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Health & Wellness

Pooping Yourself Skinny: Today's Pharmaceutical Lifestyle

By John Fischer, Huffington Post. Posted August 6, 2007.


Much like the historical practice of using Mercury to treat syphilis, GlaxoSmithKline's diet drug Orlistat could be an effective solution for the present but a dangerous precedent for the future.
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Recently, a friend sent me an Amazon.com link to a book called The alli Diet Plan. Written by Dr. Caroline Apovian, director of the Nutrition and Weight Loss Management Center at Boston University Medical Center, the book is full of helpful recipes specifically designed to "maximize your results from Alli(tm), the only FDA-approved over-the-counter weight loss aid." The link was clearly meant for nothing more than a cheap laugh -- one that I had. But as the thin sarcasm faded, I found myself considering the book's more serious implications.

For anyone who has been living under a rock for the past year, alli is the brand name for GlaxoSmithKline's diet-drug Orlistat. It offers a beguiling promise: a weight-loss regimen involving alli will help you shed pounds by inhibiting your body's ability to absorb fat. The newly excess fat exits your body by means of 'gas with oily spotting, loose stools, or more frequent stools that may be harder to control.' The drug's promotional materials suggest that you should, at least initially, wear dark pants and bring a change of clothes to work. In effect, alli lets you poop yourself skinny.

Granted, beyond the obligatory late-night talk-show jokes, alli is not as one-sided as its detractors would suggest. The pills are sold as part of an extensive kit, complete with a personalized website that helps you regulate your diet in such a way as to minimize or eliminate possible 'treatment effects' (as its side effects have been rebranded in a startlingly brilliant piece of pharmaceutical marketing). The messaging around the drug makes clear that it is no joke, no quick fix for yo-yo dieters; it is a serious commitment, requiring a regimen of dietary restrictions over an extended period of time. In fact, cautions of accidental soiling not withstanding, alli's communications are perhaps one of the best examples of a pharmaceutical manufacturer striving to achieve instructional compliance among its customers -- a problem that plagues most drugs, from the nonessential to the life-saving.

But The alli Diet Plan suggests a larger concern, of which alli itself is perhaps the tip of the iceberg. Adhering to the drug's stringent usage requirements is not easy. In fact, it requires lifestyle changes difficult for most people. As a result, the alli treatment experience becomes larger than the treatment itself. Beyond a book of easy-to-prepare, easy on the oily-discharge meals, the product add-ons are potentially limitless: an alli cross-branded set of clothing in dark colors, complete with a small absorbent replaceable pad; an alli branded wrist-watch, to keep track of the usual duration between your meal and your treatment effect; or alli-approved meal options at participating fast food chains. The list could go on indefinitely.

Alli, like many new drugs, blurs the distinction between treatment and lifestyle. In much the same way that Zoloft modifies your sex drive and your drinking habits, or that Lunesta affects your driving abilities, alli requires that to cure what ails you, you must accept new realities about what your life will be like. These drugs offer an increasingly common trade-off: the key to your health lies in conceding parts of your lifestyle -- whether your sleeping habits, your shopping habits or your eating habits -- to a pharmaceutical.

To be sure, this is not to suggest an easy blanket criticism of the pharmaceutical industry. Advanced medicine is now capable of curing and treating a historically unprecedented number of diseases and conditions. But, as typified by alli, the convergence of medical science and commerce is changing the types of choices we make about our health: whereas lifestyle trade-offs have always been de rigueur for lifesaving treatments, the pharmaceutical industry now offers us the opportunity to radically change our lives based on what is possible, no longer simply what is necessary.

From the four humors to the hysterectomy, history has proven that our commonly held concepts of wellbeing, illness, and treatment are nearly always supplanted by better information. In our modern race to find both a new drug for every disorder and a disorder for every new drug, it would be wise to consider that without an equal emphasis on advancing our understandings of illness, treatment, and health itself, our forward movement may actually be sideways. Adjusting our expectations of our lifestyles to meet the requirements of new drugs may prove to be very much like the historical practice of using mercury to treat syphilis: an effective solution for the present, but a dangerous precedent for the future.

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See more stories tagged with: drugs, weight loss, pharmaceuticals, big pharma, glaxosmithkline, orlistat, diet pills

John Fischer is a part-time writer and full-time marketing strategist.

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Obesity is good for the economy
Posted by: FDPN on Aug 7, 2007 12:20 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
People that are too old or sick to work are non-productive and drain money from an otherwise functioning economy. The number of fat people in America will reduce the overall life expectancy and increase the overall productivity of the nation.

Obesity is not something to fear - it allows people to be productive during their youth and it causes them to die much sooner in old age when they would not have been productive anyway.

Obesity is just another form of social Darwinism in America - killing off the old, sick, handicapped. These things are natural in America.

These drugs will not stop the "obesity epidemic." No, they will simply allow the drug companies to further profit from the so motion suicide of fat Americans.

I for one welcome our slender Chinese overlords, may their reign last for a million seasons.

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» I addressed this point Posted by: FDPN
» Your Chinese Overlords Posted by: janastasopoulo
» RE: Your Chinese Overlords Posted by: blitzmesser
» good for the economy... Posted by: hurricane hugo
» I semi agree with you! Posted by: Gravitas
What else can be said?
Posted by: ArtemInox on Aug 7, 2007 1:52 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Really, what insight can be gained from giving any more thought to drugs, meaning pharmaceuticals, how they are marketed, how they kill or hurt people, how they are not needed, how its just another racket for wealthy people to make more money. Sure sure, a lot of good comes about from pharmaceuticals too, thats not the discussion though. Lets see, my memory goes back to Prozak being new and thats what I can remember of how long this shameless bullshit, I mean marketing, of drugs that arent really needed for most people that are taking them, has been going on. Maybe some older folks can remember the same thing happening before then, that was about 1993. The outrages continue on and on, worse and worse, more and more people die or get very sick, more and more problems come from these great drugs that we don't need.

So where can anyone that is informed of all this go? I'm thinking that if people would make the decision to NOT take these shitty pills, to make some effort to lose weight in ways that make sense, to realize that a pill wont change circumstances in your life that are fucked up and you have plenty of reason to feel depressed about, to bother raising your kids with an understanding of responsibility, self-control and repsect, on and on I could go.

lol but it's all pretty common knowledge isnt it? Someone please add something new to the topic of pharmaceutical fuckery and what could/should be done about it

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» RE: What else can be said? Plenty! Posted by: BlueTigress
» FDA vs. Acomplia Posted by: ataran
Hmmmmmm....
Posted by: kepstein7777 on Aug 7, 2007 2:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So you take these expensive pills, regulate your diet in order to deal with the "treatment effects", wear diapers to work, school, night clubs, the opera, etc. so you can lose weight?

Here's a "lifestyle change": Suppose you eat better, get more exercise, and flush the pills down the toilet?

Heh. Just kidding. Americans must do whatever they can to protect their lazy lifestyles, their greasy diets, and their right to pop the latest magic pill. Alli is a step in the right direction. Where can I get me a bottle of them things? The name is kinda' cute.

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» RE: Hmmmmmm.... Posted by: BlueTigress
sexy
Posted by: overseas on Aug 7, 2007 3:46 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wouldn't it be awesome to take this treatment, shed your blubber and have people start checking you out in bars again? To take this further... what if you are finally invited up to someone's place for a much over do shag session? What if you are verging on an orgasm, your first since the last time you saw your feet, and you shit all over the place? That would be just great!

Get real.

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» RE: sexy--following up on this concept Posted by: dangerouslysane
I would like to offer a one word comment
Posted by: skoog5600 on Aug 7, 2007 3:57 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
WOW

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Frightening stuff
Posted by: Cruella on Aug 7, 2007 4:08 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When I was anorexic I often used laxatives as a method of stopping my body digesting food I had eaten. The pathetic efforts to deal with the issue pale into comparison with the way we allow the media to glamourise extreme thin-ness.

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» RE: Frightening stuff Posted by: blitzmesser
The Best Diet is No Diet
Posted by: Tefech on Aug 7, 2007 4:38 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The worst thing about a diet is that it usually ends, and once it ends the slide back to excess pounds begins. If you need/want to lose weight, burn more than you eat. If you need to lose a lot of weight, burn a lot more and eat a lot less. It's not a matter of dieting it's how you live. It is a 24/7 issue. Don't take drugs to lose weight! Take responsibility for 100% of what you put in your mouth... and how and when you move your body. And it is NOT easy!
And boycott places that advertise "all you can eat" deals. We're not supposed to eat all we can eat!!!

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Does anyone stand back and ask what's going on?
Posted by: heid on Aug 7, 2007 4:41 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The FDA has approved a drug that causes people to poop and fart uncontrollably and messily. They call this drug a weight control product. And they don't even crack a smile when they give the approval.

Doesn't it occur to anyone that this should never have left the realm of humor? Is our society so off-kilter, so out of touch with reality that it is willing to allow the FDA to continue to exist after approving something as idiotic as this? This organization holds the power of life and death.

The FDA approves drugs like alli. The FDA approves drugs like Avandia, which has killed tens of thousands of people, and maimed many thousands more. We have just allowed Congress to grant them even more power, pharmaceuticals to give them even more money (thus further compromising whatever is left of the FDA's independence), and even put them in the position of being able to market drugs themselves. At the same time, the FDA is trying (and is close to successful) to control our access to products like supplements and vitamins, items that are really food items - and even to control foods as drugs if someone makes a claim of health for one. (Yes, that even includes the claim that chicken soup is good for you when you're sick. Make that claim, and chicken soup might be controlled as if it were a drug.)

Doesn't anyone see the absurdity of it all? Doesn't anyone see how the so-called free market is a pipe dream? The free market has concentrated wealth in the hands of a few, who then use it to control government organizations that supposedly exist to control them.

The result is approval of a product that gives people oily and explosive poop, drugs that kill and maim, and removal of safe and even necessary products so that huge corporations can make bigger profits - apparently by a combination of keeping us from getting foods and supplements that keep us healthy, selling us drugs that make us sick, and then selling us more drugs to control the symptoms of the illnesses that they've created.

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» The FDA is bunk Posted by: russianblue1
» Stick to your guns Posted by: FDPN
» Priceless comment... Posted by: mjabele
SICK!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Posted by: wireup on Aug 7, 2007 5:32 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is so SICK it is almost beyond the realm of reality.

And people wonder why we have a drug problem in this country! Got a headache? Take a drug. Got a disease? Take a drug. Can't shed those pounds? Take a drug.

Big Pharma has medicalized every damned thing they can for the sake of the buck. Menopause. Pregnancy. You name it. There's a drug for it.

But THIS? It's disgusting. Pharma is attempting, once again, to make another buck and America will probably buy it.

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» I doubt they'll buy it... Posted by: mjabele
bold,/b Commercial
Posted by: popeye on Aug 7, 2007 5:49 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Since I just retired I think I could make a 7 second commercial for TV with no voice overs for the pooping story .

1. A fat person eating
2. Fat person taking medicine
3. Same guy but skinny and showing a big smile now holding up a pair of underwear
with a brown spot in the center and the product written across underwear.

My god who would take such medicine?

Popeye Saylor (popeye3909@comcast.net)

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» RE: bold,/b Commercial Posted by: sweet_byrd
how most of the money will be made
Posted by: Mamarianne on Aug 7, 2007 6:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Most of the money from this diet plan--as with other plans--will be made from the one-time sales of the product and book. These are now on center aisle display in most big box stores. As with Atkins and other too good to believe plans, the books will soon move to the sale table and become frequent offerings at yard sales. Eat healthy, move move, and don't judge your self worth by how much you weigh. That's the good advice surfacing in the comments to this article. Atkins proved to be an unhealthy life choice with only short term results. This plan seems dangerous, unsanitary, and unsustainable.

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WTF??
Posted by: lukehawk on Aug 7, 2007 6:30 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I dont get it. So this new drug requires you to change your lifestyle to lose weight? If youre willing to change your lifestyle, why do you need the drug? If youre willing to adhere to such a strict diet, choose another one not requiring pharmaceuticals. Just push away the burger and go for a jog...

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» Exactly what I was thinking Posted by: alphakat
Pharma-Flunkies running the country----
Posted by: wisewebwoman on Aug 7, 2007 6:32 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And killing the sheeple. I remember the movie "Soylent Green". These days are coming. I'm sure the poop can be recycled for mammal ingestion.
A bilious, gassy nation, Depended to the armpits, would be harnessed and unable to vote surely?
And no one is addressing the deep soul sickness of the sad obese waddlers who can't stop feeding at the Mctrough and slurping at the Coke Fountain.
Big Corp/Pharm has the citizens by the throat - and giggle - it can even make you wear soiled underwear!!!
The saints preserve us, who'd believe this?

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Global Deaths from Diarrhea
Posted by: sethmo on Aug 7, 2007 7:09 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Diarrheal diseases, including cholera, shigellosis and rotavirus, kill about 1.8 million children each year, accounting for 17 percent of childhood deaths.

The above is a quote from the Global Health Council. I wasn't readily able to find statistics for adults. I find it appalling that our culture has descended to the level wherein we seek a pharmaceutical method to induce a condition which kills a large percentage of the underprivileged in the world yearly and the sole reason for doing so is so that we can continue to indulge in our own gluttony and overconsumption. And our culture will support this absurdity, and spend large sums of money for the privilege of shitting itself thin, while ignoring the deaths of children in other countries that could have been prevented by something as simple as having clean drinking water.

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One pill makes you larger, and one pill makes you small
Posted by: pzzp on Aug 7, 2007 7:36 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and the one that Glaxo gives you oils your asshole

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This is so stupid
Posted by: kelt65 on Aug 7, 2007 7:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The "regimen" sounds more difficult than simply no stuffing your fat face and doing some exercise. For gods sake.


http://www.theonion.com/content/node/29381

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dug up from the Onion archives ...
Posted by: kelt65 on Aug 7, 2007 7:42 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
An Open Letter From The Makers Of Olean To Our Valued Customers

Food lovers of America, a revolutionary new synthetic fat-substitute wonder substance has at last been approved by the FDA, and is now on supermarket shelves: "Olean." This exciting new substance allows you to eat more of the foods you enjoy, without having to change your lifestyle one bit.

Imagine that, fat America, you gluttonous fucking pigs. Just imagine, you pink-faced, perfumed fat ladies who coyly sneak heaps of greased chips, creme candies and lard bars at work during your dead-end clerical jobs. You heaving, walrus-shaped dullards who scratch your sweaty testicles while sitting in front of the TV, lapping up cheese puffs, buttermilk, Double Stuf Oreos and caramel-covered popcorn. Yes, imagine the unimaginable, you bloated, artery-clogged idiots. You can celebrate our revolutionary food breakthrough in the manner which befits your disgusting existence—by stuffing your loathsome, wormy, gelatinous mouths until you burst. Without the risk of getting fatter.

I'm not even going to mention the benefits for all the young women who can now amply feed their societally induced neuroses about their body images. I'm just talking to you, fatties.

Does Olean have any side effects? You bet it does. Nutrient depletion, gastrointestinal upset, and uncontrollable diarrhea, just to name a few. That's right, watery shit is going to dribble down your log-like, oafish legs. But what do you care? What's one or two more repulsive personal traits to you? So just keep popping those Hostess Cupcakes in your mouth like they're Tic Tacs, you blimps.

Does it sound like I'm insulting you, you greasy, fat fucks? I suppose I am. But what are you going to do? Chase after me, huffing and puffing, for about six or eight yards before your arteries clog up and you have to stop? Or maybe you'll threaten to not eat my exciting new fat substitute? I doubt it. That would take self-control.

You have no choice! What else can you do but eat Olean? Eat a balanced diet? Walk to places instead of drive? Sound horrific? I'd better stop before you have a heart attack because you forgot to take your "I got so fat I'm going to die" medication.

Lastly, I thank you, you lard-asses, as I stand to profit handsomely from Olean, thanks to your laughable obesity. And to think I could have had a career in adolescent Leukemia research, scraping for grant money like a beggar. Ha! I laugh at not-for-profits now that I have been shown the true glory of The Market. Long live The Market! Long live fatties!

—Dr. Stuart Halcome, M.D.
Chief Food Scientist
Olean Development Team

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» This is beautiful.... Posted by: fearless flower
Haven't we been here before?
Posted by: fearless flower on Aug 7, 2007 7:43 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
After every weight loss fad, Americans are worse off than before. In the 80's and 90's we had the "fat-free" craze which only resulted in Americans continuing to get fatter and sicker. Alli is just a new take on an old failure. By causing the body to eliminate fat Alli will cause nutritional deficiencies because many nutrients are fat-soluble. Americans overeat and have slow metabolisms because they are already suffering from nutritional deficiencies, thanks to 40 years of modern, nutrient-stripping farm methods.

I've maintained for years that obesity is a disease of malnutrition and the cure is more and better quality food, not elimination of any foods. Eating whole foods as close as possible to their natural state will cure obesity and a multitude of other health problems.

It is an act of insanity to trust doctors and the FDA to solve America's obesity problem. These are the people who have caused it! In fact, if you want to be thin and healthy, do what I have done which is assume that their advice is flawed and look elsewhere for the truth.

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» No kidding! Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» Here we go again... Posted by: mjabele
» Statistics speak for themselves... Posted by: fearless flower
What a rip!
Posted by: phatkhat on Aug 7, 2007 7:49 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you adhere to the lifestyle changes that you are supposed to make with alli, you will lose weight anyway - without the pill. If you think you need a pill, you could take any dietary supplement pill, and do the program, and it wouldn't make any difference!!

How stupid are people, anyway???

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Sharing workspaces
Posted by: messedup on Aug 7, 2007 7:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is just great, we share chairs and cubicles where I work at. I hope this stupid pill does not catch on. I would guess this diet pill would just add to your risk of colon cancers.

My advice would be to take some fiber with this garbage.

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» RE: Sharing workspaces Posted by: maddy
» RE: Sharing workspaces Posted by: Rapunzel
A Proud Moment!
Posted by: thehousedog on Aug 7, 2007 7:55 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Indeed, we have actually crossed the boundary where, finally, and thankfully, Americans can talk about poop, farts, and disgusting rectal secretions in a serious manner. After all, kids have been interested in this stuff since time began and now that they are adults, and some of them probably work for big pharma, it makes sense that a drug would be created that allows for poop, farts and other things to come out of your butt that may be helpful. Wearing dark pants notwithstanding, being around somebody who just produced something solid or a gasseous matter in their pants or diapers - the rest of us are going to have to smell it!!! Preytell, is there a pill that will now be available for those of us who have to smell this s&*t so we don't wretch? Or could we just invest in a new kind of clothespin-over-the-nose kind of contraption that can be prescribed by our doctors? Life here is unreal and gets more unreal every day. Oops - sorry, gotta fart....

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My Roommate Bought the Book
Posted by: kwfryatl on Aug 7, 2007 8:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
. . . and started using it, because he was planning on buying & using alli (the pill). When he dropped five pounds his first week simply by following the meal plan and many of the recipes in the book, he decided to not try the pill - in his own words: "It really demonstrated to me that I was eating way too much of way too many of the wrong things . . . "

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» RE: My Roommate Bought the Book Posted by: BlueTigress
Everything old becomes new...
Posted by: judithvita on Aug 7, 2007 9:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Great article. Terrifying, of course, but fascinating. It reminded me of an early 19th century "diet fad" involving little pills with tapeworm heads in them. Ingested, the parasite would begin its work siphoning off nutrients and calories from the inside of the intestine. Weightloss WOULD occur, but at some cost to the "host." I've also wondered at the irony of gastric by-pass patients who end up on a diet so restricted that had they done it earlier, they could have easily lost the desired weight WITHOUT surgery. But that being said, I know the surgery has changed lives, and if that's what it takes, I guess there is nothing else to say.

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Alli won a "Bitter Pill Award" - "With Allies like This, Who Needs Enemas?"
Posted by: pal on Aug 7, 2007 9:09 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our organization, Prescription Access Litigation, periodically announces "Bitter Pill Awards," satirical awards given to drug companies for outrageous marketing. Our most recent award was given to GlaxoSmithKline, for the marketing of alli. They were given the "With Allies Like This, Who Needs Enemas?’ Award for Irresponsibly Selling a Formerly Prescription-Only Weight Loss Drug Over-the-Counter"

We see the switching of orlistat from prescription-only (as Xenical) to over-the-counter (as alli) as yet another tactic used by drug companies to use marketing to increase the sales of products of questionable usefulness and safety.

To learn more, visit our blog or Bitterpillawards.org

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Most people need to follow military exercise regime
Posted by: Bobsays on Aug 7, 2007 9:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am into exercise being a pre-condition for getting a job, period. People need to ALL serve two years in the military and to then develop a lifetime's workout habit. Go to Israel, there are barely any fat people. Israelis know how to workout because they learn in the military. People in the US, and the west in general, have gone soft and lazy. They need to feel the burn and know what it is like sweat and puff.

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» Military? No thanks. Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» Yes, Sir, Posted by: morticia
This is just another Republican plot
Posted by: hurricane hugo on Aug 7, 2007 10:38 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
to kill mass transit. ;)

plur

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» Pfft! Posted by: KaptainSpiffy
mick3
Posted by: mick3 on Aug 7, 2007 11:06 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's capitalism. Corporations have taken over our food supply and reduced nutrition as much as possible in order to enhance shelf life and ease of growing in the first place. It's quicker and cheaper to deplete the soil, replace nutrition with growth chemicals, breed the life (and flavor) out of fruits and vegetables to reduce harvesting costs, and enhance profits with poisons administered regularly to food plants in the field, while wasting millions of gallons of water in the process by spray irrigating, which takes less labor than ground irrigation. As a result, people who buy food produced by agribusiness and processed by large corporations such as General Mills and Nabisco, are chronically nutrition-deprived. It's no wonder we have epidemic obesity when you can eat yourself silly and still feel--and actually be--hungry. Your body, stuffed to the gills, keeps saying, "Feed me," since it has received only minimal nutrition, plus a lot of bad stuff in the process. As usual, the media and diet profiteers choose to blame the victims rather than say one negative word about capitalism. In addition, many working people are so overworked and underpaid that they have neither time nor energy to take exercise. So, we have a nation of fat people, unless you can afford organic or are otherwise rich enough to have a healthy diet. The latter are usually the capitalist parasites we all work away our lives to keep in clover.

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» You make a good point. Posted by: mjabele
Big Fat Lies!!!!
Posted by: Gravitas on Aug 7, 2007 11:23 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For anyone out there who is sick and tired of being a societal scapegoat, do yourself a favor. Read Big Fat Lies by Glen Gaesser! He is an exercise physiologist who did a 180 degrees on the fat can kill you BS when he started doing the research. His book talks about how exercise and a healthy diet are much better indicators of good health than weight (or body fat level.) As far as I can tell, he has no agenda. He is a thin jogger married to another thin person. He advocates a low fat diet (for EVERYONE) so he can't be paid off by McDonalds. If he just wanted to make $ he could have written a weight loss book, instead of truths the public doesn't want to hear. It is just ridiculous how Pharma creates a panic over obesity, sells pills that harm, then uses that as evidence of how dangerous fat was in the first place! Maybe some people like being used, but please quite feeding the machine for the sake of those of us who don't!

Here is an idea. I wish people would completely forget about diets and worry about their carbon foot prints. NO judgments or fingerpointing, everyone just concentrate on themselves. If people ditched their cars, gas lawnmowers, dryers more often, cut down on all types of consumption, etc we would all be healthier period. And we might actually do some good for the rest of the world as well! Oh wait! Way to obvious a solution. Better take a pill!

"Weight obsession is a social disease. If we cared more about CO2 than BMI there might still be time!"

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» RE: Big Fat Lies!!!! Posted by: mjabele
» Yeah, the thing is... Posted by: JoshuaLudd
Did anyone see the movie Supersize, fast food is addictive, sugar and fat is addictive drugs.
Posted by: jgdewey on Aug 7, 2007 12:43 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That movie, about a man who ate only MacDonald's food for a month is fascinating. The fast food industry has food loaded with sugar, fat , no fiber, no nutrition, and high in carbs. LOTS OF FAT, LOTS OF SUGAR. Figured out he ate 35 pounds of sugar in a month, hidden in their health yogurt etc. The up shot though was that while at first his body rather dramatically rejected the food (think upchuck) after a while he NEEDED it. Couldn't live without it, had to have his fix so to speak. Ergo, we have thousands of people getting their daily fix who can't stop eating it just like alcoholics can't stop drinking and drug addicts can't stop taking dope. Therefore, laugh all you want, this pill appeals to those who have lost control of their eating in an addictive way. They know if they take it and eat the junk they will suffer.It helps them stop. Sad to say, but it's true, and if it helps them stop the addiction to garbage food, so be it.I know the pharmaceutical co. are making money off the food corp. garbage food. It's awful. I wish someone would expose these cereal corp. who take out all the vitamins from the whole grain, mash it into flakes, put back facko vitamins and add tons of sugar. What's that all about? And fast food. Please, it's pure sugar and fat. So, this is really about our food industry, and I believe they know it too. They know these foods are addictive and they don't care. They are getting rich. And the pharmacy companies are too, depression, diabetes, cancer, etc. They took in the movie a group of the worst behaved students in a high school, the ones out of control, on meds, and put them all on a diet of fresh food. Nothing dramatic, just colorful, veggies, fruits, lean meats, cheese etc. They all calmed down, off meds, no longer behavoir problems. This is really serious it effects so many people. I don't know what the answer is, except people have got to start thinking for themselves and not letting ads and what's popular direct their behavoir because many corporations are corrupt to the core, and even though they know their products harm they do nothing.

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And Alli's contribution:
Posted by: polywitch on Aug 7, 2007 1:08 PM   
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The studies show that using Alli in addition to a restricted calorie diet and exercise results in an additional weight loss of three pounds a year. Definitely a poor tradeoff for anyone, I'd think.

And sorry (not really) to poke at cherished prejudices, but obesity does not in fact kill. Crash dieting often does, as it is quite hard on the body. I recommend http://junkfoodscience.blogspot.com if you want insight into the science behind the "obesity epidemic" propaganda.

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The Side-effects are disease symptoms
Posted by: BettynotWilma on Aug 7, 2007 1:23 PM   
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If you experienced the side effects of Alli without taking it...you would be VERY concerned about your health. Why take a pill that does that to your body ??

Agree with many previous posts..if you are willing to go through the agony of the side effects..certainly would be easier and healthier to just eat a healthy diet..reduced fat..lots of veggies.

On a lighter note..is there an Alli "recipe book" ? I propose the Atomic burger: A hamburger topped with cheese and
slices of jalapenos and habeneros...

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Same 'Ol Same 'Ol
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