David Lesage's Argument Against Childhood Obesity

462 Words1 Page

In today’s society, childhood obesity is a climbing dilemma. According to CDC (centers of disease control and prevention) in the past thirty years obesity has more than doubled in children and quadrupled in adolescents. Approximately 72.7 million children and adolescents aged 2-19 years experienced obesity. (CDC) Obesity does not require lab test or imaging; normally a person who is obese is overweight and lives a sedentary lifestyle. In an ad made by a Belgium student, David Lesage the issue of childhood obesity is most appropriately displayed. The caption of the ad reads “L'obésité commence dès le plus jeune âge”. Which can be translated to “obesity begins at a young age”. Lesage successfully persuades the reader to support the battle …show more content…

Pathos is a method of convincing people with an argument drawn out through emotional response. (Literary Devices) By appealing to a person emotionally, it is easier to convince them to change their opinion on a certain topic. Lesage used pathos in his argument against childhood obesity when he states obesity begins at a young age. This makes the audience reminisce about their own childhood and makes them question if children dealing with obesity will be able to experience the full childhood experience every child should part take in. Such as playing kickball until the sun goes down. This evokes the emotions of pity because now the reader feels sad about the situation because now they release these children will have a hard time just running around the corner. Being overweight or obese increases the risk for heart problems, high blood pressure, and other medical problems. It is very important that this subject be addressed, especially for children because if not addressed now these kids can grow to have a difficult time treating obesity in their adulthood and could develop life threatening health conditions. Thinking about the consequences of childhood obesity, the audience emotion of sorrow is invoked. The reader now places themselves in the position of someone facing obesity and a feels a deep misery of what life would be

Open Document