Law Obesity as a Protected Class - "Fatty fatty boombalatty" should be added to the list of unacceptable hate speech.

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Retailers feature plus-size models. "Fat influencers" have seen success on social media. Doctor groups have framed obesity as a disease that goes beyond willpower.

But public attitudes about weight have become more negative, even though thin people make up the minority of the population, according to a recent study from Harvard University. People who are overweight or obese not only have emotional and physical difficulties after being bullied about their weight, but also suffer financial penalties. Research from the Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity at the University of Connecticut found heavier workers earn less than thinner employees, are less likely to get promoted, and are viewed as lacking discipline.

"Weight bias happens at virtually every state of the employment cycle, from being hired to getting fired," said Rebecca Puhl, deputy director for the Rudd Center.

Michigan is the lone state with a law prohibiting discrimination on the basis of weight, and lawmakers in Massachusetts are seeking to follow along. A handful of cities, including San Francisco and Washington, D.C., also have such laws.

Despite the dearth of rules, the issue of weight discrimination in the workplace is gaining some attention from high-profile court cases. This summer, the Washington state Supreme Court ruled it was illegal under state law to refuse to hire someone just because of obesity, saying that employers were violating laws that prohibit discriminating against someone with a physical impairment. Over the years, waitresses and cheerleaders have sued against workplace rules on appearance.

In some jobs, such as for the military or in fire departments, workers must meet certain fitness requirements. In general, however, lawyers advise workplaces to avoid discussing weight unless they can show how it directly relates to workplace safety and an individual's ability to do a job.

That can make weight bias cases harder to prove, and when discrimination does happen, plaintiffs face limited legal recourse. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the federal agency that investigates allegations of workplace discrimination, addresses bias tied to race, color, gender, age, religion, national origin, and disability. While weight isn't on that list, sometimes people file weight-related complaints by alleging gender or disability discrimination.

For example, in 2017, bus driver Mark Richardson accused the Chicago Transit Authority of firing him because he was obese and sued under the Americans with Disabilities Act. Richardson had been 594 pounds, and his employer determined his weight prevented him from safely driving a bus. The court ultimately decided that obesity itself didn't qualify as a disability unless caused by an underlying physiological disorder.

In other cases, complaints tied to weight are filed under gender discrimination because women tend to be targets of weight bias more than men. That's partially why many workplaces tend to be more indirect about weight requirements.

"In my experience, it’s not often a written policy, because those ideas about what size a person can be opens up employers to gender-based discrimination," said Ted Kyle, who is on the board of directors for the Obesity Action Coalition. "But it can often be fairly explicit in terms of people being told that their appearance is holding them back in terms of progressing their career."

Sarah Bramblette knows what it's like to get that kind of feedback. Several years ago, when she was working at a medical billing office and was 200 pounds overweight, her supervisor told her in a performance review that she was working above expectations but that she should have a more professional appearance.

Bramblette has medical conditions that cause tissue and fluid to accumulate in her arms and legs, making it painful to wear certain types of clothing. Still, she dressed up even more for work but was passed up for a promotion. After that, she took the advice she had received about her appearance as a veiled reference to her weight.

Puhl from the Rudd Center thinks adding weight as a protected class would help to prevent discrimination and allow for workplaces to warn workers not to harass each other over weight.

"Adding weight legitimizes this as a form of discrimination, otherwise it makes it seem as though it's OK to tolerate," Puhl said.

Surveys published in the Journal of Obesity show nearly 80% of the public agrees. But under U.S. labor "at-will employment" laws, workers can be fired at any time and for any reason. Workers in unions are more protected, as are people who fall under protected classes, but some are more cautious about calls to expand the protections further.

"There is no question that, in our society, people are often judged unfairly on account of their weight or their looks, and I have a great deal of empathy for people who have been treated unfairly on that basis," said Jennifer Braceras, director of the Center for Law and Liberty at the Independent Women's Forum. "But I would caution lawmakers to think long and hard before creating yet another protected class."

She added: "Historically, American anti-discrimination law has been used to prohibit and punish discrimination on the basis of immutable characteristics. It was never intended to eliminate at-will employment."
 
Once we let troons be a protected class, it was all downhill. Now we have groups anyone can join vying for special treatment.
 
how the fuck is getting fat real nigga hahaha just have less calories in than out hahahaha like nigga just shut your mouth hahahahahahaahahaha
 
🤔 I wonder how it breaks down:-
  • Fats who somehow ended up fat but are trying to lose weight.
  • Fats who find it easier to ree about fat acceptance and pretend they're happy.
  • Presumably a few fat fetishists who know they're disabling themselves and society is negatively judging them and are actually getting off on it.
 
My BMI is 30+, I'm not fat.

If you like food, do it right. Lift bro. Do you even lift.
 
I do know somebody who gained 100lbs during the year he was on Risperdal. The doctor changed his medication, and the weight dropped off pretty steadily after that. I know, that is an exception, but some of those drugs that are being prescribed can fuck a person up like that.

I also remember one time on the bus when a blind man sitting in the disabled seating was forcibly removed and forced to sit in general seating just so a 500lb cunt (complete with a fast food dribble on the front of her shirt) could take his seat. That was genuinely infuriating for me to see.
 
I do know somebody who gained 100lbs during the year he was on Risperdal. The doctor changed his medication, and the weight dropped off pretty steadily after that. I know, that is an exception, but some of those drugs that are being prescribed can fuck a person up like that.

I also remember one time on the bus when a blind man sitting in the disabled seating was forcibly removed and forced to sit in general seating just so a 500lb cunt (complete with a fast food dribble on the front of her shirt) could take his seat. That was genuinely infuriating for me to see.
There's probably a legal case in that.
 
The flip side of free choice is it includes consequences for bad ones.

Nobody is saying you deserve to feel bad, but, we can't do the inverse.

We can't make it so you will always feel good, even about your own bad decisions.

You want to eat yourself to morbid obesity? That's your choice, it doesn't mean you are a "bad" person, but, when you start to suffer negative health effects and people around you conclude you may have poor judgement and withhold things from you as a consequence, or simply find your obesity repulsive, personally?

We can't shield you from those things.

We don't have the obligation to do so, even if it were possible, because it isn't. "Fat shaming" isn't a thing any more than society shunning an armed robber is being somehow against the concept of personal entrepreneurship.
Exactly. You have no entitlement to always feel good about yourself, and any time you don't does not mean someone owes you compensation for it.

Fat people lack the discipline to put down the fucking fork. Surprise surprise, having personal discipline is a quality a lot of employers value because it means they can trust your judgment when they give you autonomous tasks to complete. When I worked in a restaurant I told all the smokers to shove it up their ass when they asked for a cigarette break every five minutes, same reason.
 
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