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Tuesday, July 29, 2008

You Gonna Eat That?

posted by on July 29 at 10:42 AM

walle_movie_image_pixar__1_1.jpg

Humanity is reduced—inflated?—to a bunch of sedentary, passive, tubs-o-lard by the year 2700 or so in Pixar’s Wall•E. It looks like we may not have to wait that long to realize our full-figured potential.

Most adults in the U.S. will be overweight or obese by 2030, with related health care spending projected to be as much as $956.9 billion, according to researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. Their results are published in the July 2008 online issue of Obesity.

RSS icon Comments

1

let the sizeist bigotry flame war commence!

Posted by max solomon | July 29, 2008 10:46 AM
2

i hate fat people

Posted by some of my best friends are fat | July 29, 2008 10:48 AM
3

Maybe if more people rode bicycles instead of bitched about them they wouldn't be fat?

Posted by AMB | July 29, 2008 10:52 AM
4

Bottom line: obesity is a choice and a bad one at that.

Having lost 80+ pounds thru diet and exercise, I hate being around fat people, but there isn't much choice any more now is there?

Lose weight, feel better, be healthier -- and stop whining about it.

Posted by Hartiepie | July 29, 2008 10:52 AM
5

Now, Dan, there's nothing wrong with lard. Tub-o-crisco is much worse.

I just can't imagine a majority of the people around me being overweight or obese. It boggles the mind. But it isn't surprising. I mean, our food supply system is broken. I grew up in the middle of rural Indiana surrounded by corn fields and bean fields. But the idea of eating locally grown foods (vegetables and meat) was almost alien--except for the farm stand that popped up occasionally to provide corn in the summer. And don't even get me started on the carbo-loaded school lunches. The diets of many folks in rural America and inner city America are limited by what's available in their neighborhoods or small towns. That needs to change.

Way to represent, JHUBSPH. For reals.


Posted by Balt-O-Matt | July 29, 2008 10:53 AM
6

Is being gay a choice?

Posted by porkchop | July 29, 2008 10:59 AM
7

bastards. I used to be in the 25th weight percentile, but that just keeps getting pushed down and down. somehow, I feel like my body type shouldn't be as much of an outlier as it is, statistically speaking.

Posted by dbell | July 29, 2008 11:01 AM
8

Of course, people who are merely overweight, not obese, are healthier than skinny people, but don't let that stop you.

Posted by keshmeshi | July 29, 2008 11:03 AM
9

From the article: "more than 86 percent of adults will be overweight or obese by 2030".

Holy Smokes, that's a lot of people!

I come from a long line of short round midwestern farm folk. Good people. But round. And they tend to have heart attacks around age 55. And I was round until age 19 or so. Lost 80lbs. And I haven't looked back. For me it's mostly about exercise and not eating a lot of processed foods/pop/etc. That's not the case for lots of large folks, but exercise works for me.

Let's just assume that for SOME large people, it's difficult to lose weight. But look at that stat up there--86%! That's not some massive genetic shift in the American populace. My guess is that in large part it's just poor food choices and lack of exercise.

Posted by Balt-O-Matt | July 29, 2008 11:07 AM
10

I propose a 20 cent per pound tax on the obese. I actually think the per pound airfare makes sense, too. I refuse to believe that overweight people aren't responsible for their condition. Stop eating crappy food, drinking big gulps, sitting on your ass, and blaming some outside force on your weight condition. I'm sick of the whining.

Posted by try harder | July 29, 2008 11:13 AM
11

It's hard to judge what is fat...I mean, the average healthy body fat for women is up to 25%, but if you are over 15% most people think you are fat.

Which sucks.

Posted by Original Monique | July 29, 2008 11:13 AM
12

Survival of the fittest is what I like to believe!

Posted by Miss Piggy | July 29, 2008 11:15 AM
13

I sit her eating my flax waffles with SBL (smart bal light) and sugar free boison berry jam with a neener neener look on my face.

To be tall and lean in an obese country is so gratifying.

Posted by Non | July 29, 2008 11:15 AM
14

That's why they're a bargain to treat at $956.9 billion!

Posted by Greg | July 29, 2008 11:16 AM
15

I thought most adults in the US were already overweight or obese. Weird.

Posted by ams | July 29, 2008 11:29 AM
16

You know what really makes it hit home is to travel abroad and then return to the U.S. From the moment you land in an American airport, it's a *very* striking difference. I will add that the UK is not too far behind.

@5, add to that that most space in grocery stores is given over to pre-packaged "food" consisting of corn syrup, sugar and starch. There is just no way that you can eat that junk, plus sit behind a computer all day and drive everywhere, and not gain weight. I know, 'cuz I was there once, and in our society it takes some serious effort to keep weight off. Most of us have sedentary jobs, restaurants serve gigantic portions, and there is corn syrup in absolutely everything.

Corn syrup, people, is the devil.

Posted by rb | July 29, 2008 11:30 AM
17

Yep, in 2004 a full 66% of american adults were overweight or obese. That is.. ahem... a majority.
source:
http://www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/dnpa/obesity/faq.htm

Posted by ams | July 29, 2008 11:32 AM
18

I'm eating crap, getting no exercise, and sitting behind a desk all day. So I'm getting kinda fat.

Posted by Greg | July 29, 2008 12:11 PM
19

Growing up in Montana of all places when I was growing up I was embarassed by my parents being lard asses. But now, they both seem pretty much average in size.

And yeah, being fat is a choice people. Deal with it!

Posted by Just Me | July 29, 2008 12:26 PM
20

Ho-hum, another Slog fat-bashing post. So, ho-hum, my obligatory response: I am fat. I am exceptionally healthy. I am unable to lose weight without dramatic starvation coupled with multiple hours of exercise daily. I have better things to do with my life, considering that if said dramatic regimens are lessened (been there before), the pounds I lose will not only come back, but will come back in multiples. BTDT. Got the T-shirt, XXL this time around. If I had just been happy with 25 pounds overweight in younger years, I wouldn't be here now, but I'll be damned if I'll let 75 pounds become 100. It's genetics, kids. Much as you refuse to believe it. Flame me if you want, I won't be back to read it. I'm the one who goes to the doctor once every three years (if that) while my skinny friends are in and out every month.

Posted by fat does not equal unhealthy | July 29, 2008 12:27 PM
21

New studies are showing that environmental exposures interact with the epigenome to affect long term health and disease. There is a possibility that underweight babies change their metabolisms to adapt to a starvation environment. This adaptation goes seriously wrong in a real world environment of plenty and can lead to overweight adults. We are witnessing an evolutionary adaption to diet and premature births, people. Now let’s stop blaming the guinea pigs and start looking for a solution.

Posted by who cares what I call myself | July 29, 2008 12:45 PM
22
Posted by who cares what I call myself | July 29, 2008 12:47 PM
23

That Wall•E! It's the best.

Posted by elenchos | July 29, 2008 2:46 PM
24

#21 has an interesting spin on it being too hard to lose weight.

Not only is it too hard, the weight comes back ~with a vengance~ so he or she isn't going to try any more.

And their classification of starving themselves is probably still more food than a healthy individual would need.

The rationalizing and excusing truly reminds me of the behaviors of addicts.

Posted by Non | July 29, 2008 3:59 PM
25

Good rebuttal #24:

Just when I think I've seen it all, I happened to be returning to Tacoma on bus 594 when an obese woman that obviously had trouble walking (apparent by her double-wide walker/two-ton seat arrived at 2nd & University. I thought she would just get on the bus and sit in a seat, but noooo, she had to use the fucking LIFT to get on the damn bus. Of course, this also meant SIX FUCKING SEATS were automatically taken by this lard ass on a bus that was already full. SIX PEOPLE had to get up just for her - I don't know how she lives with herself. I would feel horrible if I took the place of six people on public transportation.

Stop eating shitty food, count your calories. Yes, your stomach may grumble...suck it up.

Posted by Layton | July 29, 2008 5:44 PM
26

Fat? Blame your 1950s-plus tract/suburban neigborhood:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/25890997/

"A new study found that the year your neighborhood was built may be just as important as diet and exercise for shedding pounds. Those who live in neighborhoods built before 1950 are trimmer than their counterparts who reside in more modern communities, the study reported.

“The older neighborhoods had a reduced level of obesity because they were generally built with the pedestrian in mind and not cars,” said Ken Smith, a co-author of the study and professor in the department of family and consumer studies at the University of Utah. “This means they have trees, sidewalks and offer a pleasant environment in which to walk.”"

Posted by emma's bee | July 29, 2008 5:52 PM
27

Non, I think you should patent your Diagnosis-over-IP (DOIP) device and sell it to doctors as a cost-saving mechanism. WebMD could make a killing as an actual Web M.D.!

Posted by AnonymousCoward | July 29, 2008 6:19 PM
28

Fat adults started as fat kids.

Turn off the TV, the Wii, the X Box, AND the computer you are currently sitting on your ass in front of, and chase the kids outside to ride a bike, or swim a lap, or just walk around the freakin' block. When I was a kid, my friends and I lived outside, on our bikes, at the park, and not just in the summer, either. In the winter, you could find us sledding and skating until our feet froze. My best friend's kids sit in the house, playing on their DS or the computer, or the Wii. And big surprize, they are fat.

How about a salad instead of a Big Mac? When my daughter says she's hungry, I offer her an apple or a banana, or rice cakes. Chips and candy are occasional treats, not a staple. I buy the Thinsations for her lunches, and they are only for lunches. Again, my best friend, who is grossly overweight, has no fresh fruit or vegetables in her house. Meals are carb heavy, tons of bread, rice, potatoes, and no vegetables.

And for god's sake, get out of the god damn car! My best friend, again, drives to the drive through to get her double double (Canadian term for Tim Horton's coffee with double cream, double sugar). She can't walk the 6 blocks. Get out of your cars. Your body, and the earth will thank you. Come to think of it, considering the cost of gas these days, so will your wallet.

Healthy living and eating right. These are not new ideas, and no secret. We have to stop looking for a magic pill, and teach our children healthy eating habits, and healthy lifestyle choices.

And yes, I'm not fat, but my whole family is. I'm the thinnest in a long line of aunts and uncles and parents and grandparents. I'm the only one without a car, who doesn't have the cable hooked up on her TV, and who doesn't live at McDonalds.

Posted by Charm | July 30, 2008 7:46 AM
29

It's easy... if it says "high-fructose corn-syrup" on the label then don't eat/drink it.

Posted by monkey | July 30, 2008 9:25 AM

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