and its effects on obesity
Really?
What makes a food natural?
Is that a real distinction?
How many people take vitamin supplements? Would you consider those natural? Why or why not?
Did you know that astronauts and submariners, among some other groups of people, have to take Vitamin D supplements because they don't get enough exposure to sunlight? And the supplements work fine.
(specifically bags, take out containers, and straws)
These are both native to Central and South America, meaning there were no tomatoes nor spicy capsicum peppers eaten anywhere in the entire world until colonists landed in the New World. There are no exceptions to this.
That means if you have any dish from anywhere else in the world that uses a pepper to add heat to a dish, it's cultural appropriation, right? This is not an exaggeration or in any way incorrect. Literally every single spicy pepper across the entire world was unheard of until the 1500s when Spanish and Portuguese explorers brought them from South America to the rest of the world.
Irish peoples and potatoes? Germans and Ashkenazi Jews in the Germanic counties around Munich?
Knishes, pierogies, gnocchi, etc?
100% has to be cultural appropriation, right?
Because potatoes are native to exactly one area in the world - the Andes mountains. Literally every potato everywhere else in the world descends from potatoes that ancient Andean people cultivated before Spanish conquistadors came to the Americas.
Until the opening of the trade between the East and West around the time of Marco Polo, noodles were unheard of outside of China and other East Asian countries.
Any Italian dish that uses any kind of noodle has to be cultural appropriation, right?
An awful lot of people get angry at the US for the food sold in Chinese take-out restaurants because it isn't "authentic" to China.
Except that Chinese Americans are the ones who made the foods. When they moved to the US in the 1800s, largely to work as veritable slaves in the railroad industry, they brought food techniques and tastes with them, but had to adapt because different staples were here that weren't common in China.
You read that correctly. Chocolate. There is no chocolate in the world whatsoever outside of Central and South America until colonizers in the 1500s took it.
So is cultural appropriation really all that bad?
(I know my answer - I'm too lazy, and I'll blame everything for my failures but myself.)