etselbbuns wrote: » It is the potato effect.
Stonedpilot wrote: » Being fat, unhealthy and obese is something to be proud of and God forbid anyone point out it's lunacy to be the size of a manatee
Stonedpilot wrote: » Had a few incidents recently where I seen very overweight people be angry with total strangers.
seamus wrote: » You must be living in a parallel universe then. Or maybe you're confusing "everyone doesn't point and laugh at fatties" as being indicative of admiration?
Stonedpilot wrote: » As far as I'm aware no country is as tolerant to obesity as Ireland, no way does France,Italy,Spain etc see it as the norm here. Odd.
Stonedpilot wrote: » I remember Katie Hopkins was on the Late Late Show making the point you can't be happy and fat (I don't know I don't care frankly) but they cut to a obese lady in the audience who had only just opened her mouth and the audience were in rapturous applause. No matter what she said they would have clapped. Katie asked the question 'Why are you clapping?. Are you clapping because she is overweight is that it?.'
Boom_Bap wrote: » I think a better question is "Why are people obsessed with other people's appearance?"
Stonedpilot wrote: » There has been several examples on Irish TV and press where (usually women) in fairness are expressing how proud they are to be overweight. Like the Late Late Show example I gave.
frozenfrozen wrote: » obesity isn't a wacky haircut
sibergoth wrote: » have you been to America ?
seamus wrote: » Stonedpilot wrote: » There has been several examples on Irish TV and press where (usually women) in fairness are expressing how proud they are to be overweight. Like the Late Late Show example I gave. You didn't give an example of someone being proud they're fat. You gave an example of someone disagreeing with Katie Hopkins. There's a difference between being "proud" of being fat and not being ashamed of it. Are you saying that fat people should be ashamed? Should they hide themselves away lest you have to look upon their grim visage when you're outside? Irish TV and press basically do nothing except discuss obesity epidemics and fitness. At least one night every week there's a show of some description related to getting fit or eating properly. You're right in one aspect though - there's no insistence in Irish media that all women should be stick thin bottle blondes with big tits and that all men should be square-jawed, chiseled-chest hulks, the way there is in other countries. Which is how it should be. Being obese is for the 99% something that can be corrected. But bodies at the correct weight still come in all shapes and sizes. Projecting a single ideal body shape for either gender is psychologically damaging because 95% of people will never be physically capable of achieving that body shape. Is there an obesity issue in Ireland? Abso-****ing-lutely. Is it because the media says being fat is cool? Abso-****ing-lutely not.
Stonedpilot wrote: » Yep, we are far worse, in terms of median average head of population. Like random 100 people in America and 100 Irish picked at random Irish will be far fatter.
Boom_Bap wrote: » You're pretty much answering my question with your smart reply. Nobody knows what any body is going through to lead to their appearance which society is hung up about commenting or reacting to.
Stonedpilot wrote: » A genuine question.
LirW wrote: » I said the same thing to my man when I moved here, that it really stands out that there are plenty of obese people around, especially young women and it's sad really. The awareness regarding healthy food and cooking seems to be quite bad here. Knowledge about cooking isn't passed on to kids like other European countries do that, I had long talks about that with my man's family because it fascinated me. What's not entirely Irish is the taboo to point out a person is overweight. You simply don't say to a person that they're obese and it can have bad consequences. While it's okay to bash people for being skinny (especially when their body is their main capital, models for example) you can't point obesity out. I remember watching Project Runway where I think 2 seasons ago a morbidly obese woman won. A lot because of the fact that she designed for plus-size and sent a statement. It was impossible reasoning with her because everything that was said she took as an offence because "I know I'm fat and I was bullied for it my entire life" and this is simply wrong. When you're a cnut it has nothing to do with your weight. I do see though a lot of action that's being taken against obesity. Especially in disadvantaged schools food is a BIG topic. My son attended one and there are a few campaigns for healthy eating also involving the parents. They are encouraged to attend cooking classes to learn how to cook from scratch. Also in his new school food and sports is certainly a topic. It's just the body positivity movement that makes it problematic. Yes we all come in different shapes and sizes. Some people struggle with health problems so they don't really lose weight, we get this, that happens. But there is a certain point where weight isn't healthy anymore, that goes both ways. It's not healthy being so skinny you're not having your period anymore, but neither is being so heavy that you can't stand for 5 minutes nevermind walk. As someone who struggled with an eating disorder I don't get it how you can embrace this without reflecting that it can have permanent effects on your body.
RoisinClare6 wrote: » I'm fat. Am I proud? No Am I working on fixing it. Yes In the process of losing it at the moment. So I'm working on it yet you could see me on the street and start calling me a manatee or what ever when in reality I'm eating quite healthy and walking every day. When you see a fatter person yes some maybe lazy ass scratchers. Some may have thyroid issues, your weight in some thyroid cases can fluctuate by 20lbs some days. Or they are actually in the process of slimming down. So how do you choose which one it is OK to make fun of? From a outside perspective you don't know which one is which. I'm not proud of how big I became to be, honestly I'm not but I'm sure as hell going to get rid of it.
seamus wrote: » "If I just throw random statisticish mathematical words in here, they mightn't realise that I haven't a fncking clue what I'm talking about."