In a recent article
British physicist Stephen Hawking pronounced obesity as one of the most serious
health problems of this century, resulting from a sedentary lifestyle that is
“putting millions of lives in danger”.
While this can hardly be
denied, Hawking went on to say that “fortunately the solution is simple: More
physical activity and change in diet. It’s not rocket science”.
Well, yes but…
Hawking, who I accept is
one of the smartest people on the planet, is used to wrestling with extremely
completed concepts and ideas and has rather fallen into the trap of seeing the
easy solution to what is, in fact, a highly complex social problem.
Shortly after his
interview, the Australian Government produced alarming statistics showing that
obesity rates in the country were growing faster than anywhere else in the
world, with almost 25 per cent of children and 63 per cent of adults
overweight.
This is just the latest
in a series of warnings. Successive Governments have taken it on board and
various programs encouraging more active lifestyles and better diets have been
introduced — with little or no effect.
This is partly because such
programs are constantly running up against the commercial world’s promotion of
tasty convenience foods, fizzy, sugar-filled drinks and sedentary pleasures
such as computer games and 24-hour, multi-channel television.
But there is more to it
than that.
Today we are bombarded
with stories about people and lifestyles that are completely divorced from
everyday experiences. The pages of down-market newspapers, commercial
television channels and countless internet sites bring news and pictures of vast
numbers of glamorous ‘celebs’ driving fast cars, eating in exclusive
restaurants and wearing designer clothes that cling beautifully to their tanned
and sculptured bodies.
These beautiful people
are in our faces every day with their unattainable lives. How does this affect
the spotty-faced teenage boy, the plain Jane supermarket checkout chick or the
frazzled single mother balancing two jobs to keep the family afloat? They know
that there is nothing they can do to even approach this lifestyle which is
presented to them as the epitome of success.
So they give up – and the
advertisers pounce.
After all, there are
burgers that are better…and there are drinks that are the real thing. It’s the
nearest most of them will ever get to the glamour world they see on their
screens or in the newspaper ads. Eat up, drink up and sit on the couch at night
living the vicarious dream. It’s better than nothing.
The problems of obesity
and overweight have resulted from decades of media moguls and high-powered
advertising agencies “giving the public what they want”; a failure in
leadership, both politically and socially and a general immaturity and dumbing
down of national debates in both developed and developing countries.
As a physicist, Stephen
Hawking can point to the solution and say “it’s not rocket science”. Applying
that solution is another matter altogether.
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