Thats nice for you, dear.
Here's the thing: we all know that seperate but equal is not equal. We know that when a child is singled out for intervention, that child has to bear the burden of being seperate and unequal to his or her normal weight counterparts. Listen to the words you all are using to describe the obese: unhealthy, stuff-thier-face-at-a-buffet, burden on society, part of a social problem. Singling out a child for intervention in a school system is placing these labels on the child- except those lables aren't coming from thier peers, the lables are coming from an insitution, from the ultimate authority figure. We spend all kinds of time trying to teach children that looks don't matter, that its ok to look and be different. Unless you're fat, that is.
I'm not arguing that childhood obesity is ok, or healthy or that we should do nothing about it. I am arguing that labeling a child for intervention based on his or her body shape can be terribly deterimental for the child's self esteem, and also for the child's privacy. I guess I'm someone that beleives in absolute privacy when it comes to medical information and decisions. Intervention in this case belongs with the physicians. If a child isn't getting the medical care he or she needs, then that's a whole other problem, you have a parent who likley needs other types of help looking after thier children.
In addtion, obese parents are raising thier kids the best they know how. To hear such parents referred to as inadequate and abusive is beyond disgusting. Skinny parents can and do sometimes demand thier children live up to a superficial ideal body image, where's the outrage there and cries for governmental intervention? Its one thing to look at creating perventative programs regarding obesity and encourage healthy eating- its another thing entierly to call a less healthy attitude about food abusive and inadequate parenting.