Your Friends Make You Fat…Not!
July 27, 2007
The newest tidbits of expertise on obesity from one segment of the medical world published in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) (vol 357, 370-379, 2007) are, not surprisingly, painfully flawed and guilty of the same underlying prejudice against fat people that plagues the medical community in general. If you break down their findings, two dangerous messages come across loud and clear:
1. Being around fat people will increase your chances of getting fat, so you better not hang out with fat people; and
2. If you’re fat, you’re going to lose all your friends if you don’t lose weight, so you better get thin as soon as possible!
Even the Chicago Sun-Times had a problem with the new research in this article. They concluded that the NEJM research “may also contribute to prejudice against overweight people.” I agree.
The new research hangs on that blemish of science, the Body Mass Index (BMI), which has never been an indicator of health and the research also makes sweeping generalizations about social networking influencing eating habits.
Common sense always provides answers where research fails, because research can be influenced by the researchers’ assumptions and prejudices.
Common sense says your friends don’t make choices for you. You decide what what you want to do with your life, even if you decide to agree to what your friends suggest you do. The assumption the medical community wants you to make is that all fat people make poor food choices and overeat with abandon, so you’d better get away from their social influence or by gum, they’ll make you lazy, ugly and stupid, too!
It’s a silly assumption but too many doctors and medical professionals make leaps of logic like that every day.
Common sense says everyone is an individual and individuals make individual choices. It may be hard for some people to understand but people of all shapes and sizes can be fit, eat healthy and be productive and active members of society. By the same reasoning, people of ALL shapes and sizes (including thin ones) can also lack fitness, have un-healthy habits and not be productive and active members of society. For some reason, some people don’t like to hear that — but it’s the truth.
Common sense says that you choose your friends based on whether they’re good friends or not.
There’s another term for choosing your friends based on appearance…it’s called “discrimination.”
New PODWOM: Paul Delacroix Interview
July 24, 2007
PODWOM - Podcast Without Measure
http://www.podwom.com
RSS Feed - http://feeds.feedburner.com/Podwom
The theme of this PODWOM Show is “An Hour With Paul Delacroix.” This show is 57 minutes long (54 MB download) and covers everything from Paul’s founding of the Middlefaire Renaissance Festival (now in it’s second year) to his now famous art of BBWs and upcoming comic book art to size acceptance and discrimination to the future role of the internet in society!
Some may wonder, what is a podcast? Essentially, it is an internet-based broadcast using the MP3 format. Podcasts can also be subscribed to and downloaded to portable MP3 players like iPods.
PODWOM is the abbreviation for Podcast Without Measure, the podcast edition of Without Measure (WOM), the official electronic magazine for the International Size Acceptance Association (ISAA).
Like WOM, each segment will reflect a different element of interest concerning size acceptance, Respect Fitness Health, science, fashion, current events and much more.
PODWOM’s aim is to present each segment in an entertaining and informative way, made available in downloadable MP3 format.
I hope you enjoy the show and please give us feedback via the website at http://www.podwom.com