May
17th
  6:48:04 PM

School lunch war gets serious

Big Brother is watching you. Actually, he’s watching your child, and what she’s about to eat for lunch. Little Susie may even get cited (and publicly shamed) for violation of Trans-fat Bylaw #1029304958474.

I’m kidding about the bylaw; there isn’t one in place (yet) at this Texas school. But they do have hidden camera to spy on kids, and rat out the nutrition content (or lack thereof) in what they buy for lunch.

Using a $2m…grant from the US department of agriculture, schools in San Antonio are installing sophisticated cameras that read barcodes embedded in the food trays. […] Officials will receive information on the nutrient and calorie counts of the food children have consumed.

This goes way beyond schools banning students bringing food from home. But somehow it’s justified because it’s all in the name of stamping out childhood obesity. Who wants to take bets on whether or not this brilliant scheme is going to be effective? Your tax dollars at work, Americans!



 
about this blog | Bookmark and Share

Search this blog

 Subscribe to FamilyEdge
rss RSS feed of posts

 Recent Posts
Humanity amongst the horror of Woolwich attack
25 May 2013
Housewife revival is not such a bad thing
23 May 2013
Declaration of 2013 World Congress of Families
21 May 2013
World Congress of Families 2013
19 May 2013
Rise of the stay-at-home dad
15 May 2013

 MercatorNet blogs
Style and culture: Tiger Print
US political scene: Sheila Liaugminas
News about bioethics: BioEdge
From the editors: Conniptions

 Archive
May 2013 | Apr 2013 | Mar 2013 | more >>

 From MercatorNet's home page

The Boy Scouts cave in
24 May 2013
Under enormous pressure, they have voted to welcome openly gay scouts. What message does the change in policy send young…

A boy’s life with unisex scouts
23 May 2013
The Boy Scouts of America will vote today on whether they will admit homosexual scouts. Will they become the Unisex…

Necessary excuses
23 May 2013
“Comfort women”, carpet bombing, atom bombs, lethal drones and genocide can all be justified by appeals to necessity.

Digital multitasking: scourge or blessing?
22 May 2013
How can we teach students to focus on what they ought to be doing?

Who or what is a “child”?
22 May 2013
Canada's Parliament lacks the courage to take a stand on defining when an unborn child will be protected by the…


 Tags
child obesity, obesity, China, brain, parental rights, language, media, television, suicide, mental health, modesty, self-control, gender equality, child wellbeing, fertility, teenage pregnancy, child abuse, birth control, Facebook, family policy, boys, smacking, Africa, HIVAIDS, family structure, demography, violence, celebrities, fatherhood, teen pregnancy, trafficking, United Nations, motherhood, daycare, parents, women, working mothers, fashion, adoption, baby boomers, parenting, Sweden, South Africa, family relationships, research, immigration, friendship, AIDS, character education, social media, Spain, contraception, family breakdown, United States, adolescence, France, health, commitment, economics, marriage, teenagers, family economics, dating, sexual behaviour, men, families, homosexuality, Australia, unemployment, character, morality, prostitution, UK, parenthood, poverty, gender, internet, adolescents, internet safety, feminism, schools, child safety, family, religion, child welfare, childcare, European Union, social networking, children, emerging adults, child poverty, video games, children's health, fathers, one-child policy, names, gendercide, National Marriage Project, Canada, ageing, Hollywood, pornography, single motherhood, sleep, same-sex marriage, recession, education of children, mothers, family values, abortion, New Zealand, anger, sex education, work, girls, large families, pregnancy, polygamy, same-sex parenting, abstinence, work-life balance, psychology, happiness, youth, divorce, media ethics, texting, family meals, education, Barack Obama, technology, sexualisation of children, child development, cohabitation, young adult, ageing population, HomeMakers Project, books, USA, child behaviour, homeschooling,