The Jewish Chronicle

Can you have your cake and eat it? Fat chance

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to a Greek restaurant and it was so packed, the waiters were run ragged and it took over an hour for the main course to come. How, you may well wonder, does this initiative dovetail with the Government’s muchtrumpe­ted obesity strategy? Surely fast-food outlets offering unhealthy food are excluded? Nope. Perhaps the discount is attached only to healthy choices: “Would Madam like the fullprice cheeseburg­er and chips or the discounted option: grilled salmon with steamed kale?” Apparently not.

To quote from www.gov.uk, “The urgency of tackling the obesity time bomb has been brought to the fore by evidence of the link to an increased risk from Covid- 19.” Yes, if you’re overweight, you’re more at risk of dying — it’s that simple. They list a raft of antiobesit­y measures but they don’t seem to include: making it cheaper for us all to go out and get fat. And that’s without packing into restaurant­s with, of necessity, no masks. Bring on the second wave!

But don’t worry because the Government must know what it’s doing; it has plenty of previous form on the “choose two opposing options at once” approach. In London, we were urged to avoid public transport so it could be safely used by key workers. However, the congestion charge has been increased to £15 a day (up from £11.50) and operates seven days a week instead of weekdays only and for an extra four hours a day. So, if you have small children or heavy shopping or thought you’d Eat Out to Help Out in the centre of town but don’t want to walk all the way home late at night, too bad. But their crowning glory is this:

Option A: Slash greenhouse gas emissions to net zero by 2050!

Option B: Expand Heathrow and add a third runway!

The slump in the aviation industry caused by the pandemic has at least shifted Heathrow expansion on to the back burner, but it hasn’t been completely ditched. Of course, the reasons behind those lobbying hard in favour of it are complex. Reports suggesting it’s just because we don’t want all the other grown-up nations to laugh at us because we can’t manage major infrastruc­ture projects are no doubt greatly exaggerate­d.

Following the having cake and eating it approach, the answer is simple. Build the runway but save it for best. It’s like having two extra flaps for your dining-table but hefting them out from beneath the sofa only for Pesach and Rosh Hashanah. You like to know the flaps are there, but you don’t use them most of the time. Same with the extra runway. Cover it with a big dust-sheet, then — when we have a state visit from a leader we need to impress — give the runway a bit of a wipe-down and there you go.

And if you think you’d never make such contrary choices yourself, just think back to when you’ve ever been on a diet. Ordered chips but also a diet Coke? Your brain, deprived of the lovely, lovely sugar and carbs it craves, just can’t process the lack of logic so thinks that’s perfectly sensible. Perhaps, you think, the diet drink will cancel out the calories of the chips?

No idea what the Government’s excuse is though.

Perhaps the discount is just on grilled salmon and kale?’

Claire Calman’s fifth novel, Growing Up for Beginners, is out now. @clairecalm­an

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Dinner discounts pose a dilemma
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Dinner discounts pose a dilemma

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