I'm so grateful to the engagement with the sources last week, you're all awesome!

In part one, the pieces were more identity focused, today I'm posting for specific facets of fatphobia that may be of interest.

As a reminder, these fall in the area of Fat Studies and there's some norms you should be aware of:

  • "fat" is taken as a neutral descriptor, think of it as reclaiming the word.
  • "obese" arbitrarily medicalises fatness and Others fat people

On capitalism and food

https://www.dropbox.com/s/kuqdcayyxt0ifax/Between%20Obesity%20and%20Hunger.pdf?dl=0


On fat and gender

https://www.dropbox.com/s/ir5f7nyn5a5y180/part-time%20fatso.pdf?dl=0


On fat representation in the media

https://www.vulture.com/2018/07/guy-branum-wants-to-see-more-real-fat-people-on-tv.html


On the "Health at Every Size" movement

https://www.dropbox.com/s/ybfbkqak4wtu3wp/What%20is%20%22Health%20at%20Every%20Size%22%3F.pdf?dl=0


:sankara-salute:

👉 Part 3 is up

  • Doomer [comrade/them,any]
    ·
    3 years ago

    I gotta say I really disagreed with the whole joy of movement part at first. It doesn't seem so bad as an idea, I don't think it's as good an idea as regular excercise though.

    The human body needs excercise to be healthy. Some animals can get away with lying ecased in mud for weeks and weeks but not us. We've just evolved to be that way. I get that it's really hard for some people to get motivated especially if they are sedintary but unless you're somebody with extremely high needs I don't think going for a walk in the morning or doing a plank once a day even though that isn't what you want to do is going to do more harm than good.

    Obviously not everyone can get the excercise their body requires every day right away but they can work their way up to it.

  • ciaplant667 [he/him,fae/faer]
    ·
    3 years ago

    I remember growing up, when both my parents were working full time, we rarely had home cooked meals. Frozen pizza, Mac and cheese, McDonald’s etc. We were on free/reduced lunch program in middle school. All that bullshit processed stuff turned me and all my brothers chubby, and definitely contributed to the body dysphoria I still experience today.

    • Doomer [comrade/them,any]
      ·
      3 years ago

      Same for me. I didn't start feeling good about my body until I was no longer relying on my parents for food.

  • carlin [he/him,comrade/them]
    hexagon
    ·
    edit-2
    3 years ago

    Here's some of my excerpts from the first article:

    Cheap food is important to capitalism because it allows wages to be lower (and thus profits to be higher) and yet leave workers with more disposable income available to buy other commodities.

    In 2005 alone the US government spent over $20 billion in agricultural subsidies (46 per cent of this went for corn production, 23 per cent for cotton, 10 per cent for wheat, and 6 per cent for soybeans). The largest 10 per cent of the farms got 72 per cent of the subsidies and 60 per cent of all farms got no subsidy at all. For the most part, fruit and vegetable crops received no subsidies, and the same could be said for most small and medium sized farms. In short, the subsidy program rewards the large yields that result from very large, highly industrialized farms.

    the US taste for Coca-Cola was first chorused in the theatre of the Second World War. The drink itself wasn’t given away during the conflict, but General Marshall went to great lengths to make sure that it was freely available to buy wherever US troops were stationed. The Coca-Cola Company was exempted from sugar rationing [Pepsi was not] so that it might produce a drink that came, for US soldiers, to signify the very lifeblood of the country.

    McDonalds and other fast food chains utilize sets of toys made by children in China to entice American children to want to come back repeatedly in order to complete their set. The hunger and exploitation of children in one part of the world feeds ‘the toxic food environment’ offered children in another part

    Why is it that the term ‘obesity epidemic’ has wide currency and ‘starvation epidemic’ does not? One reason is that capitalists would rather not call attention to hunger, because its widespread existence stands in such jarring contrast to the ‘chicken in every pot’ pretensions of capitalism. A second reason is that to medicalise starvation with the term ‘epidemic’ seems out of place in connection with something so obviously connected, except for natural disasters, to institutions of human design. A third reason is that capitalistic rationality dictates profit maximisation, and the ‘starvation sector’ of the economy is not one where profits can be made.

    • CoralMarks [he/him]
      ·
      3 years ago

      Let me add a few from an earlier comment of mine too:

      highlights

      David Pimentel, professor of ecology at Cornell University and a globally recognized expert on food systems and energy, has argued that if the entire world adopted the American food system, all known sources of fossil fuel would be exhausted in seven years.

      Even in the US, capitalism has not entirely subsumed the whole food system, and while there are few places in the world untouched by capital-ism, its degree of hegemony may vary a great deal. Still, up to the present, capitalism has been the single strongest force shaping the global food system, and much of that shaping power has flowed outward from the US.

      Warren Buffet, among the top five richest men in the world, once said: ‘I’ll tell you why I like the cigarette business. It costs a penny to make. Sell it for a dollar. It’s addictive. And there’s fantastic brand loyalty. One could say that the same for sugar. It is very cheap and it produces a craving, and in the case of Pepsi and Coca-Cola there is often strong brand loyalty too—a sure formula for fabulous profits in the food industry.
      [...]
      This is certainly the case with soft drinks, as it is also for most breakfast cereals. For example, the grain in a 12 ounce box of cereal that sells for $3.50 may only cost 25 cents.
      [...]
      on average the potato farmer gets 2 cents out of an order of fries that sells for $1.50.

      Salt itself is not fattening, but it does increase thirst, which in the US is very often slaked by high calorie soft drinks or beer. Further, salt contributes to high blood pressure, a major risk factor in heart disease and strokes. It has been estimated that reducing salt consumption by half in the US would prevent 150,000 deaths a year.

      French fries drenched in fat and salt constitute 25 percent of all vegetables consumed in the US

      The United Nations International Codex Alimentarius Commission, which sets international food norms, is heavily influenced by the food industry. This influence was demonstrated at its November 2006 meeting where it was proposed to lower the limit of sugar in baby foods from the existing 30 percent to 10 percent. The proposal was defeated by the combined forces of the European and American sugar industries. In a similar case, the UN’s World Health Organization (WHO) and Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) proposed, in their 2003 report, Diet, Nutrition and the Prevention of Chronic Diseases, a guideline, widely supported by nutritionists, that recommended that added sugars should not exceed 10 percent of daily calorie intake. This was too much for the US sugar industry to swallow, and they threatened to lobby Congress to cut off its $400,000 annual funding of the WHO and FAO if they did not remove the offending norm from their report. Under the circumstances, it was hardly surprising, if nevertheless still shameful, that the UN bodies gave in.

      According to Patti Rundall, policy director of Baby Milk Action Group, ‘A bottle-fed baby consumes 30,000 more calories over its first eight months than a breast-fed one. That’s the calorie equivalent of 120 average size chocolate bars. ‘Several research studies have shown correlations between bottle-feeding and subsequent, which is what would be expected given the early age at which tastes may be formed.
      [...]
      The soy lobby in the US has convinced the government to buy its soy formula and give it away to mothers on welfare—despite the fact that giving a baby soy formula with its powerful oestrogen is equivalent to an adult woman taking 5 birth control pills a day.

      Agriculture remains the main source of income for 2.5 billion people, 96 percent of them living in developing countries. In the late 1970s the World Bank and International Monetary Fund developed increasingly invasive structural adjustment policies (SAPs) which set conditions for developing countries to get further loans, or get better repayment schedules for existing loans, in response to the capitalist-generated ‘debt crisis’. Many of these countries were forced to develop export-oriented cash crops to pay off debts. With many tropical countries expanding their export crops (such as tea, coffee, tobacco, sugar, flowers, peanuts, cotton, and cocoa) at the same time, the resulting glut on the market produced falling prices. Given that agriculture is the weightiest sector in the economies of over 80 developing countries, the result was devastating. According to Peter Robbins, ‘The collapse of tropical commodity prices represents the most formidable obstacle to efforts to lift huge numbers of people out of poverty and yet, mysteriously, the problem has received almost no attention from the world’s mainstream media’. 44 For example, by 2002 coffee prices were 14 percent of their already low 1980 price, while cocoa had fallen to 19 percent and cotton to 21 percent. Is it really so surprising that a class-biased media would neglect such phenomena?
      [...]
      Developing countries cannot compete with crops grown in the US or Europe because they are so highly subsidized. The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) between Canada, Mexico, and the US has had a similar impact on Mexico as SAPs and the ‘green revolution’ have had in other parts of the world. During the first ten years of the agreement, 1.7 million Mexicans were displaced from agriculture largely as a result of highly subsidised US food commodities (especially corn) flooding into Mexico. 47 Because US corn farmers receive on average half of their income in subsidies, they can sell their corn on the international market under the cost of production and still make a profit. For instance, in 2002 US corn cost $2.66 a bushel to produce and was sold on the international market for $1.74 a bushel. 48 Many of the Mexican farmers displaced by the dumping of cheap US corn into the Mexican market crossed the border to the US. Before the NAFTA 7 percent of the 900,000 migrant farmworkers in the US were undocumented. Ten years later 50 percent of the 2 million migrant farmworkers in the US were undocumented.

      Suicide is the leading cause of death amongst US farmers, three times higher than for the population as a whole.

      Current trends indicate that soon one billion people in the world will suffer impaired mental development because of malnutrition.

      The UN estimates that 1.2 billion people live on less than $1 a day, while 2.8 billion, or 40 percent of the world’s population, live on less than $2 a day. 57 When food prices spike, as they did in the first half of 2008, the survival of many of these 2.8 billion people is jeopardised, as many of them were already spending 90 percent or more of their income on food. The deepening global depression has since reduced all commodity prices, including food, but the price of food has still gone up 28 percent since 2006. 58 Though many prices may fluctuate in the short term, there are several reasons why the price of food is bound to go up in the long run unless some radical changes are made.

      • Fertile land that could grow food crops is being utilized for non-food crops, including tobacco, agro-fuels, illegal drugs, and trees for pulp and paper.
      • Fertile land is being lost to suburban sprawl, golf courses, roads, parking lots, and mega shopping malls.
      • Land is being degraded by industrial farming techniques.
      • Global warming will sharply decrease crop yields due to higher temperatures and extreme weather.
      • The globalisation of a meat-based diet will divert food grains to animals.
      • Speculators, seeing all of these pressures on the global food supply, will bid up the price of basic grains on commodity futures markets.

      All of this adds up to rising food prices and increasing hunger for nearly half of the world’s population. It is unlikely that the poor farmers who produce the food will benefit much from higher prices, since they will mostly be skimmed off by the transnational corporations that control the international trade and processing.

      • No_Values [none/use name]
        ·
        3 years ago

        It has been estimated that reducing salt consumption by half in the US would prevent 150,000 deaths a year.

        Holy shit

        Current trends indicate that soon one billion people in the world will suffer impaired mental development because of malnutrition.

        Our generations leaded gasoline?

    • Koa_lala [he/him]
      ·
      edit-2
      3 years ago

      This. I have ZERO problems with being short. It does however bother me when people just straight up harass me over it. Like what the fuck?

      • grey_wolf_whenever [he/him]
        ·
        3 years ago

        I mean, I was half being ironic or whatever, but yeah. You don't really get to complain about it, because you're still a man and this is ultimately your world, and its not other girls calling any of the tall girls names in school so its a male perpetuated thing in the first place but it does suck a little.

  • CthulhusIntern [he/him]
    ·
    3 years ago

    The Health at Every Size movement is strawmanned to hell. The meaning behind the movement is that while being fat can correlate with health issues, it on its own is not enough, so people should focus on living a healthy life no matter their size, not be so bogged down on losing weight.

    • carlin [he/him,comrade/them]
      hexagon
      ·
      3 years ago

      Yep, also it doesn't mean that you can't or shouldn't lose weight, but that it can be a side effect of trying to make healthier choices

  • quartz242 [she/her]M
    ·
    3 years ago

    Once again I thank you from the bottom of my heart for these informative posts!

  • maeve [she/her,they/them]
    ·
    3 years ago

    Thank you for putting this together and working to educate the community.

    I'm a fat lady, been fat my whole life, and really dove into the FA movement in like 2008 when I found Kate Harding's blog, Shapely Prose (RIP), and a bunch of other related Fat Blogs. I wasn't looking for an excuse to be fat, but I guess I needed reassurance that I could still be fat and live a happy life and that's okay. Does this mean I'm immune to fatphobia? No. Sometimes I find myself judging people who are larger than me. Which is fucked up, I know. There's still work I need to do to unlearn my own internalized fatphobia, both towards myself and other fat people.

    The word Fat is so fun to say. Fat fat fat.