h a l f b a k e r yContrary to popular belief
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
A common guideline for daily (kilo)calorie intake is 2500 for males, 2000 for females.
The worldwide sex ratio is estimated to be 101 -- 1 extra man for every 100 women.
Thus the average earthbound human ought to be consuming 1.01(2500+2000)/2 calories daily = 2272.5.
People in the 10 poorest
countries eat, on average, fewer than 2000 calories a day. Meanwhile, the 10 best-fed countries consume, on average, over 3500 calories per day(!).
Such is the excess that is produced that many of us in some of the best-fed nations have commonly seen perfectly good food simply thrown away. What we have is a calorie surplus that can be redistributed toward the deficit.
Intercalorie Day is a holiday which can be commmorated by those in the best-fed nations (where the average citizen consumes greater than 2273 calories per day) limiting their consumption to no greater than that amount. (Celebrants may also choose to fast to remind themselves of the many that are hungry.)
Furthermore, each individual participating citizen of the best-fed nations will celebrate by charitably "giving" his or her excess calories to poorer nations. If one particular "average" American consumes 3675 calories a day, he/she "owes" 3675-2273 = 1402 calories to the world (AT LEAST -- arguably more is owed for the numerous countries where the average citizens consume fewer than that number).
This gift be achieved either through donating food, or by donating a reasonable dollar amount for the excess -- perhaps 100 calories = $1.
Intercalorie Day will NOT, by itself, solve world hunger, nor should it be imagined to be an exclusive substitute for charitably contributing for the good of the world. But, it is a way to increase awareness in better-fed nations, and do some good in the process.
Intercalation
http://en.wikipedia.../wiki/Intercalation [nihilo, Jun 27 2006]
About calories
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calorie [nihilo, Jun 27 2006]
World food consumption trends
http://www.findarti..._n1_v15/ai_13608619 a bit out of date... [nihilo, Jun 27 2006]
Worldwide gender ratio
http://chronicle.co...50/i34/34a01401.htm [nihilo, Jun 27 2006]
Daily calorie supply per person
http://www.iucn.org...LOBAL_19CALORIE.jpg a bit out of date... [nihilo, Jun 27 2006]
40-hour famine
http://www.famine.org.nz/about.aspx An event of which your idea reminded me. [methinksnot, Jun 27 2006]
Please log in.
If you're not logged in,
you can see what this page
looks like, but you will
not be able to add anything.
Annotation:
|
|
But it can't just be "calories" or everyone would donate potato chips and soda. |
|
|
Potato chips and soda could save someone's life. |
|
|
But it's not the letter of the law, it's the spirit that gives it life. |
|
|
Actually, knowing us Americans, we would keep the chips & soda and donate unwanted vegetables, unwittingly creating an ultrahealthy foreign "supercountry". |
|
|
"The relief flight has arrived!" |
|
|
"Did they bring the seed corn, clean bandages and spare parts for the water pump?" |
|
|
"Err, no... but there are doughnuts." |
|
|
The problem with starvation is not total availability of food. It is distribution. There is plenty of food available, but it is in the wrong places. |
|
|
Getting it from the fat to the starving is the problem. |
|
|
In the US we make plastics out of corn. In Brazil they make auto fuel out of sugar cane. This isn't just selfishness. It is difficulties of distribution and the variagies of the market. |
|
|
This is exacerbated by the perversities of differential production. A single farmer in the US can feed hundreds. A single farmer in Eritria cannot feed his family. But delivering bushels of corn from Iowa to Anseba is impractical, especially on a long term basis. |
|
|
Hunger is a very complex issue. |
|
|
No one is denying this. Sometimes when I'm hungry I want something sweet; othertimes, salty. |
|
|
What the proposed holiday is an attempt to do is (1) increase awareness of world hunger and food inequities among the richest nations, (2) collectively mobilize the efforts of the citizens of said nations to donate needed food and/or resources to those that are lacking. A public holiday among the wealthiest nations would create avenues to overcome currently existing distribution problems. |
|
|
I'm pretty sure this has been already baked as the Islamic holiday of Ramadan. |
|
|
It is also baked once a month by Mormons. |
|
|
Oh, and "my neighbors Joe & Mary have baked this idea". Come on! |
|
|
I'm talking about a universal national holiday for industrialized nations that institutionalizes charity-- like the various "Independence Day"s of various nations institutionalize patriotism, like Christmas institutionalizes commercialism, on a national level -- by making them mindful of, and accountable for, their gluttony. |
|
|
Our post office does this and we put food in the mailbox and the postman picks it up on a certain Saturday of the month and the food is donated to Food Banks in the area.....but it isn't a bad idea. |
|
|
I work hard to eat as much as I do. I
don't overconsume but I work to earn
my food. |
|
|
In countries where there is no food: I
suggest you get up and move camp to
where the food is. |
|
|
This is what humans have been doing
for ages... following the food. |
|
|
Why stay in an area that is barren? That
sounds like a personal problem to me. |
|
|
//Why stay in an area that is barren? That
sounds like a personal problem to me.//
Yo Twinkie, which potato field do you live
in? |
|
|
Can I just mention that I'd like you to
leave? It's just a personal preference. |
|
|
//MaxwellBuchanan// can i mention that i
don't really care. it's just a personal
preference. |
|
|
FYI you can't always get what you want |
|
| |