But, often Trump eats crap too in public at least to show that he is "One of the people". But, he must eat much better in private with Melania because he wouldn't be as strong as he is either at 70. You can't eat crap every day after 70 unless you have the most remarkable genes ever and 95% of the people don't have these genes. For example, when I'm traveling I might stop at a fast foods place and grab something on the run just because "I want to get there as quick as possible." But, with my wife or family we usually are eating organic foods which will actually keep us alive and not fast foods or junk foods which will "Kill you much quicker from all the additives and junk in them like pesticides, herbicides GMOs etc. So, if you want to live a long time you have to eat like you intend to live a long time or often you won't. For example, most meat is like eating concentrated pesticides because often the meat (beef or whatever was fed stuff that was sprayed or given growth hormones, antibiotics etc. which then stays in the meat as concentrated poisons, then it reconcentrates into humans flesh who eat this and then often they are dead by 30 or 40 from those poisons combined with cigarettes and alcohol etc. So, if you actually want to make it past 40 you have to eat like you intend to or you likely won't.
begin quote from:
Rebuking Trump nutrition proposals, Michelle Obama warns against 'kids eating crap'.
Chicago Tribune | - |
Former
first lady Michelle Obama on Friday took some thinly veiled swipes at
the President Donald Trump administration's rolling back of some
government rules on school lunches, not using his name but also warning
against "kids eating crap.
Rebuking Trump nutrition proposals, Michelle Obama warns against 'kids eating crap'
Katherine SkibaContact ReporterChicago Tribune
Former first lady Michelle Obama on Friday took some thinly veiled swipes at the President Donald Trump
administration's rolling back of some government rules on school
lunches, not using his name but also warning against "kids eating crap."
Under changes announced earlier this month, schools would not have to further cut salt in meals just yet and may serve fewer whole grains and 1 percent, flavored milk instead of nonfat milk. The move relaxes rules Obama and the former president supported.
Under changes announced earlier this month, schools would not have to further cut salt in meals just yet and may serve fewer whole grains and 1 percent, flavored milk instead of nonfat milk. The move relaxes rules Obama and the former president supported.
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Obama made the remarks to a healthy-eating conference Friday. She said she focused her "Let's Move" campaign to fight obesity on children because statistics show they are more prone to preventable illnesses such as stroke, heart disease and diabetes.
"This wasn't, you know, fake news," Obama said in her first public remarks to a Washington audience since leaving the White House.
"Every elected official on this planet should understand, don't play with our children. Don't do it," she said.
Obama joined old friend and former personal chef Sam Kass in the discussion at the Partnership for a Healthier America Summit. She urged people to back companies that supported mothers in making wise decisions when it came to food, saying parents needed to take charge.
"Kids, my kids included, if they could eat pizza and french fries every day with ice cream on top and a soda, they would think they were happy, until they got sick," she said.
"Before you know it, your kid has Type 2 diabetes, and you're confused and shocked and hurt," she said.
"And I hope you have health care," she added, in another dig at Trump.
Obama said her "deep passion" for childhood nutrition arose not from being first lady but from being a mother. "When you hear me getting riled up in this chair, it's not politics. It's parenting," she said to applause.
The Trump administration announced earlier this month it was loosening some government nutrition rules for schools that take federal dollars for free and reduced-price meals for poor students. She and the former president championed tougher rules as part of the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010.
"If kids aren't eating the food, and it's ending up in the trash, they aren't getting any nutrition — thus undermining the intent of the program," Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue in announcing the changes. .
Obama suggested Friday that nutrition and health could be among the causes the former president's new presidential center in Jackson Park would emphasize. She also said she would keep up other past commitments and singled out supporting girls' education and military families.
Her trip to Chicago with the former president last week to unveil the center's design gave her a "few hours" in their Kenwood home — and the kitchen where her campaign for healthier eating began with Kass. The chef cooked for the family in Chicago and later at the White House. For a time, he was executive director of "Let's Move." It's been a whirlwind week for Kass, who appeared Tuesday in Milan with former President Barack Obama at a conference on food and climate change.
The two also lamented a move to delay or end rules governing the enhanced disclosure of calories, sugar, fiber and serving size from food labels.
Obama recalled she'd known Kass when he was a teen. When she later learned he was a chef helping families to better their diets, he came to their Chicago home when her two daughters were young. She said they began chucking processed foods in their kitchen into the garbage — to the dismay of older daughter Malia, who found it hard to part with boxed macaroni and cheese.
To a question from Kass, she said her family was doing well and had a gentle jab at her spouse's attire in Italy. "The president is good," she said. "He's you know, running around out there in the world, with his shirt unbuttoned."
"I have one kid going to college," said Obama, adding with a bit of rue, "and another just being 16."
Friday's D.C. summit also drew former President Bill Clinton, supermodel Cindy Crawford and actress Gabrielle Union. It meant a friendly and familiar audience for the former first lady, because the meetings brought together her allies: people in the business, nonprofit, academic and government sectors gathered to talk about reducing sugar consumption, teaching children to cook, fostering healthy lifestyles and improving housing.
"First lady for life," a man called out as she spoke.
"I paid him," she deadpanned from the stage. "We'll get your check."
kskiba@chicagotribune.com
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