Is it healthy to lose three pounds per week? And is it practical for people to take it so quickly?brimstoneSalad wrote:With diet alone, around 3 lb per week could be possible. With exercise too, rather than extreme dietary restriction, more could be possible.
If you want to lose 100 lb of excess fat, that should take a little over six months. It doesn't take long.
Just like with giving up meat, it's probably better to do it gradually to decrease recidivism.
You just made up a random situation and used it to represent the situation as a whole.brimstoneSalad wrote:There's nothing to disagree with there. It's not an assumption, it's just a statistical fact.
If somebody spends 30 adult years obese, then decides to lose weight in the late 40's, and took six months to lose weight, what are the changes that a random encounter with that person while still significantly overweight were while losing weight?
One in 61. Under a 2% chance.
But most fat people never do lose weight. They live fat and they die fat. The odds, in effect, are far lower than that.
Most fat people aren't in the process of making a legitimate effort to lose weight, but rather yo-yo-ing with absurd fad diets, pills, and quick fixes because they can't be bothered to exercise some impulse control and change what they eat for real.
I have no doubt that many fat people report at any given time that they are "trying" to lose weight, but their 'attempts' are self deception, not weight loss.
Like I said before, it's not rocket science, they just have to eat fewer calories than they burn.

Also, if people think they'd lose weight on fad diets etc., of course they're going to choose those over something more challenging. Why would you choose something more challenging, when you think you can get the same results much easier?
As to the self-deception thing, we read an article in a test for health class that said all people (regardless of weight) are bad at estimating the amount of calories in food.
First of all, you're not encouraging them to be obese by not stigmatizing them. You're just minding your own business.brimstoneSalad wrote:We don't want to encourage people to be obese. It should be viewed negatively, and that's fair: it's not healthy and it's not ethical (waste), and it's a personal choice people make to be fat every single day.
It's not healthy, but your body is your body, and you can't assume that people aren't in the process of change.
There's nothing unethical about being obese; that's why the stigma shouldn't be on obesity. It should be on being wasteful, because that's the only real issue.
It says rare, not profoundly rare.brimstoneSalad wrote:It's a fair assumption when the legitimate diseases that cause obesity are so profoundly rare:
http://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-cond ... n-20014834
When you combine that with the people trying to lose weight, it's not fair to make these kinds of assumptions.
That's a tiny fraction of meat-eaters,brimstoneSalad wrote:Just as if you see somebody eating meat, it's a safe assumption that it isn't road kill that they found, cleaned, and cooked to eat.
Eating disorders don't just go away when you start to lose weight, and they don't even necessarily require you to be overweight in the first place.brimstoneSalad wrote:I understand that. But if somebody is losing weight, there is no reason such a stigma should still affect him or her. If you're losing 3-5 pounds a week, you're pretty far above any of that bullshit because you know in a few months that won't be you anymore. Psychological detachment.
It's not rational, but it's the reality.
What's a choice, that they 'eat their feelings'? So is them getting overweight in the first place, usually. What's your point? We should be concerned with those choices, and try to get people not to engage in them.brimstoneSalad wrote:It's pretty serious. Probably far worse than skinny people shaming them (which does drive them into depression and may result in them eating their feelings, but that's a choice too).
You want to stop people from choosing to be overweight via diet.
You (seemingly) don't care that people choose to be overweight due to your methods of convincing them to lose weight.
...
Also, the depression it might cause is an issue too (which isn't a choice).
It's still adding unnecessary and unreasonable negative.brimstoneSalad wrote: I can tell you that anybody really losing weight is getting compliments around the clock from people who know them (and aren't fellow fat people shaming them) for weight loss. This (which can be identified with) combined with the detachment from the insults since that won't be them anymore soon, very likely makes it a positive experience for anybody in the process of losing weight.
And you can't tell when an overweight person is wasteful.brimstoneSalad wrote:You can't tell when a skinny person is wasteful. If people wore that on them as badges, then it would be more helpful.
I think it's fine, though, if after getting to know overweight people (not just going up to overweight people and doing this), you ask about the state of their body weights (are they trying to lose weight? etc.), and if they are overweight due to diet and don't seem to care, if you then bring up wastefulness and explain why it's harmful.
It's not fine to shame them for being overweight.
Asking them about their weight, and potentially bringing up wastefulness: fine.
Assuming they are wasteful and shaming them for being overweight: unreasonable.
There's a widespread idea that 'fat' people are 'gross' because "ew fat".brimstoneSalad wrote:Why do you think it's considered 'icky'?
I don't think you're substantiating this well, when there are many well known reasons. Some people may think this, but that kind of sentiment can't be upheld long without real reasons to support it.
Like I said, it's not about gluttony (our culture is very consumerist and celebrates gluttony).
I doubt it's significantly out of health concern either.
We don't have universal health care, anyway.brimstoneSalad wrote:And harming your own health isn't without moral consequence when you drag down the economy and social healthcare with your health problems.
Well, you don't 'owe' society anything, and I don't see how it's wasteful. It's still horrible, of course.brimstoneSalad wrote:Suicide is less harmful, but again, still wasteful and abandoning your responsibility to society.
I don't know, but it's worth mentioning.brimstoneSalad wrote:How much are generic thyroid medications? Are you certain these are not covered under medicare?
We don't have a Medicare for all system.
We might if we elect Bernie Sanders...

I don't think it's as small as you make it out to be.brimstoneSalad wrote:No, it isn't. I don't think you fully grasp the rarity of this.
You can't give people the benefit of the doubt when the doubt is so astronomically small that it basically means you can't ever blame anybody for anything ever -- no matter how much evidence, because the evidence might be wrong.
I don't know about that.brimstoneSalad wrote:It's not at all like that. The correlations are several orders of magnitude removed.
That's the point you're advocating, but that picture alone doesn't really demonstrate anything without context.brimstoneSalad wrote:You'd have to check the link, I don't know where it is, I just noted the article when I found it. The point is that everything about manspreading is taking it too far.
Maybe somebody would be to his right if he wasn't spreading out so much.brimstoneSalad wrote:Not obviously, no. There's nobody to his right, and he's not touching that woman to his left (although the camera angle makes it look like it).

That's a very bizarre way of framing the question.brimstoneSalad wrote:Why is having standards bad?
I'm saying that having snobby and superficial standards when it comes to judging people in the way you're describing (as 'bums' or as people who are 'socially acceptable'- concepts that I also think are snobby) are bad.
I'm not saying there's anything inherently wrong with standards as a concept.
The criticism of 'extreme' political correctness didn't include the stuff about mens' rights issues?brimstoneSalad wrote:The criticism missed the other side. If it were more complete, you would have to explain why the other side is different and why doesn't affect the evaluation.
Yeah, political correctness is less focused on those issues, generally. That's bad, but it really doesn't have anything to do with this.