I keep on hearing fat acceptance often. All I know is that it’s common among libs.

Idk how to react aside from cringe

  • DankZedong A
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    4 months ago

    It’s not so much fat acceptance but rather just accepting people who happen to be fat as valid human beings instead of seeing them as less than perfect. Because they are valid people. Sure we need to promote healthy living as well but we don’t have to look down on people who do anything less than looking like a MCU character on steroids.

  • DamarcusArt
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    4 months ago

    The idea is supposed to be “don’t be a shithead to fat people, acting like an asshole to them doesn’t help them lose weight and gain self-confidence” but for some reason that morphed into a kind of “If you say anything negative about a fat person ever, you’ll be accused of being the worst person ever.” Though at the same time, this is mainly just one of those conservatives worrying way, way too much about a tiny group of people who no one would’ve ever heard about had they not gotten so mad at them existing.

  • lorty
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    4 months ago

    I’m old enough to remember when shitting on fat people for literally no reason was not only common but the butt of a bunch of jokes. Reddit even had a community where people took sneak pics of fat people going about their business just to say the most vile things to them for having the audacity to leave their homes.

    I feel a lot of the early body positivity/anti-fat shaming movement was a response to this sort of online discourse that helps no one and just spreads hate. Them it evolved into this “I’m fat and healthy” thing we have nowadays, that itself does a lot of harm.

  • porous_grey_matter@lemmy.ml
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    4 months ago

    It’s some of what other commenters have said, but also, a lot of the “science” about the dangers of being fat are based on extremely shonky statistics. While it’s probably true that being extremely fat is quite bad, the evidence for being a bit overweight being bad is actually extremely weak. BMI in particular is completely made up nonsense. Combine that with the fact that doctors won’t take real health complaints seriously when they think people are overweight, and that fat people are paid less for the same work, etc, and you end up with another very effective method of class oppression - rich people can get lipo, steroids and ozempic and poor people are looked down on for being fat like it’s their fault even though the fact that it’s the majority of people shows it’s something wrong with the whole societal food supply, transport infrastructure, etc.

      • porous_grey_matter@lemmy.ml
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        4 months ago

        Haha, I should have thought about that. I’m from New Zealand, it’s a pretty normal word here which means something like untrustworthy, crooked, janky, badly done. I assume Australia has it too and at a guess I’d say the Brits might also but I’m not sure about that.

  • Comradesexual
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    4 months ago

    Weight issues are inherently capitalistic. There is no adequate access to healthcare, including mental healthcare. Cities (for the most part) aren’t built with walking and cycling in mind as the only means of transporting oneself to everything you may need on a frequent basis.

    I’ve been vegan for many years. I cycle and walk. I haven’t not been overweight since puberty which started at the ripe age of 5 for me. I don’t smoke, don’t do drugs, don’t drink alcohol. Even if I wanted to eat junk food, my choice is limited by both veganism and my economic standing. I got bullied for being overweight into starving myself to a point where I was fainting. I still never got to a healthy weight.

    Apparently current BMI “overweight” category can also be healthier than below:

    https://www.newscientist.com/article/2381121-having-an-overweight-bmi-may-not-lead-to-an-earlier-death/

    A large US study has found that being overweight but not obese carried a slightly lower risk of dying within the study period than being a supposedly healthy weight

    If you mind the sight of fat people, you’ve all the more reason to fight for communism, so we get access to healthcare and proper city planing.

    • Muad'DibberA
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      4 months ago

      Spot on. My family is from a rural area in the US, and every one of them is overweight and suffering from a myriad of health-related problems from that. It’s really not their fault, they’re encouraged to eat and live incredibly unhealthy lifestyles (massive carnist consumption, forced to drive rather than walk to get anywhere), then sell them more symptoms-treatments at their doctor, rather than finding the root causes, and making sure they don’t re-arise (what marxistst usually preface with reproduction)

      Knee and joint replacements, heart disease, and diabetes are all affecting my immediate family.

      Several massive industries are devoted to advertising and selling unhealthy products, then killing them, with no-one doing anything about it.

  • darkcalling
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    4 months ago

    There’s being an asshole and bullying and shaming people for sadistic pleasure or out of some fascist idea of them being inferior and then there’s not upholding any standards or aspirations of human health and instantly incinerating anyone who suggests people should be healthy, shouldn’t eat half a package of oreos every night, should exercise, that most people with a good diet and exercise that results in a healthy BMI will have a happier life, a higher quality of life, a longer life, etc. There are some amount of people obviously who have some conditions that make this more of a challenge. But encouraging that aforementioned healthy lifestyle while offering some understanding (but not justification) for stressors under capitalism leading to unhealthy bodies, weights, habits, etc is the right course of action.

    A comradely hand up and encouragement not a derisive laugh and a shove to the ground basically is my feelings on it.