
We all have seen documentaries about fast-food restaurants in low-income areas and how they make residents of the area obese. The simple fact that the restaurant there is very bad for residents.
Poor men and women are presented with little choice when it comes to food due to rising food prices. The choice is thin, when there is only so much that you can spend. They usually go to a bargain and a nearby place. One dollar hamburger is very similar to local fast food, but terrible in its calorie content and terrible for your health.
In fact, there was not only one documentary in this story. There was a lot of participation in the cinematic world, and many documentary films and television intelligence agencies talked about the problems that people face on these issues. The District Council of New York took part and passed new labeling laws that he hoped would help learn about this issue. By letting people know what they eat, the theory was that people could start thinking twice about any bad eating habits that might exist.
Unfortunately, the result was not what they expected. Even with the new labeling laws, a recent survey showed that there was almost no change in the eating habits of people from New York. They still remain on the same path of a bad diet, they eat the same bad foods that they always eat without any serious considerations about what they do with their bodies.
Companies such as McDonald and KFC seem to believe that this is illegal information, and report that men and women order food that is lower in fat and calories. It makes no sense. How can they have such different information besides an independent survey?
One thing that could set the numbers is the fact that networks like Metro have very unhealthy, low-cost products, and chains with unhealthy products like McDonald and KFC use healthy reports in their equations. This will accurately drop the numbers for an accurate report.
What the metropolis is doing is using reports from richer areas, where more productive food is more accessible and grouping these reports with those from poorer areas that do not offer healthier food.
Still, the statement "City" is useless. The poor still make bad food choices.

