Lizzo proves that you can be healthy and beautiful at any weight by posting nude selfie

Townhall Media

Let’s say the quiet part out loud: Lizzo is not appealing.

No, I am not referring to her looks, although any fair description of those would not include the word “beautiful,” but that is true for the vast majority of mankind. A friend in grad school once said of Bob Bork that he was so ugly that he was somehow attractive to her. Sort of fascinating in a way.

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No, what is disgusting is her minions’ advocacy of the “healthy at any weight” ideology.

The simple fact is that Lizzo and her sycophants in the Elite are doing their best to lure millions of others into an unhealthy lifestyle that will kill them years or decades earlier than they should.

That, my friends, is awful.

Notice that the article about this fine photograph is featured in “Women’s Health” magazine. Every MSM outlet in the country has been on a campaign to normalize morbid obesity, featuring “plus size” models who are not exactly healthy.

This is supposed to be empowering for the marginalized, but it is actually murderous enabling. It is the equivalent of handing a bottle of Jack Daniels to an alcoholic and encouraging them to drink it straight from the bottle.

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There is even a group that pushes the false idea that you can be healthy at any size, and they are working hard with brands to get that message out. I’ve written about this movement in the past and even featured a professor at the University of Denver whose job it is to teach health professionals that the diseases associated with obesity are actually due to the stigma of being fat.

The people doing this claim they are working for social justice and compassion. What they are really pushing for is the untimely deaths of countless people. Americans are getting fatter all the time, and the last thing we need is media and health professionals encouraging it.

It takes about 5 seconds to find countless videos, articles, and even ads promoting obesity. The promotion is often, though not always, associated with promoting the obesity of Black and minority women. It’s almost as if they want to kill Black women in particular, although I suspect it is not that devious. There are plenty of Whites involved in the movement.

Sportswear brands and even fitness services promote obesity–and not based upon the idea that obese people should become fit, but rather to celebrate obesity as a healthy way to live.

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Oooh. You can be just like them!

If it weren’t for the easy availability of unhealthy food and the near-universal movement toward obesity in America, you could see the “body positivity” movement as an unfortunate and stupid way to make people suffering from obesity feel better about themselves.

But no, it isn’t. “Healthy at any size” is a lie, and videos promoting gorging oneself on sweets is exactly the wrong thing.

But it’s a thing, and it will kill people.

Look at Tess Holliday explains how she doesn’t eat enough:

We live in crazy times.

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