When a mother goes to the store and purchases food for her child, she has the right to know what she is feeding her family.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Those who store, package, and sell the food we serve our families have a responsibility to maintain basic standards of cleanliness in their facilities.
Consumers deserve the right to know what's in their food - and obviously, most people want that choice. It's hard to see how more knowledge about the products we eat every day can hurt us.
Most kids will not volunteer to eat veggies. At times you must step up to the plate and enforce the rule of authority as a parent.
When people are hungry, when a mother or father is facing a child that they can't feed, you can't ask that family to lay down their arms.
Until I got older, I never dreamed of what a demanding responsibility it is to keep food in the pantry, to keep clothing neat and presentable, to buy all that is needed to keep a home running.
You can't be a parent and say, 'I need you to be more active and I need you to eat right,' when you're still choosing to have poor eating habits.
Food is the moral right of all who are born into this world.
Getting kids into the kitchen preparing the food they and their families will eat results in them viewing food in an entirely new way. If given the right ingredients, that act alone can raise the standards of the quality of the food both they and their family eat.
Children are not a right, they are a privileged obligation.
I think it's important that people know what they are eating and especially to know what their children are eating.
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