Someone sent me this in relation to my "Who's brilliant idea was it?"post. ( http://mrsnj91.blogspot.com/2012/09/whos-brilliant-idea-was-it.html ) As a mom who currently packs a lunch for my 2nd grader and a teenager who comes home hungry because she isn't eating in school, I thought I would share.....
Complaints Mount Against Michelle Obama’s New Lunch Menu
"In Wisconsin, high school athletes are complaining about not getting
enough to eat each day, due to the skimpy new school lunch menu mandated
by the United States Department of Agriculture and First Lady Michelle
Obama.
The story
we published earlier this week on that subject is unfortunately not
unique. Students across the country are complaining about the new
school lunch regulations.
Perhaps the real motive is to starve
students into slimming down. Just ask students in Pierre, South Dakota
who, too, are in an all-out revolt.
"I know a lot of my friends
who are just drinking a jug of milk for their lunch. And they are not
getting a proper meal," middle school student Samantha Gortmaker told Keloland.com.
Despite the fact that the new regulations have increased the cost of a
lunch 20 to 25 cents per plate, it’s not pleasing students.
Some are throwing away their vegetables while others are adapting to the
rules by becoming industrious. In New Bedford, Massachusetts, students
have created a black market - for chocolate syrup. The kiddie
capitalists are smuggling in bottles of it and selling it by the
squeeze, according to SouthCoastToday.com.
Nancy Carvalho, director of food services for New Bedford Public
Schools, was quoted as saying that hummus and black bean salads have
been tough sells in elementary cafeterias. That means even smaller
children are going through the day fighting hunger pains, which can
never be considered a good thing.
One government official tried to put the blame on the students.
"One thing I think we need to keep in mind as kids say they're still
hungry is that many children aren't used to eating fruits and vegetables
at home, much less at school. So it's a change in what they are eating.
If they are still hungry, it's that they are not eating all the food
that's being offered," USDA Deputy Undersecretary Janey Thornton was
quoted as saying.
Ms. Thornton just put her finger on the
problem. The government is trying to impose a new diet that children are
not accustomed to. It’s not reasonable to expect them to either eat
what the government deems healthy or go hungry.
Many will opt to go hungry, and that’s the government’s fault."
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