I take offence to the fact that reading your post it made it sound like you were sitting up there in your ivory tower looking down on all the fat people and feeling superior because you are not fat. There was a tone of superiority to your post which I didn't like, it had nothing to do with the content.Brawndo said:You clearly didn't read my entire post - you just got incensed by the title and responded as such. I wrote how if you develop diabetes or hypertension because of your weight problem, all of the rest of society has to pay more in increased health care costs. So because you choose to buy crisps instead of veggies, my taxes and insurance premiums go up in the long run. True story no matter which way you spin it.MelasZepheos said:snipBrawndo said:snip.
And I do differentiate between a few pounds overweight and morbidly obese - which one is more likely to have serious medical issues? If being fat had no impact on society, then I wouldn't care, no matter how much I disagree with it personally.
You took so much offense at me suggests to you to be healthier that you'd think I was ripping on you for not smoking weed or not drinking. What it really comes down to is that many overweight people take OFFENSE to being admonished to lead a lifestyle that is healthier for them, their families, and society as a whole.
Surely me stating you're like Fox news would make the complete opposite of someone who believes fox news no? Not quite sure where you're going with that one. However it is still different, you can't help being black, gay, female or whatever else people have prejudices towards for impossible to effect things. I mean I AM a smoker, and I still think it's okay for people to have those views towards me, mainly because I don't care, or at least not until we start having anti smoker hate crimes, slavery and violence.Yopaz said:I wont go as far as saying that being fat is a choice. I can agree with you that my original post was poorly phrased though. However am I wrong? Now you're a smoker so strangers will judge you for it and think less of you for that thing alone. They will judge fat people and think they are lazy. Now I am neither smoking nor fat, but I don't think we should think less of anyone for any reason. Disagree?elvor0 said:Being Jewish or Black isn't a choice though is it? Stop being sensationalist, you sound like fox news.Yopaz said:Where have you been the last decade? Have you ever seen shows like The Biggest Loser, Fat Camp, Super size vs Super skinny and a million other shows with the same message? The message media is sending out is "Fat people, you are disgusting and you need to lose weight". Back in the old days it was accepted to treat Jews or black people like they're less, now we treat fat people and smokers like they're less without seeing the connection.
Obese people and smokers cost money and cause strain on the health system (well at least in countries with a COMMUNIST HEALTH SYSTEM!!!1!11! anyway). Being black or jewish isn't one day going to cause you to be in hospital taking up time and resources for someone who needs it.
Just for the record I smoke, so it doesn't sound like I'm having a go at smokers for taking up hospital space, I'm just pointing it out. But I'll cross that bridge when I come to it, besides I'm not sure I want to live past 70 anyway -_- Saying that, I pay my taxes, which WILL have gone to some obese person or smoker, so when it's my turn I'm having that damn bed.
Now you might think of me as a sensationalist here, but do not fucking compare me to Fox News cause then I will compare you to the people that believe what Fox News says. I didn't say we're being just as bad as the Nazis or anything down the line that's a meaning you put into my words just the same any frequent Fox News viewer does when he watches anything that isn't aired by Fox News. I am saying it's a part of being human to discriminate against others. If you don't think it's a bad thing to discriminate then I got another ground to compare you to Fox News.
I know, I just took umbrage with his tone.McNinja said:There is a difference between someone who is healthy and overweight and someone who puts away four bags of doritos a day and has terrible blood pressure and has already suffered a heart attack. You are not costing the taxpayers anymore money by being overweight. The other, obese guy, is. I get your point, but you aren't really the target of the OPs "moralist" views.MelasZepheos said:snip
There is a difference between being overweight and overfat. See this http://www.strengthforcaring.com/manual/food-fitness-and-wellness-healthy-lifestyle/the-o-words-overweight-and-overfatbasics-of-weight-management/
It is not irrelevant to the arguments i was debunking. No one of those 9 people i quoted said anything about nicotine they were talking about cancer and death.DracoSuave said:Irrelevant.Nisselue said:The largest and longest study (Enstrom & Kabat) followed more than 35,000 subjects for almost 40 years and found no significant risk associated with second-hand smoke. Similarly, the World Health Organization spent seven years at a dozen research centers in seven countries and came to the same conclusion.
It still contains nicotine, and if I do not want to ingest nicotine, then there's no reason why I should have to. A junkie's need to shoot up does not outweigh a non-junkie's desire to avoid the substance in the first place.
It's called consideration.
But I think this is exactly what he's talking about -- you admit that it's a result of lifestyle and choice (meaning here that you do make a conscious decision to arrange your priorities in a certain way).MelasZepheos said:Choice is an odd word, and one you should think about very carefully before using. I have never in my life made a conscious decision to be overweight, whereas you must have made a conscious decision to be 'fit' as you call it. So really you're the one who made the choice, I just ignored it because I'm happy the way I am. And why can't you accept that?
Ha. Thus speaks a thin person.z121231211 said:What about just running outside or doing push-ups or something?MelasZepheos said:Or they don't have the money to go to the gym.
I don't know what draconian hours you have, but if it's less than 14 hours/day, 7 days a week, you can find time to exercise.MelasZepheos said:Or they work a full time job and don't have the time to go for a run after or before work.
Gaining weight is just eating more calories than you burn, so even without exercise you could just eat less of whatever you usually eat and still lose weight.MelasZepheos said:Or it's cheaper for them to buy junk food (which is still cheaper than vegetables and healthy food, by quite a considerable difference)
You made the choice to eat more calories than you burn, therefor you chose to be fat. There's nothing wrong with that (unless you're unhealthily obese), but please understand that it was a choice and that no one else made you fat except yourself, even if the intention of eating was to satisfy immediate hunger rather than "I'll just become overweight!"MelasZepheos said:Choice is an odd word, and one you should think about very carefully before using. I have never in my life made a conscious decision to be overweight, whereas you must have made a conscious decision to be 'fit' as you call it. So really you're the one who made the choice, I just ignored it because I'm happy the way I am. And why can't you accept that?
Most smokers I know are, in fact, considerate about public smoking near me. They ask if I mind, and generally I say 'No I do not' because I don't mind when asked politely.Nisselue said:It is not irrelevant to the arguments i was debunking. No one of those 9 people i quoted said anything about nicotine they were talking about cancer and death.
If you are afraid of nicotine you should try to avoid it as i said in a previous comment or talk to the smokers and ask them to remove themself or stomp the smoke, as i said we smokers aren't as bad as some of you think we are, we do try to remember when/where to smoke and when not to smoke but it isn't always that easy to remember.
While you've brought up a few studies that say it doesn't, other organizations and studies, including the World Health Organization, disagree strongly.And when you see all those people talking about second-hand smoke as if it was the most deadly thing in history you cannot come here and say that it is irrelevant to tell them that second-hand smoking isn't dangerous at all.
Hey look, it's someone who's logical!Dastardly said:"Choice" isn't the same as "responsibility." Someone doesn't have to admit they "chose to be fat," but they can at least recognize they made critical, contributing decisions that led to gaining and keeping the extra weight. And if that doesn't bother them, it shouldn't bother anyone else... unless it starts to put a burden on the increasingly-public medical system.MelasZepheos said:snip
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