 In 2010, the USDA officially revised the U.S. Dietary Guidelines, which raises the question, how have we been doing with the old guidelines? What's wrong with the standard American diet? This is a table reporting compliance with the 2005 guidelines, which were not particularly stringent. For example, they recommend we should eat at least one serving of whole fruit a day. Yet, 3 quarters of Americans couldn't even attain that one fruit serving a day. And look at college age men and women. 90% couldn't even grab half a banana or something all day long. For vegetables we did even worse. About 9 out of 10 Americans couldn't even reach the minimum. And don't get me started on dark green leafies. For example, the recommended minimum intake of dark green leafy vegetables for 9 to 13-year-old kids, a fifth of a cup a day. And they even consider romaine lettuce a dark green leafy. Yet, only about 1 in 500 kids eat the equivalent of a single leaf of romaine lettuce, 1 in 500. 97% of Americans couldn't bother with a carrot, 96% non-compliant with legumes, and 99% of Americans don't eat even the measly minimum of whole grains. And then to top it all off, junk foods. You want to know how lax the federal regulations are, the federal guidelines? A quarter of our calories are allowed to be empty calorie junk foods. A quarter of our diet can be cotton candy, and we're still OK under the government recommendations. Still, how many Americans couldn't even keep it down to that? 95% of Americans exceed their maximum discretionary caloric allowances. And look at children, only 1 in 1,000 American children eats even marginally healthy by ensuring less than a quarter of their calories aren't completely wasted. The equivalent to eating less than 24 spoonfuls of sugar a day, only 1 in 1,000 American kids can evidently manage that. And we wonder why there's a childhood obesity epidemic, and adults too. In conclusion, nearly the entire US population consumes a diet that is not on par with recommendations, even crappy recommendations. These findings add another piece to the rather disturbing picture that is a merger of a nation's diet in crisis.