maiforpeace wrote:If you live in a city, and you walk home from school, the likelihood you will pass a McDonald's on the way home is huge.
Sorry, but this is false. I live in a city, there are no McDonalds' anywhere near the routes to the nearest schools. This is the case not only for most residential areas in this city, but also the other cities I know of nearby.
It's a mistake to extrapolate from your a area. The McDonalds business model depends on providing food at low prices in restaurants with enough area to facilitate rapid customer turnover. That's easy to do in rural areas where land is cheap, but the business model doesn't work in most urban locations, where land prices are much higher than in suburban or rural locations. There are a few places where a McDonalds can make money in cities, but they have to find perfect locations. As a result, the per capita occurrence of McDonalds' seems to be much lower in cities than in the suburbs or rural areas.
The average kid walking to a McDonalds in this city is getting a far more healthy meal experience than he'd normally get, because he'd have to walk a fair distance to get there.