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Saturday, April 12, 2008

Fatties Feel Discriminated Against, Want Government-Issued Protected Class Status

What a joke:

Led by Tatiana Andreyeva, a postdoctoral research associate at Yale’s Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity, a team of researchers questioned 1,100 subjects, aged 35 to 74, twice over a 10-year span (once between 1995 and 1996, and again between 2004 and 2006). The respondents answered 11 questions about whether they had been discriminated against in the context of common life experiences — including applying to college or for a scholarship, renting or buying a home in a neighborhood they desired, applying for a bank loan or dealing with police. Participants answered nine additional questions about everyday experiences, such as how they were treated in restaurants, and whether they had encountered name-calling, harassment or threats. The subjects were asked to indicate the reasons they felt they had been discriminated against (facing police harassment, for example, or being denied bank loans), whether it was because of age, gender, race, height or weight, physical disability, sexual orientation or religion. Between the two survey periods, the rate of discrimination due to height or weight increased from 7% of respondents to 12% of respondents. (The scientists determined separately that the people who reported discrimination due to height or weight were also more likely than other participants to be overweight or obese.)

The study is one of the first to track patterns of discrimination based on weight. It’s worth noting, however, that the survey relied on people’s own perception of discrimination — the authors did not require the subjects to document bias in any way. In addition, the authors found that rates of discrimination by age and gender also increased in the same time period, suggesting that several forms of bias — or perhaps sensitivity to perceived bias — is on the rise overall, not just against the overweight. Nevertheless, the study did track the same population over time, and Andreyeva says that an increase even in people’s perceived sense of maltreatment is an important measure of our society’s attitudes. In this report, weight ranked third behind age and race as the most common form of prejudice. “If a person perceives he is being discriminated against,” Andreyeva says, “it might have significant consequences for his or her health and mental health. Even the perception of discrimination can be important because it is self-perpetuating.” And if rates of weight discrimination are indeed on the rise, say the authors, then it’s up to society to mandate legal protections for those who are overweight, just as laws protect people from discrimination by race, gender, disability and age.

So 12% of people involved in the study felt they were discriminated against based no their weight.  Or height.  Of course, there’s no evidence for this discrimination other than the perception of the obese and overly tall, but they’re going to go ahead and use this as a basis for creating another protected class of American citizens based on their weight and/or height not all that unlike classes based on race, age and/or gender.

Does anyone else think that this latest front in the never-ending war to make every single American a victim sounds a little bit insane?  As a chubby American I can tell you that snide remarks and such can be very hurtful, but does that entitle me to special protected status under the law?

I don’t think the government needs to protect me from hurt feelings.

Comments

These people need to get over it and grow up.  It is not the governments job to keep people from calling me names and making sure I feel good about myself.

Sticks and stones may break my bones but words will never hurt me unless I’m fat or overly tall…



A political party cannot be all things to all people. It must represent certain fundamental beliefs which must not be compromised to political expediency, or simply to swell its numbers.

dougee on April 12, 2008 at 08:42 am

How about a protected status for working class adult Americans of all races colors and creeds who bust their humps to provide for their families without ever taking a dime of welfare, who sacrifice to educate their kids, and who live honorable lives?

THAT’S truly the group that needs protected status instead of every group that makes themselves stand out because of their lifestyle choices or because they can’t or won’t control their own behavior or that want to live on government handouts their whole lives.

The whole “protected status” thing is a sore spot with me.


Election ‘08 - We Are So Screwed

Pilgrim on April 12, 2008 at 09:21 am

In a thread here about the Americans with disabilities act I said this was coming, and people thought it was a joke.


Una Salus Victus Nullam Sperare Salutem

2Hotel9 on April 12, 2008 at 09:21 am

Awww. I hope their poor widdle feelings don’t get hurt.

likwidshoe on April 14, 2008 at 12:20 am
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