Intelligence dossiers on the heifers’ and their comrades’ heavy-handed Social Justice™ jihad against fatphobia.
Once one has occasion to observe enough of these pigs in the wild, an archetype of the public health bureaucrat begins to take shape, however amorphous and jellylike, in the form of a bulbous mass of flesh issuing proclamations regarding best practices for optimal health that it is, by no measure, in any position to credibly make.
Exhibit A is Peter Hotez, a viscerally repulsive specimen who unofficially replaced Anthony Fauci once his reputation had been torched in the eyes of all but the most militant #ZeroCOVID progressives.
Related: Vaxxed Healthcare Workers 27% MORE Likely to Contract Flu: Study
Hotez — who once told Joe Rogan with no evident shame or irony that he’s a “junk-food-a-holic” whose idea of bonding with his autistic daughter is taking her out to Shake Shack, which he shamelessly uses as the excuse for his disgusting dietary practices — has no moral authority whatsoever to lecture the peasants about their healthcare regimens.
Yet he persists.
Repugnant butterball and Public Health™ champion Peter Hotez: "I'm a junk-food-a-holic." pic.twitter.com/QBpnUyH64F
— Ben Bartee (@BenBartee) January 29, 2026
In the same vein, we have former Alberta Minister of Health Sarah Hoffman in a recent video, exhorting the public to get their flu shots for their health and wellness while weighing, according to Grok’s estimate, in excess of 250 pounds with a BMI of 41, rendering her clinically morbidly obese:
Based on available images and no confirmed public data on Sarah Hoffman's height or weight, I can only provide a rough estimate. Assuming approx. 5'5" (165 cm) and 250 lbs (113 kg) from visuals, BMI would be around 41, in the obese range. This is speculative and not precise—actual measurements vary.
Hoffman on the dubious necessity of flu vaccines:
How can we make sure that more people get vaccinated so they don't become worse, worse, worse? Like, we're looking at 20% of the population being vaccinated for the flu. That is possibly record low numbers. When people aren’t vaccinated, they’re more likely to have severe consequences from the flu and end up in emergency rooms.
I'll say to all Albertans: Get vaccinated for the flu! You can call your pharmacist. You can call your family doctor. I got in within minutes of saying I wanted the flu shot, and that gave me some more immunity and the ability to help offer more protection to the people I was around over the holiday season.
Former Alberta Minister of Health Sarah Hoffman, the size of a Volkswagen, shamelessly dispenses health advice pic.twitter.com/O23sZMP2OB
— Ben Bartee (@BenBartee) January 29, 2026
Related: Social Engineers: White Men's Sexual Interest in Big Butts Is Now Racist
What Hoffman fails to mention, in her grotesque hypocrisy and chutzpah to deign to lecture the masses on anything related to health, is that her unresolved medical condition is itself a much greater major risk factor for death and severe illness from influenza than not getting jabbed.
Via Bioscience Reports (emphasis added):
The Spanish flu pandemic in 1918 was the most devastating influenza virus attack in the last century. This virus attacked almost one-third of the world’s population, and ∼50 million people died worldwide. No other influenza pandemic after the Spanish flu pandemic is so severe as the 1918 pandemic. Another serious influenza pandemic is H1N1 influenza, also called swine flu, spread in 2009. The virus spread rapidly in ∼168 countries, and approximately more than 123000 people died worldwide in 2009. Obesity was identified as an independent risk factor for higher morbidity resulting from H1N1 infection. The previous record suggested that 61% of adult obese people died due to the influenza attack in 2009. Generally, obese people with BMI in the range of 30–35 kg/m2 have 1.45-times, and BMI greater than 35 kg/m2 have a 2.12-times higher risk of hospitalization in seasonal influenza. The current pandemic COVID-19 is also an influenza-like disease and represented similar complications in the case of the overweight and obese patient.






