She went to princeton and cant even figure out how to eat properly.
Re-read what the article said. It's more of a commentary upon how it is harder and harder to find healthy dining/meal planning options these days, even for people with higher education.
It's correct, IMO. Walk around college campus - there's a Starbucks or Taco Bell on every corner, but not a fruit stand. Drive down any road in America - There are 7 fast food restaurants at every major intersection, but in order to have a piece of fruit, you have to park and spend 12 minutes walking through a store. If you want lean and clean chicken breast, you do not have that option these days, if you're busy, out and about.
I can literally buy Coca-Cola at gas stations, restaurants, grocery stores, and machines by the side of the road - but a piece of lean grilled chicken breast that wasn't previously paste and formed into nugget form? Nope.
She was talking about how it's hard for busy/traveling people to adequately plan meals. And it is. Try being a parent these days - on the road after the beach - I mean, your options are drive thrus or a cooler filled with fruit and cold chicken breast that you made the night before lol, and I know everyone with 2 kids in shitty diapers, masters classes, a FT job and gymload has time for that.
I'd be shocked to see any actual parents on this thread, saying she's wrong about society not offering easy and fast healthy food solutions. it IS hard. Michelle obama is gross, she's a glutton, she certainly doesn't follow the diet ideals she preaches... but the point she makes is correct. Even with an advanced degree, it's doggone hard to plan healthy meals with today's schedule and public food options. It's much easier for getbiggers that aren't parents to make their 4 chicken breasts to tupperware or spend 90 minutes in an Italian restaurant. Try feeding 4 hungry kids, 2 in diapers, at 11am with a doc appt at 11:30 and the bus coming at 2 lol.