solved Part 1: Watch two of  the five YouTube videos

Part 1: Watch two of  the five YouTube videos  listed below
Question: How do these health issues impact both rich and poor countries?  What types of policies would you propose to address these issues.  What was your take-away message from the 6 minute video on the history of world population changes (if you chose this video) and also Olga Murray’s 17 minute “Ted Talk” about Nepal (if you chose this video). 
Answer these questions in one or two meaningful paragraphs.

Debate: Drinks high in added sugars versus exercise. Where do you come out on this debate?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mByoWF49lSI (Links to an external site.)4 minutes
Sugar Vs. High Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS) – What’s the Difference? 5 minutes

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fXMvregmU1g (Links to an external site.)

Is High Corn Fructose Sugar (HFCS) Really That Bad for You? 5 minutes

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qYNcLy0wYVg (Links to an external site.)

History of World Population Changes: 6 minutes.  Note: click on “Watch the Video”

https://worldpopulationhistory.org/map/2050/mercator/1/0/25/ (Links to an external site.)
5.  Olga Murray’s Ted Talk about Nepal — 17 minutes and extremely inspiring . . . also one of our guest speakers
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BrJsNeGrkhM (Links to an external site.)
Part 2: response to one peer and ask a question to another peer
Reply:

Video 1: Drinks High in Sugar vs. Exersize
My main takeaway from this video is how we as consumers have to be aware of the data we accept to be true because there might be bias behind the research. For example, In this video, Coca-Cola funded a research group to show that a lack of exercise is the reason for obesity instead of the main culprit, sugary drinks and fast food. Especially now when people are becoming more vocal about making health-conscious decisions, shown by a decline in the purchasing of sodas over the last decade and removal of soda machines in schools, we can see that companies are grasping at straws to increase sales. This shows that we should fact-check the studies we listen to and see who might be funded the research because there might be biases that we don’t realize.
Video 4: History of World Population Changes
My main takeaway from this video is that just because our population is growing, it doesn’t mean that our resources can keep up with this rapid growth. Because we live on only 17% of the world’s surface and only 4% will grow crops, we will reach a point where our resources and land can no longer sustain the world’s population. Our population is expected to grow to 10 billion by the end of the century, but the areas we inhabit aren’t getting any larger, so unless population growth slows, we limit our use of natural resources or develop new technology to make food production more effective, we will not be able to sustain that populatio

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