African-American community didnt have its own culture. Baraka chronicled a number of foods that at the time were heavily eaten by people in the South, everything from ham to sweet potato pie and sweet tea, she said. The actual label of soul food became a political term.
Cultural historian Jessica B. Harris has echoed that argument, writing that in the 1960s, soul food was as much an affirmation as a diet. Eating neckbones and chitterlings, turnip greens and fried chicken became a political statement for many.
In short, soul food was more about blackness than it was about a specific list of ingredients, author Adrian Miller wrote for the website First We Feast.
Ben-Yehudah adds even more context: Soul food is an experience in culture, its an experience in connecting with not only the people around you today, but connecting with the souls and the spirits of those that came before us that had created an identity for the food we were consuming, he told HuffPost. It not only provided nourishment but also allowed us to have a good experience. The soul food was a comfort food. It comforted us in times of difficulty.
[snip]
She points out that the origins of Southern food took root at a time when it was necessary to cook with less-than-ideal ingredients.
Some people think all black people eat is chicken and collard greens, and thats not necessarily true. However, out of utility and necessity, we ate a lot of that down South back in the day because thats all that was available. Its not like we didnt know what carrots or Brussels sprouts were.
[snip]
Brown is co-owner of Land of Kush, a vegan soul food restaurant that opened in downtown Baltimore in January 2011. His restaurant specializes in dishes like vegan BBQ rib tips, smoked collard greens, vegan mac and cheese, candied yams, vegan drumsticks, smoothies and fresh-pressed juices. He created his restaurant to provide patrons with a healthier version of soul food, which he says is inherently unhealthy. Its heavy, greasy, animal-product based ... in its original form, it was really just scraps. Not the healthiest things. Black people just kind of made it taste good to make it palatable. That just became the cultural regularity.
Ben-Yehudah is the owner of several restaurants, including vegan soul food restaurant Everlasting Life in the Capital Heights area outside of D.C. He agrees that soul food has been in need of a healthy makeover.
Soul food is always greasier, its always saltier, and its always sweeter, Ben-Yehudah said. So those three elements that we dont need more of in our diet are definitely found it more abundance in todays soul food diet. I call it the Standard Black American diet, and it has created many of the health challenges that we have today because its void of nutrition, its full of toxins and its addictive.
[snip]
-PJ
I guess being a 65 IQ, low intelligence, primative that eats hand to mouth had nothing to do with it. Heck, I’m surprised she even knows that Trump is the president.
You blame bacon!!?!??!?
You’re a pig...
That’s a lot of bacon!
I remember talking to a Ukrainian officer and he was telling me how prosperous America was because even the poor were fat.
I blame KFC and Popeyes
Even worse, IMHO, is that kids take these insane courses, major in these insane “Areas of Study” (or some such BS description) and get degress in these insane whatchmacallit majors!
And, they pay for the privilege of “Studying” this insanity!!
And, we poor suffering taxpayers subsidize the insanity!
God Help Us!
Oink ! Oink ! , I’ll bet you know what that means .
Good grief is that for real?
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