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For example, it seems to me that the assumptions that rat behaviors transfer so directly to human behavior are too facile.
He documents how chain restaurants manipulate food with chemicals to maximize appeal and profit. Oddly enough, although I am overweight, I find most restaurant food unappetizing because I am aware of all the artificial ingredients and extra sugar. I bake my own bread and pastries. My kitchen has never smelled like a Cinnobon store.
So, while Dr. Kessler explains what's going on for some people, and offers good advice to everyone, he leaves a lot of questions on the table. In the opening chapters, he describes an overweight woman, a normal weight woman and a normal weight man and their reaction to M&M's. Both women crave the candy, but only one is overweight. What is the difference? Why do both women find themselves obsessively thinking of food? Why isn't the man obsessive about food?
The glaring question that goes unanswered is this: Dr. Kessler states that c. 1980, not only did obesity rates rise precipitously, but that overweight people were even more overweight than they had been in prior years. So what happened c.1980? Was it a general life style change so more people were eating out more often? Was it a change in what people ate? Was it a change in the amount and/or make-up of hidden sugar content (HFCS)?
All in all, I think Dr. Kessler's book raises more questions than it answers.
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