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ShowApril 04, 2025
Watch: "Fat Pride" is OVER and the body positivity movement is a lie
Fat pride is officially out, and the narrative that “obesity is healthy” is over. Nonetheless, there are still leftist “personal trainers” out there who exclusively work with people uninterested in losing weight.
“I think it's meant to exclude people seeking help and guidance to solve a problem,” Crowder said.
According to Men's Health:
THE DELUGE OF TikTok influencers selling the recipe for the “perfect body,” the fat jokes, and the compliments that were nonexistent before the weight loss can define your body image if you let it. These three men—wrestling legend Mark Henry, fitness trainer Roy Belzer, and adventure travel host Jeff Jenkins—refused to subscribe to society's body ideals. They looked in the mirror and found love for their bodies. Bodies that have given them strength, power, and confidence, no matter what shape or size.
"You don't see a lot of fat 80-year-old trainers," Crowder said. “The left removes any accountability.”
One TikToker influencer has gone viral after claiming he would never work with people who strive to lose weight, despite being a personal trainer. He claimed this has to do with his mental health, while refusing to work with anyone who wants to be quantified other than how they are feeling.
“False empathy is not moral. It comes at a cost,” Crowder said.
According to Belzer,
From around the time I was 17 years old until I was 22, I’ve had back-and-forth battles with anorexia, bulimia, and orthorexia [an obsession with healthy eating].
My weight doesn’t dictate my happiness anymore. It was a lot of work with self-love and valuing what my body could do over how my body looked.
"We shouldn't shame people for being a little bit chubby," Crowder said. "You don’t need to have empathy for people who are not improving themselves and are demanding you support their poor decisions.”
It helps no one to lie to them and condone the claim that you can be healthy in any size.
“It’s not just skin deep,” Crowder said. “It’s another form of narcissism. You are demanding people declare you beautiful.”
It's not a coincidence that no one regrets losing weight and then decides to go back to being fat. Although, some do try to justify it.
"It's about justifying your own poor decisions," Crowder added.
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