I absolutely agree with this, and it sucks that a lot of Americans have had poor diet as a huge part of their childhood.I'm in Florida, and I just want to point out that the obesity issue is a function of class and culture. (Although yes, overall America has a huge obesity problem.) I teach at a private school here (our annual tuition is about the same as a minimum wage worker's annual salary) and while we do have obese students, I'd say it's about 5% of our students (and parents), and they're still more 'regular obese' and not 'struggles to breathe' obese. I too am shocked when I go to Wal-Mart, the grocery store, etc.
Poor Americans don't get access to healthy food (meaning, real food costs a lot more here and the grocery stores in the nicer parts of town are going to get a higher % of the healthy food from distributors), don't have access to exercise equipment, and don't come from a culture that values those things.
I agree.I absolutely agree with this, and it sucks that a lot of Americans have had poor diet as a huge part of their childhood.
But if you’re an adult still scoffing down burgers and donuts on the daily and refusing to waddle further than the toilet, it’s kind of pathetic to just shrug and complain about your upbringing.
Have a word with yourself and fix up.
I dont think you got that type of guy in 1950 eating cheetos in front of an RCA radio all night.
Not surprising when the US has tons of buffets, giant food portions, cheap booze everywhere and rock bottom priced fast food deals. Watching US TV channels and the Taco Bell and McDonalds or bargain pizza ads shown with crazy deals are nuts.
I absolutely agree with this, and it sucks that a lot of Americans have had poor diet as a huge part of their childhood.
But if you’re an adult still scoffing down burgers and donuts on the daily and refusing to waddle further than the toilet, it’s kind of pathetic to just shrug and complain about your upbringing.
Have a word with yourself and fix up.
See, those are legit disability cases where Disney works with the family to ensure everyone has a good time.Lots a talk in this thread with zero understanding of how it actually works.
To get Disability Access Service at Disney parks you need to contact Disney at least two days before the start of your trip, do a live phonecall with a representative, and pick your initial rides.
The way it works is that you preregister for rides for each day of your visit and then when you are in that specific park that day you confirm which rides you want to ride and it gives you a return time, typically the average time of the standby line (so if the clock says 60 minute wait to ride Pirates you have a 60 minute wait) and you come back at your time and use the FastPass/Lightning Lane to get on the ride.
The idea is to help people who have a hard time standing/waiting in lines without letting them skip to the front to be fairer.
Folks spent MONTHS dieting and exercising so they could ride that one ride. While I'm happy that some made progress, it took a THEME PARK RIDE for these folks to finally commit to weight loss????
So is the Avatar flying horse riding one, another ride that the Pooh folks have issues with.It's a good ride, to be fair.
So is the Avatar flying horse riding one, another ride that the Pooh folks have issues with.
Personally, I think it's gonna be harder and harder to accomodate those folks as rides have to get more dynamic to compete. A slow moving boat or carriage ride just isn't gonna cut it these days.
As I said above, I can't speak for Disneyland....but this was 100% true of disneyworld in December.Actual image of Disneyland....
Don’t misunderstand me, if you’re trying but failing to lose weight, then of course you shouldn’t be subjected to ridicule. You should be encouraged and supported.That's a pretty surface level analysis of it. If it was easy to lose weight, there'd be no fat people at all. Nobody wants to be fat. I'd like my waist to be 2 inches smaller than it is, but that's proven difficult for me to achieve over the past couple of years, and I know the basics of nutrition, go to the gym and don't really eat fast food (I did have a doughnut yesterday though).
There'll be plenty of reasons that mean people find it difficult to manage their weight, be it economic, psychological or lifestyle (which could just mean working endless hours with no time to prepare food, and no availability of healthy food nearby).
I suspect that this won't get any better as a result of people being told they're pathetic and to fix up. It doesn't seem to have had a long history of success.
Judging people based on how they appear is asinine to me. I’m so sorry you had to wait to get on a Star Wars ride because all of the people you mention aren’t “real disabled people”, for real OP?Almost every other person at Disneyland is either in a wheelchair or an electric scooter. These people seem pretty normal to me. It sucks because real disabled people and me now have to wait even longer to get on the Star Wars ride.
I’ll just leave this here. This thread is something else, and really a great view into what we’ve become as human beings being so judgmental with absolutely no knowledge of what we are talking about in any way. Wow
I would like to add though, that people who legitimately fake being disabled in any way are scum. Figured I would add that before people get mad at me lol.
Yep, the world we live in unfortunately. Pretty sad seeing a thread about it here though, but I’ve been around Gaf long enough to know some of the small percentage of personalities here that are living that life, it’s all good. As always, I drop my two cents and leave it alone lolYeah, there are a lot of invisible disabilities people don't know about and thus remain ignorant of. It's sad. Judging people immediately ...
I'm autistic. I wait just like everyone else. Fuck special treatment. I just want to be treated as a normal dude.A few years ago there was an epidemic of parents claiming their kids were autistic and couldn't stand in long lines. It became such a problem at Disneyland that they made it more difficult for people to game the system that way in that if a parent really did have a kid like that they'd have to go stand in a different line to get a specific pass and then go to the disabled line. People will always game the system and use social media for tips but Disney finds ways to make it difficult for them while still complying with ADA.
They meet up after dark at Disneyland for some sick drifting competitions.Almost every other person at Disneyland is either in a wheelchair or an electric scooter. These people seem pretty normal to me. It sucks because real disabled people and me now have to wait even longer to get on the Star Wars ride.
I don't think the average "land whale" as referred to in this thread is paying close attention to the USDA dietary recommendations.This is the problem. The US government made a food pyramid that made carbs the most important, then went around telling people that meat and eggs will kill you. The sugar industry lobbied hard for the government to be nice to them where even now 100 grams of sugar per day is officially what a person should consume. Carbs are listed at 300 grams per day which is also too high.