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The #Bodypositivity Annals: Fleshy Logistical Nightmares

AP Photo/Nicole Evatt

Intelligence dossiers on the heifers’ and their comrades’ heavy-handed Social Justice™ jihad against fatphobia. 

Airplane lavatories are discriminatory, claim ‘plus-size influencers’

The walking they were forced to perform in order to film this TikTok video is probably more exercise than they average in a month.

Related: Southwest Airlines Caves to Fat Mob, Gives Away Free Seats to Obese Passengers

Gigantic specimen hoisted onto airplane by nearly complete football team of airline staff

In the largest logistical nightmare they’ve probably had all year, a team of no less than eight baggage handlers — almost enough for a proper football squad — were made to drag what appears to be a 500-pound hippo-human chimera up the stairs into the airplane.

Where they stuck her once on board, we can only speculate, although if I ever find video of that, I’ll be sure to share it.

Someone asked Grok AI for a synopsis of the events depicted in the video, which the LLM obliged in strikingly well-mannered and gracious terms — as any AI gentleman sensitive to the plight of the fats should:

The video shows Air Peace ground crew assisting an obese female passenger by carrying her up the mobile staircase to board the plane, as she appears unable to climb due to mobility issues related to her size.

When you really stop to think about it, the fact that the technology exists not only to support the life of such a creature (and millions like her), thereby thwarting all laws of natural selection, but also to facilitate ferrying her through the sky at hundreds of miles per hour to exotic corners of the world is a testament to human ingenuity.

Truly, technology has ushered in a remarkable era, full of feats that would have been literally impossible for our ancestors to imagine in the days of yore.

The Jetsons might not have envisioned that civilization would devolve into hauling quarter-ton human blobs with corn syrup for blood hither and thither, but here we are.

Social Justice™ adherent claims Ozempic is a tool for fat genocide, ‘fatphobia is racism’

They’re trying to exterminate fat people. They want to get rid of us. It’s all white supremacy. Fatphobia is racism. They’re so excited that they found a drug that makes it so we don’t exist anymore. If tomorrow, they released a drug that said ‘we cured blackness, if you just take this pill, you can be white,’ it’s all the same.

Related12-Foot Statue of Obese Black Woman Appears in Times Square

Before we rush to give this lady credit for the incredible yarn she’s spun in her work of dystopian fiction, let’s acknowledge that she borrowed her thesis from DEI scholar Sabrina Strings — and, in typical evil white fashion, didn’t even credit her.

I’ve covered the so-called work of Sabrina Strings for you fine people before here at PJ Media, but here’s a brief refresher of what she’s all about, via “Fearing the Black Body: The Racial Origins of Fat Phobia” (emphasis added):

There is an obesity epidemic in this country and poor black women are particularly stigmatized as “diseased” and a burden on the public health care system. This is only the most recent incarnation of the fear of fat black women, which Sabrina Strings shows took root more than two hundred years ago.
Strings weaves together an eye-opening historical narrative ranging from the Renaissance to the current moment, analyzing important works of art, newspaper and magazine articles, and scientific literature and medical journals―where fat bodies were once praised―showing that fat phobia, as it relates to black women, did not originate with medical findings, but with the Enlightenment era belief that fatness was evidence of “savagery” and racial inferiority.
The author argues that the contemporary ideal of slenderness is, at its very core, racialized and racist. Indeed, it was not until the early twentieth century, when racialized attitudes against fatness were already entrenched in the culture, that the medical establishment began its crusade against obesity. An important and original work, Fearing the Black Body argues convincingly that fat phobia isn’t about health at all, but rather a means of using the body to validate race, class, and gender prejudice.

 

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