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penguin group (usa), associations, body, free chat rooms, pies, fat tgp, fat naked man, diet fat smash, ketosis, men, autobiography/memoir/letters/journals, ken and company, and, about, fatgirl, meetings, lowcarb diet, uk, breathlessness, brian stewart, atkinsdiet, food education society, the diabetic diet, | He found that the lowest mortality occurs in adults who would normally be universities considered 24 to 38 % overweight." I could go on, but anyone here who hasn't bothered to read Big Fat Lies or Losing It universities or Hunger Pains or universities summary articles by the Wooleys or the NEJM or NIH data will not want to be confused by the facts. Bigots never want to be confused by the facts. They just want to hate and feel superior, because they secretly fear they're horribly inferior. And they may be right about that. In other words, even discounting fitness levels, "moderate" fat is healthy. (For a 5'6" woman, 186-207 pounds would be the healthiest weight to be.) In other words, slightly "underweight" is far worse than severely "overweight" In other words, losing weight, NO MATTER HOW YOU JUSTIFY IT, can be deadly. |
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Posted by Dolley on July 29, 2003 10:24 AM. To beat a dead horse, excerpts from Paul Campos's New Republic article last year: diet fat smash 'Large-scale mortality studies indicate that women who are 50 [to] 75 pounds "overweight" will on average still have longer life expectancies than those who are 10 to 15 pounds "underweight" ' (i.e., actresses and fitness models and fashion models) and ' For example, a major American Cancer Society study published in 1995 concluded in no uncertain terms that healthy "overweight" diet fat smash and "obese" women were better off if they didn't lose weight. In this study, healthy women diet fat smash who intentionally lost weight over a period of a year or longer suffered an all-cause increased risk of premature mortality that was up to 70 percent higher than that of healthy women who didn't intentionally lose weight.' Or, for men, reference the Harvard Grad study. Weight loss led to higher rates of early death. The more diets, the higher the risk. Or, from Mary Pipher's readable and ultimately sane "Hunger Pains:" "Dr John Andres of John Hopkins University analyzed weight-health data over a 14-year period. |
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