Who's to blame for teenage obesity?
Education Minister Ed Balls blames parents, teachers and "embarrassing" PE kits for the rise in teenage obesity.
Bob Severn
"If the kit is awful or embarrassing it's much more likely the kids will forget to bring it," he said. "I don't think it's sensible for parents to be shoving food through the fence outside the school but I'm not going to say they must have this standard in their packed lunches."
This comes from the same government that has no problem with school fields being sold off to property developers, or cancelling PE or swimming lessons for SATs exam training.
The national obesity forum questions the food industry's ethics in marketing junk food to children.
In a gross understatement, Professor Philip James said that food industry actions to help ensure public health have been too little, too late.
Just banning junk food advertising during TV programmes is not enough.
The Foresight report predicts that, within 25 years, half of Britain's population could be obese and that obesity-related health care will cost £45 billion a year by 2050.
While Balls is pushing a School Food Trust campaign for a million more pupils to have school dinners, in Walthamstow it took a battle involving teachers, kitchen staff, children, parents and the Socialist Party to stop Waltham Forest council abandoning local authority provision of school dinners and letting private contractors take over the service.
Wouldn't a better solution be to take the food industry giants out of the control of the fat cats who put profits before healthy eating, and into public ownership with democratic planning that involves health experts, kitchen staff, parents and teachers?
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The coronavirus crisis has laid bare the class character of society in numerous ways. It is making clear to many that it is the working class that keeps society running, not the CEOs of major corporations.
The results of austerity have been graphically demonstrated as public services strain to cope with the crisis.
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In The Socialist 25 October 2007:
Public health not private wealth
Join the 3 November NHS demonstration
NHS: What the Socialist Party says
Michael Moore's latest film 'Sicko' reviewed
Huddersfield SOS: Class fighters' bold initiative
Postal dispute
Reject Royal Mail deal: Vote 'No' and reinstate the action
Striking Liverpool postal workers return to work
Campaign for a New Workers Party
Respect in crisis - what lessons for socialists?
Socialism 2007
Socialist Party feature
Pakistan: Suicide bombings at Bhutto rally
International socialist news and analysis
Turkey's invasion threat increases regional instability
Release Saburi Akande Akinola, Taiwo Hassan Soweto and Olatunde Dairo now
France: Biggest public transport strike action since 1995
Socialist Party women
Do women still have the 'right to choose'?
Socialist Party news and analysis
Liberal Democrat leadership: Two candidates, one background, no answers
Classroom assistants challenge the Stormont Assembly
Who's to blame for teenage obesity?
Workplace news and analysis
Glasgow: On strike for a fair deal
Train drivers prepare for action
Fight Cadbury's factory closure
Teachers' union election – time to change!
BBC threatens hundreds of jobs
Home | The Socialist 25 October 2007 | Join the Socialist Party



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01/05/21
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