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Former fat thread

Former fat here: losing weight is easy and there is no benefit or reason to be overweight, get fricked with muh food desserts and fear of water and walking

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🔊 THIS IS TRANSPORT :marsey300:

Context :marseyreading:

>Tubby wanted to exit before the designated stop because fat. :marseychonker2:

>Bus driver was like 'nah b-word you walking or rolling.'

>Bus driver decides and 300's her fat butt off the bus.

The bus driver was fired for throwing the purse which is obviously every foids sacred divine object :marseyshrug:

:#!marseyscooter:

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Fatty seethe when told to just put down the fork
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Seething about this mainly due to the facial expressions this fat sack of shit is pulling.

She's complained to the manager and got some innocent weight-loss inspiration things pulled from shelves.

Look at that fricking face. Fat slag.

![](/images/16570966150264246.webp)

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:#marseyobey:

:#marseyscooter::#marseyscooter::#marseyscooter::#marseyscooter::#marseyscooter:

American cultural norms could be making us fat.

A new study looked at the effects of societal traits on obesity rates — and it found that countries that value individualism have higher body mass indexes in males.

Published in the journal Social Science & Medicine, the study examined data from 51 countries to find out why there is so much variation in global obesity rates.

While economic prosperity is an important factor — with wealthier nations having greater access to food and lower levels of physical activity — it doesn’t explain why some less-developed countries have high levels of obesity (Egypt, Jordan, Mexico) and more developed ones don’t (Japan, South Korea, Singapore).

The study found that those latter countries were more “flexible.” In other words, they prioritize thrift, discipline, self control and delaying gratification — all behaviors that can help with weight control. They were also slimmer across the board.

Meanwhile, countries that valued individualism — such as the United States and those in Northwestern Europe, as well as some in Latin America — are more headstrong about personal independence and choices. Men in these countries tended to be heftier, although it was surprisingly not a factor when it comes to women.

While the study acknowledged that genetics and diet — particularly the fatty, processed and sugary foods Americans love — contribute to obesity, it found that national culture also played an underdiscussed role.

The findings resonated with Dr. George Fielding, a bariatric surgeon and professor of surgery at New York University.

“I’m not trying to be crass, but fat is the new normal here,” Fielding told The Post.

“Culturally, it’s fine to be considered fat. Britain and Australia are the same. Most of the people making national health policies are aiming it at individuals to eat less and exercise more, rather than look at the [societal] cost of health care and early death.”

As of 2020, the prevalence of obesity among adults was 41.9% in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Obesity — one of the leading causes of death globally — is linked to a myriad of life-shortening illnesses including Type 2 diabetes, many cancers and cardiovascular disease.

“On the flip side, in Asian countries, there’s a belief you should comply with restraint, which is not inherent in American culture,” said Fielding. “There are rules, and you are supposed to follow the rules.”

As for the difference between male and female obesity rates in “individualist” countries, the surgeon said he sees the dynamic play out in his own practice — where women outnumber men for bariatric surgery 3 to 1.

“Men in particular think, ‘I’m an individual, don’t tell me what to do. I’m going to eat what I want,’ ” said Fielding, who notes that surgery should be considered once a person’s BMI hits 40.

He said female patients seek interventions because they feel terrible, while his male patients are motivated to lose weight once they’ve become ill due to diabetes, high blood pressure or heart ailments.

Fielding, who called obesity a “national disaster,” added that other societal factors play into our collective weight issues.

“Fewer and fewer jobs require physical exertion, and you don’t have to work hard to get food anymore,” he said. “We have heaps of processed food, and we are bombarded with advertisements for it. It all plays a big part.”

As for reversing the trend, Fielding said it’s an uphill battle: “How do you institute a national policy in a country where you can’t tell anyone anything?”

But he said that acknowledging America’s obesity problem — now verboten in polite society — would help.

“It’s the new normal, and how dare you be mean to the new normal?” Fielding said. “The people out there who are fat, they think that’s how it is now.”

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Fat Man Leaning

People loved my previous candid snaps of fat people just living their lives, but many people got the wrong idea that it was only fat women I liked to picture.

This was wrong. I do have more pictures of fat women but that's because there seems to be far more astonishingly fat women than men.

There is no sexual element to fattysnapping and to suggest otherwise is defamation.

Anyway, a bit about this guy. He would always wear black because it's so slimming and he would always lean against this fence with his back turned because that would make him difficult to notice.

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At first I thought this was bait but the site has dozens of serious articles.

:marseylaugh:

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I think the other one was for her son that stood outside and looked just as much as a blob. She actually fricking wheezed walking 5 steps into the store to the fridge and to the register.

:#marseyemojirofl::#marseychonkerfoid:

Like B-word probably thinks she is doing some dieting when she destroys a bottle of Zero goyslop instead of goyslop regular. As Trump would say:

https://i.rdrama.net/images/1684134962822034.webp

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https://i.rdrama.net/images/16841353764669862.webp

This plus-size woman isn’t taking any crop from her bosses.

A former smoke shop staffer named Abigayle Canterbury is virally blowing the whistle on her now-ex-manager for allegedly body-shaming her for wearing a crop top during her shift — a sexy blouse often sported by her more petite co-workers without rebuke.

And the full-figure employee ultimately quit the gig after receiving a scathing demand to “cover the stomach.”

“I got dress-coded at this job that does not have a dress code. Make that make sense — you can’t,” exclaimed Canterbury, 22, in a now-trending TikTok testimonial, which has raked in over 404,000 views.

“I’m also the only plus-size female that they had working,” added the buxom brunette, from Mobile, Alabama, of the smoke shop chain — which she failed to name in her digital rant.

“I’ve never been to one of their locations and seen a bigger girl working. It’s always been very small, petite girls, and they’ve always wore whatever they wanted,” she continued.

And the brand’s seemingly relaxed dress-code policy is what initially attracted Canterbury to the job.

“When I got this job … I was under the impression I could wear a crop top with some jeans and it’s not a big deal,” she said, alleging that she was never made aware of any work attire restrictions.

However, when Canterbury received a harshly worded text message from her unnamed manager, she was shocked to learn that the smoke shop’s owner didn’t approve of her midriff-baring outfit.

https://i.rdrama.net/images/16841353772025821.webp

“I got a text message from my manager, and the text message said, basically, the business owner saw what I was wearing and he wanted to tell me to ‘cover the stomach,’” said Canterbury.

She went on to share a screenshot of the text thread, in which the manager plainly instructs her to “dress nicer” and “cover all your body.”

And Canterbury — who, in the comment section of her video, claims she’d been donning a crop top when she was hired at the smoke shop — admitted that the reprimand did “get under my skin.”

“‘Cover my body?,’” she questioned in the clip. “Have you seen your other f- -king employees, bro?”

And the next day, when she asked her slimmer work associates — who were wearing peekaboo tops and skimpy bottoms — if they’d ever received dress code admonishments, Canterbury was stunned to learn that she was the only employee to be lectured for her looks.

https://i.rdrama.net/images/16841353779023209.webp

Outraged TikTok watchers flooded her comments with words of encouragement, as well as similar accounts of body discrimination that they’d personally endured in the workplace.

“So basically you could sue for discrimination … and you [clearly] have it in the text,” penned one cyber supporter.

“Yea as a woman that’s been thin and plus size. I can definitely tell the difference of how I was treated. they were so nice to me when I was thin,” confessed another.

However, the supportive comments notwithstanding, in a separate video, Canterbury claimed that she’d also received a lot of “really hateful f- -king comments” from women who she says have likely never faced fat discrimination.

“If you have never been singled out for your size, I pray that you never are because it’s a horrible f- -king feeling,” she spat.

“Nobody deserves to be treated like that based on their size or their race …Discrimination is discrimination. And what was done to me falls into that little f- -king box.”

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Piggy escorted off plane

Kicked off a plane for being too fat

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Mayos are disgusting fat creatures

https://i.rdrama.net/images/16841355410424578.webp

https://i.rdrama.net/images/16841355419340498.webp

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Fat b-word vs car.
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Found under the 4chan twitter trend, thought of you chads here.

:#marseychonker:

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A classic :marseychefkiss:

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Sub dedicated to artificial fatties makes me :marseyrope:
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My god i hate fatties

Went to a outlet and they were EVERYWHERE. It seems like they grown and increase in numbers each time. Chonkercide when?

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Fat man hit by car, world rejoices

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And I thought Bulimia kept you thin...

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