by: Scott F Paradis
Two thirds of American adults are overweight, nearly one third can be categorized as obese. Obesity among children and adolescents is reaching epidemic proportions. Arguably the only affliction growing faster than our girths is our accumulation of debt. The total debt (government, business and personal) per U.S. citizen is fast approaching $180,000.00. Under existing policies the future liability per current taxpayer is over $1,000,000.00 (yes that is one million dollars). While we suffer the effects of our excess now, in declining mortality, skyrocketing medical costs, debt service, lost productivity and diminished quality of life, the situation is far more grave for our future. It is time we as a nation take a look in the mirror, accept responsibility for the shape we are in, and set a new course. It is time to initiate a debt reduction diet.
The known contributors to obesity vary: genetic susceptibility, emotional stress (caused by economic or relationship challenges, social isolation, environmental factors), poor nutrition (ranging from empty calories to just pure gluttonous excess), medical conditions (hormonal imbalances, disease) and lack of exercise (caused by lifestyle choices, proliferating technology and just plain laziness).
The known contributors for debt accumulation vary as well: economic necessity, cultural practices encouraging payments over time (mortgages, auto loans, etc.), compensating for diminished resources and declining productivity, government overreach, (for political expediency and to placate special interests), loose monetary policy, loose credit practices, and the list goes on. The propensity for debt is leveraging optimism for the future, shored up by a system espousing credit at every turn. To rationalize debt people project future earnings growth to offset current expenditures with interest. We mistakenly believe, "Time heals all indulgences - it shall, or we'll be dead."
While academics split hairs over the causes and contributions for both obesity and debt, let's call a spade a spade. It is our human tendency toward comfort and our propensity for excess that has brought us to this place.
America is the land of opportunity. We want "more" and we have devoted limitless effort to ensuring "more" is what people get. Our system promotes and produces the means to satisfy wants and needs. This is how fortunes are made. Unfortunately the success formula we have come to rely on is one of conspicuous consumption - consumption at all costs, despite the consequences. Government and industry (both instruments of the people) have collaborated to create and encourage ever more ways to consume now and pay later. The system has been so effective and the consumer mentality has become so ingrained in our culture that at a moment of national crisis the president of the United States does not call on the people for sacrifice and resolve, he implores them to go to the mall.
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