The Reason Interview With Nick Gillespie

From Big Gulps to Raw Milk: The Rise of MAHA

57 snips
Jul 2, 2025
In this engaging discussion, Elizabeth Nolan Brown, a Reason cover story author, delves into the Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) movement, led by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. She explains how the right's stance on wellness has drastically shifted from the previous disdain for health trends. Brown discusses the implications of food purity, critiques governmental dietary recommendations, and highlights the tension between tradition and modern parenting in nutrition. The conversation sheds light on the political influence embedded in contemporary health choices.
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ANECDOTE

Conservative Pride in Unhealthy Eating

  • Conservatives once proudly embraced unhealthy foods as a cultural marker, exemplified by Sarah Palin championing Big Gulps.
  • This was partly a backlash against government-led healthy initiatives linked to liberals and feminist-coded diets.
INSIGHT

Healthy Eating Was Feminized

  • Healthy eating was long feminized and associated largely with women and liberal urbanites.
  • Meat-heavy, fatty diets were seen as emblematic of masculinity and traditional American identity for conservatives.
INSIGHT

Slow Food as Anti-Globalization

  • The slow food and farm-to-table movement emerged as a localized, anti-globalization response amid the 2008 recession.
  • People sought control through making their own food and escaping corporate capitalist systems.
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