LMAO I swear they are making fun of us, they start it off with "Perfectly Healthy", then show an overly obese kid and from all of the things they could mention about him, they decide to mention the peanut butter sandwich!
Try strapping 10 bowling balls to your body and living a day in their shoes. It must be he'll and my heart goes out to them. We are killing the fatties with kindness. "Healthy at any weight" is enabling their death sentence. True compassion is offering to help them lose the weight. But instead it is called "fat shaming". They should be ashamed! Especially the parents who engage in this child abuse. A 16 year old should be in the best shape of their lives. Not fat. It is really sad!
Football/sports that require weight gain
Excessive Gaming
Overall Stress due to social media.
I think some people need to remember that todays generation when it comes to peace of mind, has it the worse. With the always connected society, you can no longer escape your troubles because they are always a phone away. At least in the 90's you could avoid the stress of social interactions with bullies, schools or any other authority since you only had a landline to get in touch with them.
Now that everyone is always connected you are just 1 second away to being harassed over something, which I feel puts children on edge because they can't have a proper escape unless they actively hermit themselves inside their room and just close out everyone around them.
I am offended that you think football requires you to gain weight. It isn't sumo wrestling, FFS. Fat gets turned into muscle which technically does weigh more if we're being pedantic.
LMAO I swear they are making fun of us, they start it off with "Perfectly Healthy", then show an overly obese kid and from all of the things they could mention about him, they decide to mention the peanut butter sandwich!
Kid obviously wasn't an ambercrombie model but he could have played football and turned that weight into muscle.
In the context of vaccine injuries he was entirely healthy because he didn't have a history of congenitive heart failure.
I'll never not be amazed at how a 15-16 year old can be 100+ lbs overweight.
Try strapping 10 bowling balls to your body and living a day in their shoes. It must be he'll and my heart goes out to them. We are killing the fatties with kindness. "Healthy at any weight" is enabling their death sentence. True compassion is offering to help them lose the weight. But instead it is called "fat shaming". They should be ashamed! Especially the parents who engage in this child abuse. A 16 year old should be in the best shape of their lives. Not fat. It is really sad!
To be fair, there are 3 reasons this occurs.
Football/sports that require weight gain Excessive Gaming Overall Stress due to social media.
I think some people need to remember that todays generation when it comes to peace of mind, has it the worse. With the always connected society, you can no longer escape your troubles because they are always a phone away. At least in the 90's you could avoid the stress of social interactions with bullies, schools or any other authority since you only had a landline to get in touch with them.
Now that everyone is always connected you are just 1 second away to being harassed over something, which I feel puts children on edge because they can't have a proper escape unless they actively hermit themselves inside their room and just close out everyone around them.
I am offended that you think football requires you to gain weight. It isn't sumo wrestling, FFS. Fat gets turned into muscle which technically does weigh more if we're being pedantic.
I agree with everything else.
Post the link so i can scroll through it and see that he was “recently vaccinated.”
No, he was in hospital bed, wishing he had taken the vaccine.
Im tired of all this BS.
he probably fell over and couldn't get back up
What am I to get from this? Peanut butter sandwich bad? And how far back do they have to reach to get these stories? April?
Pandemic of the perfectly healthy obese people who average 2.7 other comorbidities