Health Nazis
Despite being overweight, Clothilde, 48, considers herself to be in good health and she is scathing of the scurrilous methods of Health Nazis and Big and Little Pharma in their push to prohibit restaurants and food outlets from serving food to obese customers.
"Sure, there are fat people with serious health problems –but no more than thin people with serious health problems," says Clothilde. "Fortunately, my health is pretty good, and if – I repeat, if – I get some fat-related disease in old age then so what?”
“What's health insurance for if not to take care of us in old age, when something or other takes us out?" asks Clothilde. “Nobody gets out of old age alive, fat or thin!”
"I eat out a lot," says Clothilde, "and if some skinny chit thinks he or she can refuse me on account of my size then there's going to be trouble."
"Anyway, all the guff put out by busy-bodying, do-gooding health Nazis has absolutely nothing to do with our health," says Clothilde. "On the contrary, it has everything to do with them feathering their nests and entrenching their jobs at our expense."
“Their methods are scurrilous – and I call them Health Nazis for a good reason – because first they focus negative attention on a target group to garner public support,” explains Clothilde, “and when their lies about health risks have gained enough public disgust and derision they legislate for bans and fines – along with so-called miraculous pharma products designed to change the behavior of the target group."
"Sure, they don't like looking at fatties and talk up big about an obesity crisis," says Clothilde, "but would they – and you, the taxpaying public – really prefer to be looking at Auschwitz inmates and be talking about a starvation crisis instead?"
Read more of Clothilde's story:
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"Sure, there are fat people with serious health problems –but no more than thin people with serious health problems," says Clothilde. "Fortunately, my health is pretty good, and if – I repeat, if – I get some fat-related disease in old age then so what?”
“What's health insurance for if not to take care of us in old age, when something or other takes us out?" asks Clothilde. “Nobody gets out of old age alive, fat or thin!”
"I eat out a lot," says Clothilde, "and if some skinny chit thinks he or she can refuse me on account of my size then there's going to be trouble."
"Anyway, all the guff put out by busy-bodying, do-gooding health Nazis has absolutely nothing to do with our health," says Clothilde. "On the contrary, it has everything to do with them feathering their nests and entrenching their jobs at our expense."
“Their methods are scurrilous – and I call them Health Nazis for a good reason – because first they focus negative attention on a target group to garner public support,” explains Clothilde, “and when their lies about health risks have gained enough public disgust and derision they legislate for bans and fines – along with so-called miraculous pharma products designed to change the behavior of the target group."
"Sure, they don't like looking at fatties and talk up big about an obesity crisis," says Clothilde, "but would they – and you, the taxpaying public – really prefer to be looking at Auschwitz inmates and be talking about a starvation crisis instead?"
Read more of Clothilde's story:
Labels: big pharma, fat-related disease, health, health insurance, nazis, obesity epidemic
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