Agent Steel wrote:But there are tons of other facts of which you are refusing to take serious consideration.
I considered them, but they are the exceptions, and not the rule.
Agent Steel wrote:You don't know what another person's struggle is like. Everyone is different.

People can generalize about most things because they are true, for most things.
Agent Steel wrote:When you and Dr. Lee say "I lost weight, therefore anyone can", that's just ignorant. Your experience is yours alone and cannot be used as a good argument against obesity being a disease.
It's true for most people. The exceptions are rare. Even women with PCOS can lose weight. I can direct you to a YouTuber(Michelle McDaniels) who suffers from this and changed her life. She speaks to many other obese women and helps them to lose weight.
I can probably find thousands of examples of people changing diet and losing weight. In fact, most of the things like bariatric surgeries can only be done once a person loses enough weight for the surgery to be possible.
Agent Steel wrote:I am able to control my drinking. But you know what? Some people can't. They are called alcoholics. Alcoholism is a disease. Obesity is the same thing.
Sorry, but that doesn't absolve people of responsibility. People CAN and DO quit drinking every day. It's call willpower and self discipline. No one EVER says that no one can stop drinking. How come people say this lie to obese people?
Agent Steel wrote:It's like I said before. You are arguing from personal feelings here, not me. You're using your experiences with weight loss, which you have invested personal emotion into, as a way to make judgements about weight loss in general. That's not logical. That's emotional.
False. You're the one being upset. I argue from facts which even YOU admitted to:
Agent Steel wrote:I don't deny the fact that obesity is a result of eating too many calories.
If it's true that obesity is the result of eating too many calories, it stands to reason(and is fact), that reducing calories can reduce weight, and obesity.
Fact: obesity can be cured by caloric intake reduction. Things like exercise, which burn calories, assist with this. No doctor, in the history of many kind, with any sort of integrity has ever told a person that they
cannot lose weight.
Counting calories: Get back to weight-loss basicsWeight control really boils down to one thing — calories. See what steps you can take to win the calorie battle.
And if you eat fewer calories and burn more calories through physical activity, you lose weight.
In general, if you cut about 500 calories a day from your usual diet, you may lose about ½ to 1 pound a week. But this can vary depending on your body, how much weight you want to lose, your gender and activity level.https://www.mayoclinic.org/healthy-life ... 20a%20week.
Weight loss: Study finds calorie restriction more effective than intermittent fastinghttps://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articl ... nt-fastingDiets that reduce calories lead to weight loss, regardless of carbohydrate, protein or fat contenthttps://www.hsph.harvard.edu/news/press ... otein-fat/I suppose doctors are emotional and illogical, too, according to you?
No one is fat shaming anyone, or fatphobic, unless you consider not wanting to be fat, as being fatphobic(which it isn't). Being obese comes with a lot of health problems that mostly disappear when the obesity is no longer a factor.
You and others can call obesity a disease if you want, but there is a cure for it that works for the vast majority of people, and it's diet control and exercise. While exceptions do exist, they are not the norm, so mentioning them is largely irrelevant.
“Let me never fall into the vulgar mistake of dreaming that I am persecuted whenever I am contradicted.” ― Ralph Waldo Emerson