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#fat discrimination
boyfailurr · 5 months
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‘we support all people with disabilities’ are you normal about people being disabled because of being fat
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thisisthinprivilege · 3 months
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Thin privilege is saving money, or even being able to access air travel at all, by being able to relatively comfortably book middle seats and tight-pitch seats on budget airlines.
Thin privilege is that last-minute $100 round trip.
Thin privilege is being able to afford to visit a dying relative, or being able to afford to be there for a milestone family occasion, or being able to interview outside of the local job market.
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fatphobiabusters · 2 years
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TRANSCRIPT (From tumblr user skoople)
I think because we talk about body image and fatphobia together so much, we sometimes forget those are separate things; and it is actually exhausting being someone who talks about anti fatness frequently to have those conversations be misunderstood and derailed into being about body image.
When I am talking about systemic anti fatness, I'm not talking about how I feel about my body.
I love my body with the best of them, but I cannot love my body out of employment discrimination or medical discrimination.
I can't love my body into equal pay or equal access to healthcare.
Fat people live in a world that pays us less, charges us more, denies us healthcare, openly ridicules and excludes us, and then tells us the solution is to love our bodies.
But it's not.
The solution is to give fat people access to the same rights, resources, and services that thin people get without question.
The solution is activism and policy change.
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chubbymuffinclub · 3 months
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curvysurfergirl
It’s easier for some people to believe my surfing is photoshopped than to accept I can surf.
There are very few things that people can write in the comment section that bother me at this point.
Almost everyday on one platform or another I hear:
• “you're fat” • if you lost weight you’d (fill in the blank) • You’re too skinny to be curvy or plus size • you look like a whale/ island/ hippo / cow • she has diabetes or will • Now that you’re done surfing go get your McDonald’s
But the one that never ceases to amaze me is when people say my surfing videos are faked…
Like oh yea let me just spend a cool several thousand dollars to go through a Hollywood production to fake I can surf…
It blows my mind that people would rather accuse someone of faking surfing than to accept that a woman with my body type or bigger can surf.
While these comments baffle me more than they cause any actual harm to me, I take heart knowing we are actually making change.
I’m rather certain for the better part of the last several decades people used hurtful words like these to exclude women like us from surfing in surf breaks around the world.
But here and now we continue to show we are strong enough to rise above those spiteful words through our passion and self acceptance.
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none-prob · 7 months
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"Fat people aren't oppressed"
Meanwhile airplane industries:
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living400lbs · 7 months
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"While both men and women experience greater discrimination if they are fat, women suffer more for failing to be thin enough. Study after study shows that overweight women are more likely to be unemployed than their thinner counterparts. When they are employed, larger women earn less, with smaller penalties for Black and Hispanic women, who already earn less, on average. Overweight white and Asian women experience the labor market discrimination that Black and Hispanic women already do.
Outside of the workplace, the trend of educational and economic elites marrying, befriending and socializing with one another — assortative matching and mating — is also a marked characteristic of our time. Elite homogeneity has a look and the look is thin. So when women say that it is better to be sick and thin than healthy and fat, they are perfectly rational."
- Tressie McMillan Cottom
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timemachineyeah · 2 years
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(Source)
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thedoilynews · 1 year
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I don’t think I’ve taken it in all the way that my Nana died from a brain tumor when I was 1 because she was fat and all of the doctors thought her neurological symptoms were from her being fat and they perhaps could have found the benign tumor before it became the size of a crab apple and was inoperable. My aunt told me this fuller story of her death within the last 5-7 years and that they sued the hospital after her death but I don’t know if anything came of that. I have been told my whole life how I am the spitting image of my Nana. I have also been told that I am more loud spoken than she was in her life.
I’ll be damned if I let history repeat itself and die in my mid-60s and leave all my little grandchildren because fatphobic shitty asshole doctors. I love you Nana.
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daltongraham · 2 years
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beckywtghmai · 6 months
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The Best Example
Sometimes I think about All the years of work I’ve done towards losing weight And all of the denial and gaslighting and abuse I’ve received Instead of respect Because I don’t look like The best example of what they know And somehow it’s always, always and forever My problem. Not y’all’s.
View On WordPress
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thisisthinprivilege · 3 months
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Thin privilege is having a normal partner.
No fat person in a healthy relationship has a normal partner. Our partners have to have reflected upon and grappled with the cultural stigma against fatness, particularly in beauty standards, and somehow overcome it.
Our partners have to have rejected the constant messaging that fat people are physically and emotionally and mentally less-than everyone else, or have some kind of giant personality flaw, or have some dark hidden trauma that "caused" us to become fat.
Our partners have to have rejected the constant messaging that fat people make worse partners and parents, that we are socially contagious, that we unwittingly/uncaringly contribute to climate change, that we exemplify excessive materialism.
Our partners have to have rejected the media that has equated people with our body types as pathetic, as jokes, as villains.
The partners of fat people are exceptional.
Thin privilege is having a huge dating pool because you don't need an exceptional partner to be treated with basic respect and dignity, as you already have it by default.
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fatphobiabusters · 1 year
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Mod squirrel:
I wanted to share this episode of the Church of the larger fellowship of Universal Universalist about fat liberation.
I'm exploring the UU framework so I'm super excited that they are hosting this conversation.
Topics include but not in high detail, and not limited to: accessibility, airplanes, clothing access, Job discrimination, healthism, fat as gender, medical fatphobia, eating food in public, fat Reclaiming, o word vs fat (they use the word and mock it).
Sadly they don't use the term fatphobia and minor warning for Christian refrences as UU borrows from everywhere as you can be any religion but gather in UU churches. Also I think the UU started as a Christian branch but has diverted far since. Anyway if terms related to Christianity bother you I just wanted to warn for it. Even if it was divorced now.
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lardylard · 2 years
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youtube
This asshole thinks he can make these kinds of videos insulting our community. when guys like this only get into other people's lives and profit from it.
Repost the tweet and report this type of videos.
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neuroticboyfriend · 9 months
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thanks to ableism, heightism, and fatphobia, almost nothing is made to fit or work for my body ever. mobility aids. furniture. clothes. shoes. cars. etc. etc. if any of these do work out for me, they're usually expensive and i have a much more limited selection than abled, average height, straight sized people.
this isn't just inconvenience, either. things like furniture and shoes not being made for me causes me pain and takes a toll on my body, because i physically cant use them properly. making things fit me takes energy and money that i cant afford, but sometimes have to spend anyway. the safety measures in things like cars could injure or even kill me if i were to get in a bad accident.
being short, fat, and disabled in this society is so much harder than it has to be. it's unfair and downright dangerous that our bodies aren't being taken into account when designing almost everything around us. disabled people deserve better. fat people deserve better. people with short and tall stature deserve better.
we're just as much part of this world as everyone else, and we deserve to live in a world that acts like we exist.
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not-gray-politics · 8 months
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I find it fascinating how many people can acknowledge on some level that the bmi is bad, outdated, inaccurate, wasn't made for individual use, and isn't even useful on a broader scale... but will still use terminology that comes directly from it and won't bat an eye at the fact that it's still in doctors' offices. So, just a reminder for folks who don't know:
"Obese" and "Overweight" are both terms that come directly from the BMI, and are both inaccurate and harmful.
The BMI itself was invented by a eugenicist who believed that all people should strive for the population average of his time period and only conducted research on white men. Women, poc, disabled people, and many other demographics were intentionally left out. It provides no meaningful information on the health or wellbeing of those who use it, but simply stacks them up to an outdated population average. Nothing more, nothing less. Using the terminology that comes from it is reductive and does damage to the scientific community. It has done irreversible damage to marginalized people and the culture as a whole, and is often used to dismiss the health concerns of fat patients. This can and has lead to many people's deaths and is an issue that should not be taken lightly. It has also been used to insult and dehumanize fat people for generations and could be considered a slur under those contexts. Stop using eugenicist language. Be mindful and be kind.
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fatliberation · 1 year
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I just want to say I'm so glad i found your tumblr. I used to follow a couple fat acceptance tumblrs that just don't really post anymore, and was missing that in my life. I've been liking your posts all day. I know some ppl don't like that, but i hope you don't mind. I want to share it all with folks.
A question came to me while browsing. I'm going to need knee replacement surgery, but the ortho said they won't do surgery of you're over a certain bmi (in America, on medicaid). I don't know if that's just this particular surgeon, or if medicaid won't approve it because of my weight. Maybe a follower of yours might have some experience with navigating weight discriminating with medicaid?
Hey there! I don't mind at all, I'm so glad this blog fills that need!
It's likely the surgeon. Medicare and Medicaid do cover knee replacements, and so far I haven't been able to find anything that says the insurance has a BMI cutoff. Most surgeons won't operate on patients with a BMI over 35-40 because of "surgical complications, risk of infection and poor outcomes." (And, of course, a new University of Alberta study shows that losing weight before knee replacement surgery doesn’t lead to better outcomes for patients.) But I would still have a conversation with your doctor/surgeon to make sure that Medicaid does cover it. If anyone reading this has any relevant information to share, or resources on finding arthroplasty surgeons without BMI limits, please let me know!
I'm so sorry you're dealing with such a detrimental facet of weight discrimination, @enbycarp. It breaks my heart. You deserve treatment in the body that you're in TODAY. I sincerely hope you're able to get this surgery soon, but in the meantime, here's 6 Alternatives to Knee Replacement Surgery (really it's 5, cuz #2 is weight loss, so... ignore that one).
Related articles:
BMI Does Not Affect Outcomes in Knee-Replacement Surgery
BMI Cutoffs are Bad Medicine – High BMI Individuals Deserve Access to Total Knee Replacement Surgery
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