The New Dietary Guidelines Are a Warning About State-Run Grocery Stores
If progressives distrust Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s vision of healthy eating, they should rethink giving the government control over grocery aisles.
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), under Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., recently released its long-awaited dietary guideline revisions for 2025–2030. The 10-page document has drawn both praise and fire from dietitians and public health experts.
While lauding the emphasis on eating real, whole foods, some experts argue that Kennedy's prioritization of dairy and meat does not reflect nutritional science. Progressives have claimed Kennedy's focus on red meat is creating a "funnel of performative masculinity" and a culture of "protein-maxxing." But those on the political left should also see a warning sign about one of their favored policy ideas: government-run grocery stores.
During his election campaign, New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani mainstreamed the idea of government grocery stores as a potential solution to alleged "food deserts" and affordability problems in the Big Apple. Commentators and economists across the political spectrum were quick to condemn Mamdani's idea, citing past debacles and the lack of evidence that corporate grocery chains are hoarding excess profits and extorting customers.
Despite this, many progressives remain defiantly in favor of state-run stores. But the handwringing over the new HHS dietary guidelines revisions should provide a moment of pause.
What Americans should or should not eat has been a matter of controversy for decades. Perhaps most notably, the federal government in the 1980s urged Americans to eschew saturated fats in favor of carbs and low-fat (often highly processed) foods. Unsurprisingly, encouraging Americans to eat products like Kellogg's Frosted Flakes—with their zero grams of saturated fat—every day for breakfast merely accelerated the already skyrocketing obesity rate.
In other words, the government has not proven to be a very reliable nutritionist. But when it comes to government-run grocery stores, it would be the same government that determines what gets stocked in them. In some progressive circles, this is seen as a virtue—lauded as a way to ensure "dignity" over the food supply chain while focusing on "providing healthy food" for the citizenry.
But therein lies the rub. As the new dietary guidelines prove, what constitutes "healthy" is in the eye of the beholder, and it's unlikely Mamdani and Kennedy—not to mention President Donald Trump—would agree as to which direction their preferred food pyramid should be turned. Presumably, Kennedy's treasured beef tallow would not be prioritized in Mamdani's borough stores.
While partisans trust folks on their ideological team to make these calls, that doesn't mean the next mayor or HHS secretary will act in kind. These decisions inevitably become political, not only over what constitutes healthy eating, but also based on the current administration's political interests. Progressives are already alleging that the new guidelines were tainted by financial influence from the meat and dairy industry, a fight that would unavoidably become more virulent once it spilled over into the grocery aisle.
If more evidence is needed, one need look no further than government-run alcohol stores, which still exist in a handful of states. In these "control states," selection committees are in charge of which spirits get carried in the statewide system. Those that don't make the cut are locked out of liquor stores entirely within the state.
Progressives may dislike the new Kennedy-led dietary guidelines. But then why would they empower a future Kennedy-like official to decide what makes it into their local grocery store aisle?
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Not a real problem.
Whatever the fascists decide is healthy, they will be out of it all the time.
I don't think that the healthiness of food is going to be the problem at the government-run grocery stores, so much as the availability of food.
https://notthebee.com/article/i-bet-youll-be-surprised-to-lear-that-the-subsidized-grocery-store-in-kansas-city-has-closed
There's a teachable moment here.
If progressives distrust Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s vision of healthy eating, they should rethink giving the government control over grocery aisles.
You switched subjects without even noticing it. Try understanding the difference between distrusting Robert F. Kennedy Jr, and distrusting the government. You defeat your own purpose by framing it so wrongly. Let's redo that.
If progressives distrust the government’s vision of healthy eating, they should rethink giving the government control over grocery aisles.
It answers itself when phrased properly. Progressives do NOT distrust the government's advice. They distrust one person's advice. They'll trust their own guy when they're back in charge.
Progressives don't distrust anything about the government, except when they perceive it to be under the control of someone other than who they voted for.
Many of them seem to also sincerely believe that the fact that the candidate they oppose ever wins is a failure on the part of the world around them, or some kind of subversion of the voting process. For all the bold talk of "protecting democracy", in their conception of "democracy" electoral results are always known before the ballots are printed. Even the Dems here in California have somehow convinced themselves that while their party leaders are talking openly about leveraging the "temporary" powers of Prop 50 into a means to create a map with 100% Democrat-majority districts (like what Maryland tried and Massachusetts already has), it's only the "evil republicans" who would do something like gerrymandering. Apparrently the trick is to just vote "blue no matter who" and then actively avoid noticing what they're doing with the power you've given them (since only those "other guys" would ever abuse it anyway, like in 2021 when trump kept the CA schools closed for an extra year after opening the ones in Florida and Texas). I truly wonder if even Orwell himself could have imagined the extent to which some people would someday be capable of doublethink.
I am "The Science" now - Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
What is wrong with the science deniers? He has spoken.
“Science deniers are insurrectionists”
- democrats
creating a "funnel of performative masculinity" and a culture of "protein-maxxing."
This is something a chick would say.
It's much of what Suderman writes. No tolerance for masculinity or anything male coded.
But "performative femininity" and "vegan-maxing" is (D)ifferent!
So basically, RFK inverted the old food pyramid. South Park did that 12 years ago.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fIGXkh6S8Zw
...life, liberty, (property,) and the pursuit of happiness.
Where in that list is "running grocery stores" or even "telling people what they should eat"? Where in Art. 1 are those listed?
...the non-existent 'democracy' clause?
'Running grocery stores' is, at present, a municipal action. So you'd have to look at the City Charter or maybe the state constitution to see if it's listed. It's absence in the federal Constitution is irrelevant.
'Telling people what they should eat' is currently a federal action so your criticism is on-point. To the extent that it's advice (not compulsion) on nutrition, maybe it fits under "fix the Standard of Weights and Measures"? Defining things like calories would definitely fit there. Maybe also the Recommended Daily Allowances. Still a long way from that to the Food Pyramid, though.
The only 'warning' leftarded-tribsters see is that their
GodGovernment isn't in office.The right would be more than happy to abolish the whole outfit.
All "progressives" have TDS and therefore will oppose anything RFK Jr proposes because of his association with the Evil Orange Nazi, no matter how much it might dovetail with the way they actually feel about nutrition (or used to feel). Remember when it was only the extreme left who was opposed to vaccinations and constantly screamed that we needed to update the government nutritional guidelines?
Beyond that, there shouldn't be one fucking libertarian (including the editorial staff at Reason along with their contributing writers) promoting the idea of government health guidelines, no matter who is proposing it. Libertarians are supposed to be for individuals taking control of their own health, or did all of you corrupt, Soros-funded libertarians-in-name-only forget that? Yeah...a large influx of cash DOES tend to create amnesia.
The irony is that RFK Jr probably wouldn't have been on trump's "long list" for any position if the left hadn't pulled a switcheroo on the anti-vax rhetoric when the MRNA jabs became the only "credible" fix for their "team panic" self-designation in response to Covid.
In 2014, the vaccination rate for measles and smallpox at high schools in Santa Monica and Hollywood were lower than in South Sudan, because the fashionable position on vaccines in the leftist cocktail-party (and Dem Party fundraiser) circuits was to follow RFK's lead and keep kids unvaxxed against serious diseases out of fear of causing autism (and because Jenny McCarthy said so, and doubting a woman on any claim is miogyny). It wouldn't entirely surprise me if half the people I see around L.A. wearing masks while driving alone in 2025 have had 7-10 Covid boosters and still aren't vaxxed against measles despite multiple outbreaks in the area a few years before the pandemic.
When being anti-vax went from being synonymous with leftist ideation to being somehow core MAGA belief (about a week after the campaign to get rid of a president whose "greatest failure of leadership" had been the excessive focus on vaccine development during the pandemic (instead of forcing inadequate facilities to attempt to re-tool into shops for rush-assembling makeshift ventilators even after the ICU docs realized they were killing more patients than they were saving with the ones that were available), the left went scorched-earth on RFK Jr, just as they had previously against Joe Rogan (apparently for endorsing Bernie Sanders?) and Tulsi Gabbard (for wiping the floor with Harris in a debate and according to HRC being the latest "Russian Agent", since millenials and younger wouldn't get the reference if they'd accused her of collaboration with Emmanuel Goldstein). While I don't doubt that Tulsi is qualified to be DNI, it's very likely that both her and RFK's appointments were largely another way for trump to troll the TDS crowd on the left.
Why do people insist with the fiction that ideological consistency exists? Whatever a political faction argues when they're not in power will be freely and enthusiastically ignored when they are in power, if they choose to do so. So what's the point of arguing about consequences and long term effects when all of those precedents can and will be ignored at will?
It's pointless.
That's just rhetorical inconsistency.
The left is incredibly consistent once you figure out that they're running the INGSOC Playbook as if 1984 were an instruction manual and not a cautionary vision. They just haven't been brazen enough to apply the slogan "ignorance is strength" to their "anti-misinformation" campaigns. Gavin Newsom is on the verge of replacing the "HOLLYWOOD" sign with "Freedom is Slavery" though.
Looking forward to the food pyramid one day emphasizing dietary fiber.
The emphasis against processed foods and eating "whole, real" foods is SOOOOO close to getting it right, but doesn't explicitly explain why processing is problematic.
Fiber-rich foods are mjore challenging to the palate and largely exclude a texture Americans (and pretty much everyone) like: crisp.
Whole foods can be crunchy, but crisp is solely provided by processed carb. Chips, pretzels, cookies, toast, crackers.
Food technology has blessed and cursed us.