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Summary Of Don T Blame The Eater

Decent Essays

Is Greed actually not of a financial use rather than a emotional use. If so would employees who work at fast-food establishments or even major corporate heads of these billion dollar fast-food chains allow their own children to indulge themselves in them, knowingly aware of the vast risks they could embark on later in life due to their unhealthy choices? In his essay “Don’t Blame the Eater,” David Zinczenko brings up valid points on how fast-food is harmful to one’s body. Zinczenko is able to effectively argue against the manipulation of the food industry. by showing the reader that the consumer is the victim while the food industry is the one to blame. His use of questioning, personal appeals, imagery, and his direct tone and colorful diction …show more content…

“My parents were split up…my mom working long hours to make the monthly bills. Lunch and dinner, for me, was a daily choice between McDonald’s, Taco Bell, Kentucky Fried Chicken or Pizza Hut…” (Paragraph 3) This is a recollection of the author’s life, establishing ethos in broad daylight. This addition of detail from his own life makes his claim much more relatable for the reader essay: a true story from his own life offers appeal to society and pity and allows the reader to relate to the facts through the personal aspect of the essay. His mom struggles to stay afloat financially, and can only afford fast-food restaurants. As a result of this, he became a “torpid teenage tallow” by the age of 15. (Paragraph 3) Within his personal narrative, the imagery is extensive. As a reader, I can picture him as a lazy, unmotivated, and overweight teen. As his narrative continues, he writes that teens who live as he once did will cross “under the golden arches to a likely fate of lifetime obesity” (Paragraph 4). I can picture children walking under the golden arches laughing and jumping symbolizing McDonald’s, and walking out the other side obese and fatigued just like he …show more content…

He juxpostizes time explaining, “Before 1994…only about 5 percent of childhood cases were obesity related…today type two diabetes accounts for at least 30 percent of all new childhood cases of diabetes in this country” (Paragraph 5). He is straightforward and aggressively uses logos to not sentimentalize the causes of type two diabetes. He simply states the increase of carriers of the disease , which is very effective from the reader’s perspective he clearly states that obesity affects diabetes rates, leaving no room for deviation of thought in the reader’s mind that if nothing is done that 30 percent will only increase even more. Leaving the country in a more greater economic issue when it comes to health care and regulating the federal budget on allowing The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to spend more than 100 billion a year when health care isn’t even considered mandatory spending on capital hill. Direct questions as well as vivid imagery and a frank tone strengthen Zinczenko’s argument about the manipulation of food

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