So there was a recent post of some right wingers standing next to a ballot box to intimidate voters. This is clearly bad. They also made questionable aesthetic choices, like wearing dad cargo-shorts and growing goatees. This is also clearly bad.

So, what did Chapeau.Chat focus on? The weight of these men of course!

Let's start with the basics:

--Everyone has a range of weights their body is comfortable at. If you try to go too low or too high in this range, your body will start sending your hunger and satiety signals to keep you within that range. While you can go higher or lower in that range by manipulating Calories-in-calories-out, this range is fairly fixed without medical intervention. In other words, some people are just fat.

--There are other uncontrollable factors that effect weight. In Texas, for example, there are fewer walk-able neighborhoods and more access to fast food than here in Portland where there are more new-seasons than mcDonalds or Manhattan where it's easier to take the train than to drive.

--Socially, weight is co-constructed with fitness and self-control. In the protestant value system (the dominant one in the U.S. even among atheists), self control is one of the most important virtues. Fat implies unfit implies poor self control. Thin implies fit implies good self control.

Protestant morality is, here, at odds with reality. Weight here is co-produced by environment, hormones, eating habits and movement habits. All of those things are only partially under our control, and a Portlander is always going to have an easier time being thin than an Austintonian. Moralizing weight the way this community did celebrates protestant morality over basic reality.

As communists, we are better than that.

Call them fascists, make fun of their ugly beards, offer to shoplift them better shorts, but don't fat-shame them.

  • KnilAdlez [none/use name]
    ·
    2 years ago

    The obesity epidemic is caused by corn :corn-man-khrush: and I will fucking die on this hill. Corn growth was encouraged heavily in the 1970's by Nixon's USDA and was and is subsidized by the government. This is when obesity really started to jump. This cheap corn has lead to it being used as cheap feed for animals making factory farms profitable flooding the US market with cheap, low quality meat. Moreover corn is put directly in peoples mouths with things like cheap corn based food, such as chips, as well as cheap sweetener with high fructose corn syrup. This is what's making us fat, and I'd be willing to bet that almost any study that says otherwise or suggests any alternative is funded by agribusiness.

    Moreover, all this corn farming is bad for the soil (it's what caused the dust bowl) and CAFOs are one of the biggest polluters in the world, and horribly mistreats animals (even if you're not :im-vegan: I think we can all agree that it's still bad to do). It's not just bad for our bodies, but for our planet and needs to be stopped.

    • Nagarjuna [he/him]
      hexagon
      ·
      2 years ago

      I absolutely agree that industrial corn farming is a key factor. I do not want to ignore other factors like car infrastructure, fast food advertising, obesogens, etc. Most social phenomena are co-produced.

    • 7bicycles [he/him]
      ·
      2 years ago

      The drive through is also a product of the 70s and I'm genuinely convinced it did its part