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Shame On You Fatty
 Moderated by: Nir  
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JSABD
Distinguished Member


Joined: 10 Apr 2011
Location: Blimpville, USA
Posts: 874
 Posted: 8 Aug 2013 09:21 pm
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Several years ago, one of the best-loved theme parks in the world shut down a classic ride so it could make some adjustments: People had become so obese that the ride?σΤιΌΤδσs boats were scraping the bottom.

How would obese patrons feel if, in front of hundreds, they were required to stand in a different queue?σΤιΌΤΗΨone simply marked ?σΤιΌ?τObese Riders Here?σΤιΌ?Ψ? And instead of meeting just a height requirement, theme park guests were also forced to meet a ?σΤιΌ?τwidth?σΤιΌ?Ψ criteria.

Or when boarding an airplane, fat people would be called separately so they could sit in extra-wide seats, for which they pay double?

And what if stadiums had a section of reinforced double-wide seats where obese folks were required to sit?

Unfortunately, our country doesn?σΤιΌΤδσt go for such options, which is truly a shame.
And that?σΤιΌΤδσs precisely the problem. There is no shame.

In genuflecting to political correctness, America shuns shame.
It has become a nation so afraid to offend that it turns a blind to its biggest problems, such as obesity. And that problem is burgeoning. Two-thirds of Americans are overweight or obese, and a staggering percentage of our children?σΤιΌΤΗΨour future?σΤιΌΤΗΨare growing up (and out) with little regard for how this epidemic will impact them. In this regard, some medical experts have predicted that our children may be the first generation to have a shorter life expectancy than their parents. For many, they are the product of their environment, where parents (many obese themselves) and society as a whole have sent the message that being fat is no ?σΤιΌ?τbig?σΤιΌ?Ψ deal. The stigma once rightly associated with obesity is disappearing as quickly as fat is accumulating.

So how do we get to the bottom of this problem? For starters, shame. Because no matter what else is attempted, if shame is not the cornerstone of the solution, the situation will never improve.
*****
Two fantastic and courageous examples of how shame is being effectively utilized are occurring in Georgia and Minnesota. In Atlanta, an extensive advertising campaign ?σΤιΌ?τStop Sugarcoating It,?σΤιΌ?Ψ sponsored by Children?σΤιΌΤδσs Healthcare, targets childhood obesity. Taglines under obese children include ?σΤιΌ?τWarning ?σΤιΌ?ͺ It?σΤιΌΤδσs hard to be a little girl if you?σΤιΌΤδσre not?σΤιΌ?Ψ; ?σΤιΌ?τBeing fat takes the fun out of being a kid?σΤιΌ?Ψ; and ?σΤιΌ?τBig Bones Didn?σΤιΌΤδσt Make Me This Way ?σΤιΌ?ͺ Big Meals Did.?σΤιΌ?Ψ There was also a YouTube ad with a sad girl saying, ?σΤιΌ?τI don?σΤιΌΤδσt like going to school, because all the other kids pick on me. It hurts my feelings.?σΤιΌ?Ψ

Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Minnesota has launched a similar campaign, targeting overweight parents whose behavior is often mimicked by their children. One ad shows two chubby boys arguing about whose dad can eat more?σΤιΌΤΗΨa discussion overheard by a father as he approaches their table with a heaping tray of fast food. Another shows an obese woman filling her shopping cart with junk food, only to notice that her obese daughter is doing the exact same thing with a smaller cart.

Both campaigns use shame correctly. Without being mean-spirited or over the top, they prod people to acknowledge, and change, their unhealthy behavior. Not surprisingly, though, both have something else in common: They?σΤιΌΤδσve received significant criticism from the waistline-challenged community. Their biggest beef? It?σΤιΌΤδσs not education, but shaming, which, of course is ?σΤιΌ?τbullying.?σΤιΌ?Ψ
They simply don?σΤιΌΤδσt get it.

Shaming isn?σΤιΌΤδσt the total panacea, but it must be an integral part of the solution. There?σΤιΌΤδσs no better example of how shame can change perceptions than smoking, which was once considered cool but is now viewed with utter disdain. Sure, cigarettes are expensive, but that?σΤιΌΤδσs not why smoking is down. It?σΤιΌΤδσs because society made a conscious effort to shame smokers. Try lighting up in a bar with co-workers, and you receive dagger-like stares. Do it outside, and people immediately move away, because smoking is regarded as disgusting, and therefore, the smoker must be, too.

Smoking kills, and we have no problem pointing out that as a deterrent. Yet so does obesity, and we still hesitate to mention it. Just as non-smokers are picking up the tab for the massive medical costs related to smoking, non-overweight people are subsidizing the obese since it is ?σΤιΌ?τdiscriminatory?σΤιΌ?Ψ to charge differently for health care (though a section of the Affordable Care Act would change that).

But shaming is now taboo, and no one is ever at fault or accountable for his actions. Consider:

?σΤιΌ?σ It used to be, when a student received a detention, they weren?σΤιΌΤδσt just shamed in front of their classmates. They knew they had to tell their parents, which would invariably trigger another punishment.

Contrast that to the reaction this week to a New Jersey principal?σΤιΌΤδσs letter to parents about pictures of their underage children on Facebook holding alcohol bottles.

Instead of thanking the principal for bringing that situation to their attention, a number of parents ripped him.

?σΤιΌ?σ Airlines have attempted to charge double for obese passengers whose girth extends beyond the armrests. While this is clearly commonsense, since not doing so penalizes paying passengers of normal weight, such policies are met with scorn and even lawsuits by those lobbying for obesity-without-consequence.

?σΤιΌ?σ And since it would be considered ?σΤιΌ?τdiscriminatory?σΤιΌ?Ψ to have an obese-only section in stadiums, seats are being made wider to accommodate overly plump posteriors. And when seats are wider, there are fewer of them. Who pays? You do. The same way that the non-obese eat the cost of new toilets that must be installed with ground supports, as the standard wall-mounted commodes can no longer bear the weight of America?σΤιΌΤδσs fat brigade.

We have coddled ourselves so much that we have shamed using shame. As a result, people have become clueless to their appearance. Sure, what?σΤιΌΤδσs under the skin matters, and no one should feel that obese people are bad, but what?σΤιΌΤδσs on the outside counts, too. Or at least it should. But go to any beach, and count how many linebacker-sized women are showcasing themselves in bikinis. Ditto for men whose guts reach the next block. Since they all have mirrors, one can only assume that shame is simply not a part of their lives.

Should we have scarlet letters for the obese? Of course not, since there is no problem identifying them. But we should employ shame to shed light on an issue that affects us all, in the same way that some judges order drunk drivers to place ?σΤιΌ?τConvicted DUI?σΤιΌ?Ψ bumper stickers on their cars.

And speaking of cars, how shameful is it that overweight people are not just guzzling food, but fuel? A recent report calculated that one billion gallons of gasoline are wasted every year (one percent of the nation?σΤιΌΤδσs total) just to haul Americans?σΤιΌΤδσ extra pounds. And given that the average American weighs 24 more pounds than in 1960, airlines are using roughly 175 million more gallons of jet fuel per year just to accommodate the overweight. That?σΤιΌΤδσs downright shameful.

And if not shame, then what? Do we tax fast food? Soda? Candy? Do we regulate portion size? No. Not only are such ideas preposterous and unenforceable, but they are tactics, not strategy. It?σΤιΌΤδσs time to tip the scales against obesity and solve the problem.

Otherwise, we will soon find out that the ?σΤιΌ?τelephant in the room?σΤιΌ?Ψ isn?σΤιΌΤδσt a pachyderm at all.

:pig:It?σΤιΌΤδσs an average American.
 http://blogs.phillymag.com/the_philly_post/2012/10/12/solve-americas-obesity-problem-shame/

EAT EAT EAT YOU BIG FAT LOSERS!

Last edited on 8 Aug 2013 09:24 pm by JSABD

Nir
Senior Administrator


Joined: 11 Jan 2006
Location: Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire, United Kingdom
Posts: 11761
 Posted: 8 Aug 2013 11:24 pm
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In January 2006 I had the idea of using shame to better myself

Nir's Diary of Shame
Excuses for eating the wrong things when I should know better
I always seem to have an excuse for side-stepping healthy eating in favour of whatever comes along. Maybe logging my mistakes here will help me, one way or another!
forum55/953.html


I can't say that this is was a smooth ride but basically worked :smile:

JSABD
Distinguished Member


Joined: 10 Apr 2011
Location: Blimpville, USA
Posts: 874
 Posted: 9 Aug 2013 01:09 am
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Nir wrote: In January 2006 I had the idea of using shame to better myself

Nir's Diary of Shame
Excuses for eating the wrong things when I should know better
I always seem to have an excuse for side-stepping healthy eating in favour of whatever comes along. Maybe logging my mistakes here will help me, one way or another!
forum55/953.html


I can't say that this is was a smooth ride but basically worked :smile:

This is about taking responsibility.

The fatties that lose weight do it for their family. Gluttons are selfish and egoistic. We see it here with their over use of personal pronouns.

I ME MY LIE DENY and CRY. Get fat and ask why?

?σΤιΌ?τBig bones didn?σΤιΌΤδσt make gluttons this way ?σΤιΌ?ͺ big meals did.?σΤιΌ?Ψ

Last edited on 9 Aug 2013 01:17 am by JSABD

Diet Coach
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Joined: 27 Jan 2012
Location:  
Posts: 135
 Posted: 28 Oct 2013 02:59 pm
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Overeating in some cases is not really shameful but for the average run of the mill fatty it is.


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