Country rejects McDonald's

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McDonald's closing all restaurants in Bolivia as nation rejects fast food - Underground Health

(NaturalNews) McDonald’s happy image and its golden arches aren’t the gateway to bliss in Bolivia. This South American country isn’t falling for the barrage of advertising and fast food cooking methods that so easily engulf countries like the United States.

Bolivians simply don’t trust food prepared in such little time. The quick and easy, mass production method of fast food actually turns Bolivians off altogether. Sixty percent of Bolivians are an indigenous population who generally don’t find it worth their health or money to step foot in a McDonald’s. Despite its economically friendly fast food prices, McDonald’s couldn’t coax enough of the indigenous population of Bolivia to eat their BigMacs, McNuggets or McRibs.

One indigenous woman, Esther Choque, waiting for a bus to arrive outside a McDonald’s restaurant, said, “The closest I ever came was one day when a rain shower fell and I climbed the steps to keep dry by the door. Then they came out and shooed me away. They said I was dirtying the place. Why would I care if McDonald’s leaves [Bolivia]?”

Fast food chain remained for a decade, despite losses every year

The eight remaining McDonald’s fast food shops that stuck it out in the Bolivian city’s of La Paz, Cochabamba, and Santa Cruz de la Sierra, had reportedly operated on losses every year for a decade. The McDonald’s franchise had been persistent over that time, flexing its franchise’s deep pockets to continue business in Bolivia.

Any small business operating in the red for that long would have folded and left the area in less than half that time. Even as persistent as McDonald’s was in gaining influence there, it couldn’t continue operating in the red. After 14 years of presence in the country, their extensive network couldn’t hold up the Bolivian chain. Store after store shut down as Bolivia rejected the McDonald’s fast food agenda. Soon enough, they kissed the last McDonald’s goodbye.

Deep cultural rejection

The McDonald’s impact and its departure from Bolivia was so lasting and important, that marketing managers immediately filmed a documentary called, “Why McDonalds’s went broke in Bolivia.”

Featuring, cooks, nutritionist, historians, and educators, this documentary breaks down the disgusting reality of how McDonald’s food is prepared and why Bolivians reject the whole fast food philosophy of eating.

The rejection isn’t necessarily based on the taste or the type of food McDonald’s prepared. The rejection of the fast food system stemmed from Bolivian’s mindset of how meals are to be properly prepared. Bolivians more so respect their bodies, valuing the quality of what goes into their stomach. The time it takes for fast food to be prepared throws up a warning flag in their minds. Where other cultures see no risk, eating McDonald’s every week; Bolivians feel that it just isn’t worth the health risk. Bolivians seek well prepared, local meals, and want to know that their food was prepared the right way.

This self respect helps Bolivians avoid processed “restructured meat technology,” often used by fast food joints like McDonald’s.

The McRib: 70 ingredients all restructured into one

Did you know that the McRib is processed with 70 different ingredients which include azodicarbonamide, a flour-bleaching agent often used in producing foamed plastics? McRib’s are basically “restructured meat technology” containing a mixture of tripe, heart, and scalded stomach. Proteins are extracted from this muscle mixture and they bind the pork trimmings together so they can be molded in a factory. The McRib is really just a molded blob of restructured meat, advertised and sold like fresh ribs. There’s nothing real about it, the preparation or the substance. In fact, McRibs really came about because of a chicken shortage. The restructured meat technology approach kept the McRib on the menu, despite the shortage, and the profits continued rolling in.

This is the very disgusting idea that the Bolivians have rejected in their country.

The Bolivian rejection of McDonald’s has set a proper example for the rest of the world to follow.

Source: Natural News


Very interesting!
 
OMG so gross!!!! Never had a McRib and never will.
 
Well...if they don't want to go out on a Saturday morning or evening to McD's with the kids...and the USA kiddies love McD's!...that's their loss....
 
Well...if they don't want to go out on a Saturday morning or evening to McD's with the kids...and the USA kiddies love McD's!...that's their loss....

dont american kids have weight problems and type 2 diabetic highest in the world.
bolvian kids more healthy.
i veggie and i look at mcd burgers glad i am....sorry robin we agree to disagree on this one
 
I have not eaten at a McDonalds in like.. 8 years. Their food is not appealing to me at all. And everyone should know their food is not REAL. They were the food chain the produced pink slime.

People have a choice on whether to put that stuff in their bodies, good for them for picking the healthier road.
 
after our local one got closed to be cleaned of semen on everything i would not even go into one to have a pee
 
Once a week, say on Saturday, taking the kiddies to McD's or BK is fine with me....it's a tradition....Even having the kiddies birthday parties at McD's.....Kids being obese?...blame the parents for not cooking during the week nutricious foods and allowing them to play video games and not requiring them to get outside to play for an hour or so....and allowing their kids to eat junk foods 7 days a week....especially sweet foods, cakes, candy bars, donuts, etc., and it's bad for their teeth also....

Blaming McD's for kids being obese?.....Nah!....Nobody eats healthy every day.... and what about family cook-outs on the weekends...having hot dogs and hamburgers?...That's "junk food" also.
 
it's a combination of things - McDonald's is one aspect of it. Food deserts are another aspect of it. And if you grill your own meat and stuff outside, there is a higher chance you will know what actually went into it/what it is.
In some areas, playing outside is simply too dangerous to do.

Fast food corporations do what people want them to do, which is provide cheap food at a very low price.

I personally eat healthy most very day - probably about 95% of the time. I stopped going to McDonald's in 8th grade. I also know that not everyone has that privilege.
 
Well...if they don't want to go out on a Saturday morning or evening to McD's with the kids...and the USA kiddies love McD's!...that's their loss....

The culture between US and Bolivia are unique - not same at all.
 
Once a week, say on Saturday, taking the kiddies to McD's or BK is fine with me....it's a tradition....Even having the kiddies birthday parties at McD's.....Kids being obese?...blame the parents for not cooking during the week nutricious foods and allowing them to play video games and not requiring them to get outside to play for an hour or so....and allowing their kids to eat junk foods 7 days a week....especially sweet foods, cakes, candy bars, donuts, etc., and it's bad for their teeth also....

Blaming McD's for kids being obese?.....Nah!....Nobody eats healthy every day.... and what about family cook-outs on the weekends...having hot dogs and hamburgers?...That's "junk food" also.

I will not take my future kids to any fast food, including McDonald's.

I already live in bad habit with fast food and became obese in late teen.
 
GOOD!, at least they took a stand, i like it, **** madonalds over preservated slugs of shit that fattens and kills people (ever so slowly that they completely eat away with it, as 'its often blamed on the consumers' for making poor choices.
 
RR,i wish there are more of 'others places to take kiddies' meaning like i think Malls or groups of cafes should start to consider stealing Mac's playgrounds ideas...and have close to 'family orientated coffee shops' ok coffee isnt entirely healthy but muffins and rolled sandwiches with REAL food inside it are better anyway...then 'taking kiddies' out isnt just lurred to MacD's filthy glossed up merchants of poisoned foods.
 
But McDonald's is a cheap outing that most people can afford.
 
GOOD!, at least they took a stand, i like it, **** madonalds over preservated slugs of shit that fattens and kills people (ever so slowly that they completely eat away with it, as 'its often blamed on the consumers' for making poor choices.

RR,i wish there are more of 'others places to take kiddies' meaning like i think Malls or groups of cafes should start to consider stealing Mac's playgrounds ideas...and have close to 'family orientated coffee shops' ok coffee isnt entirely healthy but muffins and rolled sandwiches with REAL food inside it are better anyway...then 'taking kiddies' out isnt just lurred to MacD's filthy glossed up merchants of poisoned foods.

I found something is pathetic in America.

Poor families only could afford to eat at fast food, such as McDonald's, Burger King, Taco Bell, etc because they are cheaper than cook the food at home.

Junk food is cheaper than healthy food too, that's sad.
 
But McDonald's is a cheap outing that most people can afford.

Yes, that's true but it isn't option for people with medical condition that require special diet, especially IBS.

IBS will easily broke the food stamp (based on $80 monthly) after week or couple week because my monthly on grocery is around $200, it can be much as $300. I can't eat PB&J anymore and can't eat anything with peanut butter. I can't eat cheese, butter (margarine is fine), grits, oatmeal, MSG, broccoli, baked beans, regular milk, soy milk, etc. I can't eat TV dinner. I have to eat speciality bread - french, sourdough or italian that cost $2-$4, compared to less than $1 for processed bread that I can't eat anymore.

I have to eat some organic (must be 100%) vegetables, especially corn because GMO isn't well tolerated. There is no labeling that cause a major problem because I don't know if any vegetables contain GMO, except for 100% organic, but I can look at number that only applies to fresh vegetables.

It is frustrating for sure.
 
New book finds many U.S. foods banned overseas for cancer links - Washington Times

Put down the Mountain Dew and step away from the Pringles. An estimated 80 percent of all packaged foods sold in America are actually so unhealthy and packed with chemical additives that they’re banned in much of the world, a new book reveals.

Six food additives in particular are the worst-of-the-worst, the Daily Mail reported. A new book, “Rich Food, Poor Food,” by Dr. Jayson Calton and Mira Calton, a certified nutritionist, explains how the Food and Drug Administration’s stamp of approval means little to other nations — and that much of what America is eating is actually considered cancerous in other nations.

Watch out for food coloring, the authors say. One of the most common used in the United States — found in soda, sports drinks, mac and cheese, cake and candy, and several other products — is make from petroleum and has been linked to various cancers, the authors say, in the Daily Mail.

Another common additive in America but banned in the United Kingdom and in Canada: The fat substitute, Olestra. It’s found in low-fat potato chips, including Ruffles Lite, Lays Wow and Pringles fat-free, the authors say, the Daily Mail reported. Fat-free ice cream and mayonnaise also contained the chemical at various time, the authors said.

Meanwhile, drinks like Mountain Dew, Squirt and Fresca and foods like New York brand flatbreads and bagel chips made the authors’ hit list because they contain brominated vegetable oil — banned by more than 100 countries because of its link to thyroid cancer, the Daily Mail reported. Bromine, the authors say, is also used to protect carpets from fire and to disinfect swimming pools.

And don’t even think of hitting the frozen dinner aisle at the grocery, the authors say.

Hungry Man frozen dinners, and certain frozen potato and bread products, contain a chemical that is tied to asthma, they say. Its banned in Australia, the United Kingdom and many other European nations. In Singapore, its use could bring a 15-year prison sentence and a $500,000 fine, the Daily Mail reported. Its name? Azodicarbonamide, the authors say, in the Daily Mail.

Here in America, though, the FDA says the additive is “approved to be a bleaching agent in cereal flour” and is “permitted for direct addition to food for human consumption,” the Daily Mail reported


I wish all of these foods were banned here!
 
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