bit_pattern
Unregistered
- Joined
- Apr 22, 2010
- Messages
- 7,406
You assume ignorance whenever someone strays from the righteous path?
If you feel 'good' about being obese, where is the motivation to change?
It's as good as denial. We all know how self destructive denial can be.
When people make statements at complete odds with the conclusions of a very wide body of literature, I assume they are not familiar with said literature - yes.
And if you think that the corollary of saying that stigmatisation of a condition is bad is that the condition itself is in fact good, then I would have to assume further ignorance and advice you again to read more deeply on the topic.
ETA:
Social stigmas used to exist for a wide range of conditions. Take cancer for instance (the Big 'C' - the disease whose name we could not even utter in polite society), it used to be subject to a considerable degree of social stigma. By breaking down that stigma and 'normalising' the disease, as yourself and others have put it, we as a society weren't saying cancer was 'good', we were saying that people who suffered the condition didn't have to feel ashamed by it - because feelings of shame are never useful. As for motivation, people aren't any less motivated to get cancer treated because it has been destigmatised. Quite the opposite. As with obesity, the best motivation for treatment is not dying a premature death. And making someone feel ashamed is probably definitely a really good way to make someone feel as if life isn't worth living so, **** it, why bother with treatment when they can sit at home and get some modicum of satisfaction from an otherwise ****** existence by eating another bag of potato chips.
So unless you have some evidence beyond your feelings that shame is actually a good motivator for achieving anything positive in life, you would have to start questioning whether employing social stigma is doing a lot more harm than good.
Last edited: