Website review: Frostfirefizz.com/why-a-salad-costs...
snapish discovered this in Nutrition
•15 reviews since Nov 2, 2007
nutrition
•frostfirefizz.com/why-a-salad-costs-more-than...
Website currently unavailable. Should we check again? (Click to enqueue this site for examination)
People who like this website

- microphobia
Long Beach

- kpeters13
Oxnard

- eronquillojr
East Bay

- muskrat
California

- soapoperagiraffe
California

- alexbward
California

- meb
Monterey

- damnskippy1
Santa Cruz

- plainjanemom
Palo Alto

- skatensquat
San Francisco
StumbleUpon is the best way to discover great web sites, videos, photos, blogs and more - based on your interests.
Everything is submitted and rated by the community. Discover, share and review the best of the web!
Reviews of this website

snapish discovered 9 months ago- I always sorta assumed the difference in price was volume. This explanation makes more sense, but does not make me happy.

bigjanproduction rated 6 months ago- Shit

nails58 rated 8 months ago- yes, don't we all wonder why that is

enfpkimberly rated 8 months ago- One of the 8 ways - labeled "move to Japan" was to eat more fresh fruits and vegetables. It's a shame that government choices of subsidies result in unhealthy food being cheaper for us than healthy food. It's enough that we live in a fast-paced world where it's more difficult to have the time and energy to shop more often and prepare fresh food every day. Even though good nutrition has a much better long-term payoff. We have multiple short-term payoffs for eating poorly. From what I learned about Learning and Motivation, even in human beings, immediate rewards or punishments have more power than ones that are further away in time. When a reward or punishment happens more frequently, then people are more likely to adapt their behavior accordingly. So one of our goals as a society should be to create more immediate rewards for eating healthy. Why don't you chew on that idea for a while?

slocum77a rated 8 months ago- and that's a damn shame.

paulmatzko rated 8 months ago- Excellent practical example of how government interference in the market can create societal imbalances...never knew Adam Smith affected obesity, did you?!

wkevinc rated 8 months ago- Displays the discrepancies between governments subsidies for types of food and the nutrtion suggestions for types of food. Shows once again that our representatives have themselves in mind and not those they represent.

- Subatomike rated 8 months ago
- The pyramid plot is grossly distorting the statistics. The volume of each element is what's important, not the height. So, meat & dairy subsidies would be more like half the height of the pyramid and not almost 75%. There is no reason to distort the numbers to achieve your desired effect.

BrandeMae rated 8 months ago- Let's sign together shall we? "Oh, I hate, the FDA, the FDA, the FDA..."

Thomas-Jefferson rated 8 months ago- govt. is evil, vote Ron Paul in 2008