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Childhood Obesity

(53 Posts)
janeainsworth Thu 10-Oct-19 19:53:14

What if you’re travelling from Edinburgh to London on public transport?
Do you have to starve for 5 hours?

janeainsworth Thu 10-Oct-19 19:51:35

Why will banning snacks on public transport help?
Children will still eat snacks in their cars and their homes.
How many children actually use public transport?

Are the rail companies going to be banned from stocking snacks in their buffet cars?
What’s a snack anyway? Does a bacon sandwich count as a snack, or is that a meal and can be served at specified meal times?

Don’t get me wrong. I feel sad for any child who is going to face a lifetime of health problems because of poor eating habits, whether that’s due to poverty or parental ignorance.

But I think Dame Sally has lost the plot with this one.

specki4eyes Thu 10-Oct-19 19:40:44

Just reading about the proposed ban on eating on public transport. What a great idea! I'm not too old to remember that at my grammar school in the swinging sixties we were banned from eating anywhere except at a table. Our headmistress would patrol in her car after school and if any girl was spotted eating outside whilst wearing her school uniform she got detention and/or lines the next day. One girl was even expelled for twice eating an ice lolly on her way home. In a school of 680 girls you could count on one hand the number of overweight ones. Now I know very few youngsters (including my own grandchildren) who are slender and fit. Their eating preferences revolve around snacks, fizzy drinks,McDonald's, Nandos, full restaurant meals (adult portions) Ben & Jerry's. ..etc etc. I'm not permitted to comment. Activities involve various screens and sitting around in each others bedrooms eating snacks.