• @Rachelhazideas@lemmy.world
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    4918 days ago

    Yes, let’s blame it on moral failure rather than the destruction of walkable spaces, endangering as many outdoor spaces as possible with 3-ton emotional support vehicles, portion sizes at restaurants and grocery stores that are double of other countries because going anywhere requires committing to driving 15mins both ways and parking, and having fuck all for a health care system.

    • @ZILtoid1991@lemmy.world
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      3618 days ago

      Don’t forget putting sugar/HFCS into everything (in Hungary, we call them cookies), and the toxic gymbro culture of “everything or nothing” mentality when it comes to sports/workout.

    • Boomer Humor Doomergod
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      317 days ago

      Or we could blame it on a food industry that soaked up all the researchers and marketers who got unemployed when we cracked down on cigarette advertising

    • @DontMakeMoreBabies@lemm.ee
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      17 days ago

      People are, for the most part, stupid and/or* lazy.

      So they’ve gotten fat.

      “Walkable spaces!! 😭😭”

      🙄

      • @Soup@lemmy.world
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        717 days ago

        Yes, and stupid and lazy people don’t want walkable spaces. Neither, it seems, do you. Curious.

        • skulblaka
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          117 days ago

          Because not every metabolism is built equally? I ate like shit and barely exercised for 10 years working as a programmer and my weight stuck at 180lb/82kg the entire time. Nowadays I get a lot more exercise and still eat like shit and weigh 170. My buddy watches his food intake properly and takes a walk every day, and he’ll gain 10 pounds just by looking at a tray of cookies, bounces over and under the 200lb mark constantly.

          • @BuckenBerry@lemmy.world
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            16 days ago

            Your individual anecdotes are irrelevant. We can see obesity started to increase worldwide in the 1950s, especially in America.

            There are other causes but it was partially due to the rise of more heavily processed foods.

            We can, broadly speaking, link obesity to a person’s economic status, as having the time to exercise and prepare/purchase healthier foods is a luxury.

            We can also link this to the ris of car dependent cities as people walked less.

            Countries with more regulation against unhealthy food and more walkable infrastructure have less obesity.

            Blaming obesity on laziness is just short-sided.