She also could have gotten 16 packs of Ramen noodles, 2lbs of Weis brand hotdogs, or even a lb of lunch meat.
That's what broke people do.
Not lazy ones that the government says we have to take care of.
She also could have gotten 16 packs of Ramen noodles, 2lbs of Weis brand hotdogs, or even a lb of lunch meat.
Even so, is it really incumbent on a business to compensate for a responsible human beings bad habits? Pay for a gym membership? I can see encouraging and influence, but putting the consequences of bad habits on others is dreadful and so are the consequences of that. Because once it's been established that you are the ward of another be it state or employer, you are then their debtor.
The longer people are enabled in their bad habits, the longer they'll maintain them and the worse they will become.
That's what broke people do.
Not lazy ones that the government says we have to take care of.
I'm not saying they should pay for a gym membership, just saying they should.
If you're in the business of insuring people, you insure people. Picking and choosing based on some sense of responsibility is bullshit. No doubt they deny legitimate claims that are too spendy as being "unnecessary". Do I think people who utilize more costs because of unhealthy lifestyles should have higher premiums than a crossfit champion, absolutely. But that person should still be covered.
Yes, we like our food fried here in the South. Being a fat ass is not frowned upon. We refuse to change our lifestyle because of some Yankee health kick. We like everything fried, lots of sugar and tons of salt. It is good. Try it.If there's any excess cost from treating all these extra fatties, the South Eastern US will likely drain the bank.
Then again, obese people have disease states that are readily treatable with cheap medications. Give a guy some cholesterol meds or watch him have a heart attack and go to the ER and rack up 50K after undergoing bypass or stent placement.
You could treat 1000 people with high cholesterol for a year just by preventing a single heart attack.
From a business standpoint, any insurance company that doesn't cover this sort of stuff in the first place is likely losing money on the deal. Pay for a couple office visits and even a gym membership and you're still well under the cost of treating the complications of obesity for that same patient.
I eat fried foods frequently, but since I haven't caught the obesity disease, I'm pretty trim. I might be immune. Maybe I should be studied through science and help find a cure for this dreadful disease.
Height and weight and we will be the judge fatty.
That is a poor way to measure if a person is a fat ass. I used to weigh 230lbs and I was only 5'9". I had 20 inch biceps, massive thighs and broad shoulder with a very deep chest. At the time, it was muscle weight. All I did was lift weights. I only had a 36" waist at that weight. Body types don't fit the little doctors weight chart. I was strong as an ox at the time.
Do we have any libtards on the board anymore? I wish superpunk was here to explain.
You don't see many football players in the 200 range (especially white players, sans kickers)6'1 200
My shoulders don't fit through a door. I was destined for the NFL before an accident at work wrecked my knee. I cried like a baby when the doctor said I wouldn't play football again.
You don't see many football players in the 200 range (especially white players, sans kickers)
Sure it was muscle and Oprah is just big boned. Fat Asssss!
I was actually into power lifting and I have a big frame. I wasn't fat then. I could lose ten pounds now, but I am not fat ass. I don't really care if I am though. I eat what I want, when I want and drink about three ltrs of Coke a day. I also smoke about two packs a day. It's called living son.
I was actually into power lifting and I have a big frame. I wasn't fat then. I could lose ten pounds now, but I am not fat ass. I don't really care if I am though. I eat what I want, when I want and drink about three ltrs of Coke a day. I also smoke about two packs a day. It's called living son.