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Claire Calman

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Claire Calman,

claire calman

Opinion

Can you have your cake and eat it? Fat chance

The government's Eat Out to Help Out scheme poses a dilemma

August 16, 2020 10:37
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3 min read

Spare a thought for the Government, the poor little lambkins. When faced with conflicting priorities, clearly they suffer the same dilemmas we do as individuals. Let’s take an example from everyday life: Mr Fegenbaum has enough money for either Option A: buying a new sofa, or Option B: getting his car fixed. What should he do? The car is essential, so Mr Fegenbaum has the car fixed and has a little left over for a couple of new cushions to cheer up his old sofa. These are the kind of decisions most people make all the time. We may not relish them but we accept the either/or principle.

But now the Government is leading the way in an exciting new approach, which will allow everyone to be happy, forsaking that old-fashioned, tedious one-or-the-other kind of decision-making in favour of choosing both Option A and Option B, even if they were previously mutually exclusive. Remember what Boris said regarding Brexit: “My policy on cake is pro having it and pro eating it.” The point about the original phrase: “You can’t have your cake and eat it” is — it’s not advisory; it’s a fact: you cannot both retain something and use it up.

Which brings us to the current “Eat Out to Help Out” campaign, the Chancellor’s plan to encourage us to do our duty by stuffing our faces at a discount, Monday to Wednesday. So far, it seems to be successful. Last night, my husband and son went to a Greek restaurant and it was so packed, the waiters were run ragged and it took over an hour for the main course to come. How, you may well wonder, does this initiative dovetail with the Government’s much-trumpeted obesity strategy? Surely fast-food outlets offering unhealthy food are excluded? Nope. Perhaps the discount is attached only to healthy choices: “Would Madam like the full-price cheeseburger and chips or the discounted option: grilled salmon with steamed kale?” Apparently not.

To quote from www.gov.uk, “The urgency of tackling the obesity time bomb has been brought to the fore by evidence of the link to an increased risk from Covid- 19.” Yes, if you’re overweight, you’re more at risk of dying — it’s that simple. They list a raft of anti-obesity measures but they don’t seem to include: making it cheaper for us all to go out and get fat. And that’s without packing into restaurants with, of necessity, no masks. Bring on the second wave!