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Culture War Roundup for the week of July 8, 2024

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People didn't just suddenly lose willpower. Nor did they suddenly lose the knowledge that diet and exercise were important.

This is a bad strawman, and you should feel bad.

You might not agree with SlimeMoldTimeMold, but they do a good job of explaining why all the various folk theories are wrong.

SMTM acknowledges that calories have something to do with it. He just thinks there's some magic 'nonlinearity' somewhere in the middle. Fine, whatever. Give me a model. Tell me how we can design an experiment to confirm or falsify your belief. Imagine that we have enough resources to run a lab-controlled study with a double digit number of subjects for a year or two. What do you do?

You're asking me to explain the obesity epidemic. I can't.

But I can disprove standard medical advice. Honestly, I don't even need to because we are already running the experiment and the results are overwhelming.

But anyway, here's my experiment. We have a control group and an experimental group. The experimental group goes to a location once a week, for one hour, where they receive diet and exercise information provided by you. You can also do anything you want during that hour, including exercise. However, you may not recommend or mention any pharmaceutical intervention. To ensure compliance, each person is paid $50 per hour but people who drop out still count in the experimental group. After 8 weeks, the intervention ends.

Then we check back in 2 years to see how the BMI of the control group and experimental group has changed. I predict with a high degree of confidence that there is no significant difference.

You're asking me to explain the obesity epidemic.

No, I'm not. It would be simple enough for you to just propose an experiment to show that CICO doesn't work. You know, to demonstrate that "something else is going on". For example, you could propose an experiment where subjects are fed maintenance level calories, but gain weight. Or where they're fed deficit level calories, but maintain weight. You could show something specific about a weird nonlinearity that actually contributes to a claim that "something else must be going on". Anything. Literally anything at all that contributes to that. In any way whatsoever.

But I don't think you want to even try to demonstrate that "something else must be going on". You simply want to say that many people don't choose to do a thing, even given extremely mild informational content. That has never been contested, nor does it imply that "something else must be going on".

It would be simple enough for you to just propose an experiment to show that CICO doesn't work.

Who is saying that CICO doesn't work? No one is saying this.

What do you mean when you say, "There's something else going on"? What is the "something other than X"? Please speak plainly and directly about what you are meaning to say. Also, please take into account SMTM's writing on CICO in your description, as that appears to be related to one of the "folk theories" that you said were wrong, according to his explanation.

What do you mean when you say, "There's something else going on"?

Sure. Something in our natural environment is causing us to eat more food than we need, thus gaining weight. Throughout most of history (and even today in countries like Vietnam and Japan) people were able to effortlessly stay thin. They eat when they're hungry. Some days, they eat excess calories. Other days they have a deficit. But overall, there is an almost EXACT match between calories eaten and consumed. Being off by even 200 calories a day would lead to serious weight gain over time.

This is homeostatis. And, importantly, it does not require CONSCIOUS thought.

The mistake most people make is the assumption that thin people are thin because they continuously monitor their weight and exert willpower to maintain it. This is the same flawed mental model as the closeted gay who thinks that straight men want to bang other dudes but just resist it. No, straight men don't want to bang other dudes. Likewise, skinny people don't have to RESIST eating that second donut. They simply don't want to. Because they are full.

Something in our diet or environment has disrupted this homeostasis. This "something else" causes our bodies to send signals to eat more than we need. It might be sugar, it might be seed oils, it might be pesticides, it might be lithium. It could even be hyperpalatable foods. But it's causing people to continue to eat when they should feel full.

What is the "something other than X"?

What I perhaps was not clear on was that I was wanting you to describe what you think X is. What is the foil that has been shown to be wrong, such that "something else" must be going on? What is that something that is separate from the something else? Note that this question goes all the way back to here, where presumably, the X that is wrong was already presented in the conversation.

I'd also note that you did not mention anything about how to reconcile your views with what SMTM has written about CICO. Is this not one of the "folk theories" that he demonstrated was wrong?

Though, to go ahead and discuss the question of homeostasis, consider historical examples of obese people, some going all the way back to antiquity (often rich folks). Did they lack homeostasis? Were those people exposed to this "something else" in their diet or environment, disrupting their homeostasis?

(FYI, SMTM says it's not sugar, so you might want to update. That's one of the "folk theories" that he's proven wrong, too.)

For any onlookers, jeroboam has now blocked me rather than respond to what I thought was a very reasonable question.

You know it’s always interesting to me that the few people who blocked me are never the people with whom I’ve had the most serious or catty arguments, often they’re people I’ve barely even spoken to, or maybe slightly disagreed with on a minor issue like this, but always politely. I think it would be reasonable for @jeroboam to explain why he blocked you, but I understand why the forum does not mandate such an explanation.

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No one claims that consistent diet change is easy or that people are easily controlled.

Okay but the problem is that if it's not frictionless enough then it's not a good enough solution for the masses which means not a good enough solution overall for society.