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Lucy Collett (Page 3 Girl)


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1 hour ago, Mike Rotch said:

Wrong.  This whole concept of thinness=health is absolute nonsense, perpetuated by a diet and weight-loss industry which has bought its way into and corrupted the medical profession.  Lucy is the only one of those models who is even close to a healthy weight.

You're a lunatic.  None of the other girls in the photo are at an unhealthy weight.  None of them are skin and bones, they all look very healthy. Thinness does not equate being healthy, but it's also not like there is a negative correlation there.  Unless your'e anorexic which none of those girls appear to be, there is nothing unhealthy about being thin.

Lucy on the other hand is not automatically unhealthy because she is overweight, but it doesn't make things easier.  

People are free to live their lives how they see fit and it is bullshit that people will see an overweight person and automatically believe they're unhealthy when that may not be the case.  At the same time though, being totally detached from reality as you seem to be serves no one.  Honestly, all of these women look to be at weight that could be considered healthy assuming lucy is getting proper exercise.  But to say that Lucy is the only one close to a healthy weight is nonsense.  Clearly her weight presents by far the most significant barrier to healthfulness out of any of these women.

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Guest _Antipathy

It's hard to win an argument with a smart person, but it's nearly impossible to win in one with a stupid person.

She has to be over 250lbs to be healthy, and if you say otherwise you're fake news.

 

 

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46 minutes ago, islanders said:

Unless your'e anorexic which none of those girls appear to be, there is nothing unhealthy about being thin.

But to say that Lucy is the only one close to a healthy weight is nonsense.  Clearly her weight presents by far the most significant barrier to healthfulness out of any of these women.

Firstly:  There is nothing unhealthy about being thin?  Yes, there is.  You have been brainwashed (this is not a shot at you - we all have been) by a $60 billion diet and weight-loss industry which inculcates the general public with highly pervasive and effective advertisements and has corrupted the medical profession (by providing financial incentives to doctors to prescribe weight-loss drugs and give referrals to various weight-loss programs, sponsoring medical school programs and participating in medical textbook authorship, and lobbying government to legitimize weight-loss "research" via regulation).  Thin women are far more susceptible to any number of hormonal disorders and are much more prone to complications during pregnancy, not to mention the fact that thin women have a far higher mortality rate from cancer and other serious illnesses, controlling for incidence.  And unlike all so-called "research" into the "unhealthiness" of being "overweight" (which is almost invariably commissioned and/or funded by the diet/weight-loss industry), all of this is based on cause, not correlation.

Secondly:  Her weight presents by far the most significant barrier to healthfulness out of any of these women?  That is patently false.  Allow me to dissect a few of the most commonly presented myths about weight and health.

     Myth #1:  Being fat causes diabetes.  As with nearly all research into weight/health, this is based entirely on correlation, with no causal relationship demonstrated.  If you delve deeper into the facts, you will see that diabetes is not a consequence of obesity, but rather that both of these are often effects of the same root cause.  Setting aside genetic factors and focusing only on lifestyle elements, diabetes is principally caused by routine long-term consumption of foods with a high glycemic index.  Such foods (such as potatoes, most processed bread, anything with high fructose corn syrup, etc.) provide a source of sugar which is absorbed extremely quickly, causing rapid spikes and falls in blood sugar and insulin production.  This, over time, results in the development of diabetes.  The correlation between diabetes and obesity arises from two things:  Firstly, most high-glycemic foods are also high in calories, causing weight gain.  Secondly, rapid insulin spikes stimulate fat storage.  Being fat does not cause diabetes; they are frequent symptoms of the same cause.

     Myth #2:  Being fat puts significant extra strain on one's heart.  Once again, this is simply false.  This would be true if blood volume remained relatively constant regardless of weight, in which case a larger person's heart would have to circulate the same amount of blood through a longer circulatory system - and thus circulate it at a higher rate - which would indeed put considerable extra stress on the heart.  However, blood volume does not remain constant; it increases as weight increases.  The ratio of blood volume to circulatory system volume - and thus the rate at which the heart must perform - remains relatively constant.

     Myth #3:  Being fat causes high cholesterol/arterial plaque/hard arteries.  As with Myth #1, the correlation is misleading; being fat does not cause high cholesterol/arterial plaque, for they are common symptoms of the same root cause - long-term routine consumption of high-glycemic foods and consequent insulin production.  Insulin stimulates the development of blood triglycerides (hence the formation of arterial plaque) and reduces HDL cholesterol (the good kind, as it removes LDL cholesterol from the blood stream) and thus increases LDL cholesterol (the bad kind).  Furthermore, the rapid spikes in insulin production caused by the consumption of high-glycemic foods causes magnesium to leave the body via urine, which prevents proper blood vessel dilation (for which magnesium is required), hence the condition of "hard arteries."  As stated previously, many high-glycemic foods also tend to be high in calories, hence the correlation between obesity and the myriad problems caused by insulin spikes.  Obesity, again, is not the cause.

I chose to address the above myths as they are the most commonly repeated.  Please feel free to present me with any other "health concerns" correlated with obesity that you would like to have addressed; I have studied this extensively.

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Guest Byzbyz
1 hour ago, pummpumm said:

@Mike Rotch

Bullshit, facts and conspiracy theories all mixed together... (@all) Could you just stop to put walls of text between the relevant posts? Thx

sample.jpg

Whoa, is that a morph?

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Guest tumlover
17 hours ago, Mike Rotch said:

Firstly:  There is nothing unhealthy about being thin?  Yes, there is.  You have been brainwashed (this is not a shot at you - we all have been) by a $60 billion diet and weight-loss industry which inculcates the general public with highly pervasive and effective advertisements and has corrupted the medical profession (by providing financial incentives to doctors to prescribe weight-loss drugs and give referrals to various weight-loss programs, sponsoring medical school programs and participating in medical textbook authorship, and lobbying government to legitimize weight-loss "research" via regulation).  Thin women are far more susceptible to any number of hormonal disorders and are much more prone to complications during pregnancy, not to mention the fact that thin women have a far higher mortality rate from cancer and other serious illnesses, controlling for incidence.  And unlike all so-called "research" into the "unhealthiness" of being "overweight" (which is almost invariably commissioned and/or funded by the diet/weight-loss industry), all of this is based on cause, not correlation.

Secondly:  Her weight presents by far the most significant barrier to healthfulness out of any of these women?  That is patently false.  Allow me to dissect a few of the most commonly presented myths about weight and health.

     Myth #1:  Being fat causes diabetes.  As with nearly all research into weight/health, this is based entirely on correlation, with no causal relationship demonstrated.  If you delve deeper into the facts, you will see that diabetes is not a consequence of obesity, but rather that both of these are often effects of the same root cause.  Setting aside genetic factors and focusing only on lifestyle elements, diabetes is principally caused by routine long-term consumption of foods with a high glycemic index.  Such foods (such as potatoes, most processed bread, anything with high fructose corn syrup, etc.) provide a source of sugar which is absorbed extremely quickly, causing rapid spikes and falls in blood sugar and insulin production.  This, over time, results in the development of diabetes.  The correlation between diabetes and obesity arises from two things:  Firstly, most high-glycemic foods are also high in calories, causing weight gain.  Secondly, rapid insulin spikes stimulate fat storage.  Being fat does not cause diabetes; they are frequent symptoms of the same cause.

     Myth #2:  Being fat puts significant extra strain on one's heart.  Once again, this is simply false.  This would be true if blood volume remained relatively constant regardless of weight, in which case a larger person's heart would have to circulate the same amount of blood through a longer circulatory system - and thus circulate it at a higher rate - which would indeed put considerable extra stress on the heart.  However, blood volume does not remain constant; it increases as weight increases.  The ratio of blood volume to circulatory system volume - and thus the rate at which the heart must perform - remains relatively constant.

     Myth #3:  Being fat causes high cholesterol/arterial plaque/hard arteries.  As with Myth #1, the correlation is misleading; being fat does not cause high cholesterol/arterial plaque, for they are common symptoms of the same root cause - long-term routine consumption of high-glycemic foods and consequent insulin production.  Insulin stimulates the development of blood triglycerides (hence the formation of arterial plaque) and reduces HDL cholesterol (the good kind, as it removes LDL cholesterol from the blood stream) and thus increases LDL cholesterol (the bad kind).  Furthermore, the rapid spikes in insulin production caused by the consumption of high-glycemic foods causes magnesium to leave the body via urine, which prevents proper blood vessel dilation (for which magnesium is required), hence the condition of "hard arteries."  As stated previously, many high-glycemic foods also tend to be high in calories, hence the correlation between obesity and the myriad problems caused by insulin spikes.  Obesity, again, is not the cause.

I chose to address the above myths as they are the most commonly repeated.  Please feel free to present me with any other "health concerns" correlated with obesity that you would like to have addressed; I have studied this extensively.

dude no-one gives a shit lol. we're just here to look at chubby girls coz we're some of the weird cunts in the world that fetishise weight gain, which in all honesty, isn't fucking healthy. being scary skinny isn't either, but stop fucking kidding yourself and thinking being fat is healthy. its not gonna give u fkn cancer but its not going to help you live longer either. 

LETS GET BACK TO WHACKING ONE OFF TO LUCY VIXENS WEIGHT GAIN NOW PLS?? 

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Guest sdd619
7 hours ago, backgammonroyalist said:

I feel like she hasn't gained weight in about a year.

I would say she is bigger than a year ago, but then I think the gain was intentional to get to BBW. It is no accident in my view that she gain so much weight. I wonder when she retires if she will eat more. I have known models who retire to just eat as they finally can. Its like tell you to shake by a boss. When you leave the job. The first thing you are going to do is grow a beard, cause you can.

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Guest sdd619
1 hour ago, someone145 said:

You need to look at the pics of her hips then. She does. 

Cannot think of the oil, but apparently that gets rid of them.

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