Besides the fact that the woman obviously has very LITTLE body fat. She is quite thin actually. Look at her stomach!
She is not the kind of fat blob that we are discussing here.
This is the kind of shit we are talking about . . . this is the kind of shit you see EVERYWHERE nowadays.
So then it is about appearance rather than health. After all obese is obese correct? not one looking fit and muscled and the other a tub of lard of both are obese
Obesity CAUSES bad health. How big are some of those girls going to be in 20 years if they don't start dieting and exercising? They are going to be HUMUNGOUS, and their high cholesterol, bad hearts, diabetes, etc., etc., are going to put our health care system into the shitter.
You are posting photo of fat people only and commenting. Thankfully you only serve in a support position in the medical field and not actually administering patients for their health needs.
That is what you see nowadays everywhere. To try and convince anyone that is healthy or NOT bad for your health is nothing but a blatant lie.
That is not my point, your selection of examples is.
Childhood obesity is considered an epidemic in America.
http://www.apa.org/pi/families/resources/newsletter/2012/07/childhood-obesity.aspx
We have not always been a nation in the midst of an obesity epidemic. In the 1960s and 1970s only 13 percent of U.S. adults and 5 to 7 percent of U.S. children were obese. Today, 17 percent of our children, 32 percent of adult males, and 36 percent of adult females are obese. Although obesity has increased across all racial and ethnic groups, it affects some groups more than others. Black (50 percent) and Hispanic women (45 percent) have the highest adult obesity rates. Among children, Black adolescent girls (29 percent) and Mexican-American adolescent boys (27 percent) are most affected (Flegal, Carroll, Ogden, & Curtin, 2010; Ogden & Carroll, 2010a, 2010b).
Obesity kills; it is now the second leading cause of death in the U.S.and is likely to become the first (Mokdad, Marks, Stroup, & Gerberding, 2004). Unless this epidemic is successfully addressed, life expectancy will actually decline in the U.S. (Olshansky et al., 2005). Not only do obese individuals die earlier, but their quality of life is severely compromised; they are far more likely to suffer from diabetes and its complications — kidney failure, blindness, leg amputations — as well as stroke, breast and colorectal cancer, osteoarthritis and depression (Jebb, 2004).
Obesity often begins in childhood and is linked to psychological problems, asthma, diabetes and cardiovascular risk factors in childhood. Because many obese children grow up to become obese adults, childhood obesity is strongly linked to mortality and morbidity in adulthood (Reilly et al., 2003). Because obesity disproportionately affects certain racial and ethnic minority groups in both child and adult populations, it underlies many of the health disparities facing our nation.
This rapid increase in obesity is not the product of changing biology or genes; it is the product of an obesogenic environment that promotes inactivity and overeating. How did this happen? As a society, we have changed the types and quantities of food we eat, reduced physical activity, and engaged in more passive leisure-time pursuits.