Tigger wrote:I think I'd agree. I was overweight a few years ago, but I knew whose fault it was, which is why I lost 20% of my body weight and kept it off. Someone blaming another factor like McDonalds, glands (ffs), etc, will perhpas be happy to waddle through life blaming something else. My sister is a doctor and she sees this attitude all the time.
"But I do exercise, Doc, and I'm not losing weight!"
"Yes, but because you exercise you're not gaining weight anymore. To lose weight you need to eat less [essentially] and do more."
I wouldn't go so far as to say anyone can lose the extra weight through "exercise more, eat less". That worked for me when I started gaining weight in my late 20s, but it did not work when I again started gaining weight in my mid 40s. Then I went on a specific type of low carb diet for other reasons, and the 15 pounds of extra weight came off.
I'd describe it differently: the people who are overweight don't know how to lose the weight - whether it's not knowing how to summon up the willpower, or not knowing what kind of diet will work for them - so they tend to blame things beyond their control. And of course their blame is likely to be wrong, since if it was right, they wouldn't be overweight.
The opposite possibility is that McDonald's actually is at fault, in which case we'd expect the thin people to be the ones who realized what the problem was and they'd want to ban McDonald's since they knew avoiding it worked.