Jump to content

Thai Govt Proposes Salt & Fat Tax to Boost Public Health


webfact

Recommended Posts

A fat tax... now that would bring in trillions.. start with Walking street

A sugar tax or a sugar ban in food and drinks would benefit health much better.

Edited by hotchilli
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Oh please no, it's so bad how everything now is zero-fat or low-fat. With the good fats remove (for profit) and add all the cheap horrible vegetable oils like palm oil and sunflower oil to preserve the food. Then stick the label "No preservative", the biggest lie in the food capitalism in Thailand.

  • Thumbs Up 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, harryviking said:

Fat is NOT the problem! Sugars and refined cooking oils are!!! Start to study before deciding things!! 😆

You see, that's the thing! All doctors don't agree, because they dont want to change their outdated mindset. they think like a rock.

And Thai people still dont believe that Fats are good and Sugars are bad.

Nothing to do with Salt or Fat. Salt is absolutely necessary for any balanced diet, the problems lies on the imbalance of minerals and nutrients. Food now a days have zero nutrition and full of cheap vegetable oils. 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thai Govt Proposes Salt & Fat Tax to Boost Public Health 

 

What an Idiotic  idea, People eat what they want to eat .

What in Satans name has this got anything to do with the Govment what people eat.

Who dreamed this Greedy ,Money ,Tax Scam up.

Next they will put a tax on the Dirty air we breath .

Tax for walking on the footpaths.

We pay road tax now so they will look at that for sure.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 hours ago, webfact said:

however, the Ministry is considering measures to mitigate these impacts, possibly through subsidies for healthier food options.

 

Eat your peas, and shut up about it.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

When I was growing up in the UK during the 1940s and 1950s, oil was something you put in the engine of a car.

 

Butter was for spreading on bread and margarine was for pastry and baking.

 

My Mum used to fry and roast with pork or beef lard as the dripping went on bread or toast, and it was rare to see any fat people. Sugar was used mainly in tea and sometimes in pastry.

 

Food was simple, basic and filling, and all the kids burnt off their energy playing in the streets or up on the "common" land until the street lights (mostly gas back then) came on.

 

meal times were when your stomach alarm went off, If you were late for a meal, it was either in the oven keeping warm, you ate it cold or went hungry.

 

Even though my Mum would tell me what time dinner would be, it made little difference as I didn't have a watch anyway.

 

Take away food was fish and chips once a week and we had to walk a mile each way and stand in a queue to get it. And that was exotic fast food. No home delivery by Grab etc, you either went and got it yourself, or went without and ate bread and dripping. There was always a lot of that in the larder.

 

 

Edited by billd766
  • Confused 1
  • Agree 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 minutes ago, LennyW said:

Sugar tax on coffee shops is what is needed, it is like many Thais permanently have a coffee shop coffee in their hand, crazy!

 

Cream and sugar, it's not even coffee, its a dessert! I am guessing most of these drinks are almost 1500 calories each, won't take long to add weight with a daily intake of that many calories just in a drink.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Tax his land, tax his bed, Tax the table at which he's fed. 

Tax his tractor, tax his mule, Teach him taxes are the rule.

Tax his work, tax his pay, He works for peanuts anyway!

Tax his cow, tax his goat, tax his pants, tax his coat. Tax his ties, tax his shirt, tax his work, tax his dirt.

Tax his tobacco, tax his drink, tax him if he tries to think.

Tax his cigars, tax his beers, If he cries tax his tears.

Tax his car, tax his gas, find other ways to tax his ass.

Tax all he has, Then let him know, That you won't be done till he has no dough.

When he screams and hollers, Then tax him some more, tax him till he's good and sore.

Then tax his coffin, tax his grave, Tax the sod in which he's laid.

Put these words Upon his tomb, 'Taxes drove me to my doom…'

When he's gone, do not relax, It's time to apply the inheritance tax.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Have the proposers of the legislation done their homework?

 

The question of healthy living covers far more than salt and fats.

 

Much of the medical profession remains under the totally false belief, that began with a study in the 1950s, latterly shown to be erroneous, that the traditional saturated animal fats (e.g. butter) are dangerous and should be replaced with solvent-extracted unsaturated oils (i.e. with carbon-to-carbon double bonds) obtained from seeds.

 

Modern research shows the opposite to be the case.  Excessive consumption of omega-6 fatty acids relative to omega-3 is one of the adverse factors induced by high seed-oil consumption.

 

The body needs natural salt - not the 'refined' sodium chloride offered by the food industry after it has extracted and sold off the trace elements.

 

Sodium needs to be balanced with potassium, deficient in many modern diets, otherwise hypertension can result.

 

Other common deficiencies in modern diets include magnesium (essential to balance calcium), iodine, and zinc.

 

Even when consumed in the required amounts there can be malabsorption of trace elements caused by chronic poisoning by heavy metals.  E.g. mercury, from amalgam fillings, causing iodine deficiency by sitting of the cells' uptake sites for iodine.

 

Sugars that have been extracted and concentrated and are no longer associated with the co-factors that exist for example in fruit, are one of the worst causes of ill-health.  Leading to type 2 diabetes, which in turn leads to a multiplicity of further diseases, including hypertension.  Perhaps worst of all is the growing adoption by the food industry of fructose syrup synthesized from maize starch.

 

Dysbiosis - disruption of intestinal flora by food preservatives, agricultural chemicals, and medicines given to humans and livestock - is yet a further factor in the proliferation of modern 'degenerative' diseases.

 

Increasing exposure to high levels of man-made e.m. radiation yet another.

 

Unnaturally sedentary life-styles, another.

 

Lack of exposure to the Sun's broad-band visible and invisible radiation, another.  Vitamin D, synthesized by exposure to sunlight, participates amongst many other tasks in calcium metabolism.  (preferably in association with K2)

 

Education rather than taxation must be the principal road to better health.  For the benefit of both individuals and of society.

 

 

Better overall health of the population means less cost to society.

Edited by ericbj
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.



×
×
  • Create New...