Can A Decent Man Achieve Success In This...
Society & Culture1 min ago
No best answer has yet been selected by peters cute. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I agree with magicdice. What do you think about fat people seems akin to lumping any other group of people together on a single characteristic. Do you think asking 'What do you think of black people' is ok or 'What do you think of Jews'? I'm guessing not.
I find it slightly disturbing that it is still seen as acceptable to criticise and even ridicule people based on their weight. I have heard some who do this justify it on the grounds that fat people may not be as healthy and that their choices will lead to them being a burden on the NHS and so on. Yet the same is true of those who smoke, or drink too much and there doesn't seem to be anywhere near the same degree of venom directed at these people.
People who feel justified in discussing 'fat people' as one group and criticising their appearance may in fact be part of the problem. I recently persuaded a friend who is somewhat overweight and wants to be slimmer to come to my gym with me. The hurtful sniggers that were directed at her by a small group for no apparent reason make it unlikely she will go again.
Can we just accept that no one characteristic defines a person. There are fat people Iget on with really well, some I dislike and the vast majority I have no view upon either way.
The previous answers are all perfectly valid, but it does underline the fact that we are a 'body-concious' society. Our culture is geared towards average weight people, and larger people will always be stared at, and even ridiculed, and abused.
How ever hard we try to be civilised, and understand intellectually that being fat does not make a person any less valuable, we still automatically notice people who are above average size.
How often do you hear people refer to Dawn French as being 'really attractive...', leaving the 'for a fat woman' unsaid, but still there for the listener to mentally add on to the statement.
We are 'fatist' as a culture, which doesn't make it right, but it does make it the way it is.