Battle of the bulge.

AuthorGillespie, Nick
PositionEditor's Note - Editorial

FOR MORE THAN a decade, I weighed about 35 pounds more than I wanted to. During the last year or so, through a combination of diet, exercise, and calorie-burning irritability due to diet and exercise, I've taken the 35 pounds off. Yet with a "body mass index" (BMI) of 25, I'm still a borderline tub of lard, at least according to government-sanctioned definitions.

Your BMI is calculated by dividing your weight in kilograms by the square of your height in meters; a BMI of 25 or more means you're overweight, and one of 30 or more means you're obese. (Sorry to be the one to tell you.) Back in the old days--before the late, controversial low-carb guru. Dr. Atkins sparked what appears to be a permanent Diet Revolution-nobody talked about BMI, and I half suspect it's a Trojan horse to finally sneak the metric system into Fortress America.

According to government BMI stats, two-thirds of adult Americans are overweight. Indeed, a whopping 20 percent of us are obese. But here's the real question: Should my weight--or yours--be a public policy issue?

In our cover story, Senior Editor Jacob Sullum (who also has a BMI of 25, by the way) reports from the front lines of "The War on Fat," the latest attempt to save us from our own worst impulses (page 20).What he finds is appalling. That's not because of too many stretch marks or too many Twinkies. It's because of folks like Kelly Brownell, the Yale psychology professor best known for advocating taxes for fattening foods; the dietary puritans at the Center for Science in the Public Interest, who rail against McDonald's as if it were the Church...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT