Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Cindy Fuller wrote: > In article >, > Dan Abel > wrote: > > > According to an article in the Washington Post (reprinted in the Santa > > Rosa Press Democrat), they will no longer report on the 11 million > > people in the US who identified themselves as being "hungry" at times. > > Instead, they will report them as "very low food security". > > > > :-( > > Food security and food insecurity are actual terms. Think of food > insecurity as a continuum, with starvation at the lowest end. Then would > come hunger. Food insecurity is defined as limited or uncertain > availability of nutritionally adequate and safe foods, or limited or > uncertain ability to acquire acceptable foods in socially acceptable > ways. As an example, a homeless person who dumpster dives behind > McDonalds may be getting plenty of calories, but the food may not be > safe to eat. In addition, dumpster diving is not socially acceptable in > some circles. > > If I were the USDA, I'd continue to call hunger hunger. However, food > insecurity is a more wide-ranging term and may better capture the scope > of the problem. > So, maybe it would be more politically correct to stop referring to "the government's stupidity" and instead to use a more wide-ranging term "the government's mental insecurity"? |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|