this post was submitted on 10 Apr 2026
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I think it is unironically very funny to assert something is real just because it's normalized in medicine. As we all know, medsci is historically very conscious of social and material conditions and is not subject to the distortions of the classes of people who have access to that authority, and no new research is relevant ever. I guess that means black women really do feel less pain, trans people only started existing forty years ago, and skulls can actually teach us about racial intelligence (people were arguing for phrenology until the late twentieth century). That you're arguing this during a period where eating disorders are very visible in popular culture is also just too perfect. Could you then, cite any articles or studies you've engaged with to build your oh-so-well-informed-and-underthought worldview? I have just a few off the top of my list:
The Obesity Myth: Why America's Obsession with Weight Is Hazardous to your Health, Campos, 2004.
Yamawaki, Niwako, Christina Riley, Claudia Rasmussen, and Mary Cook, "The Effects of Obesity Myths on Perceptions of Sexual Assault Victims and Perpetrators' Credibility," Journal of Interpersonal Violence 33 (4): 662-85, 2018.
Ramos, Salas, X, M Forhan, and A. M Sharma, "Diffusing Obesity Myths," Clinical Obesity, 4(3), 2014.
Pollack, Catherine C, "Characterizing the Prevalence of Obesity Misinformation, Factual Content, Stigma, and Positivity on the Social Media Platform Reddit Between 2011 and 2019: Infodemiology Study," Journal of Medical Internet Research, 24 (12), 2022.
Lindeman, Tracey, Bleed: Destroying Myths and Misogyny in Endometriosis Care, 2024.
https://www.ama-assn.org/system/files/a23-refcomm-d-annotated.pdf (2023 American Medical Association House of Delegates statement against the use of BMI).
There's some social and medical criticisms of the concept of obesity as well as how it is measured and medicalized.
This is all of course besides the fact that, regardless of whether obesity is understood properly, its presence in this original joke is in fact still fascist and still functions to normalize the fundamental values of fatphobia as they intersect with transphobia, racism, misogyny, and ableism. "I think you're over thinking this," is a staple phrase of fascism. Maybe you should fucking think a bit.
I did not resort to swearing or insulting you. I've said all I meant to say and now I think I'm done talking to you.
Oh, how noble of you. Eat shit, fascist.