this post was submitted on 22 Mar 2026
16 points (80.8% liked)

news

795 readers
767 users here now

A lightweight news hub to help decentralize the fediverse load: mirror and discuss headlines here so the giant instance communities aren’t a single choke-point.

Rules:

  1. Recent news articles only (past 30 days)
  2. Title must match the headline or neutrally describe the content
  3. Avoid duplicates & spam (search before posting; batch minor updates).
  4. Be civil; no hate or personal attacks.
  5. No link shorteners
  6. No entire article in the post body

founded 7 months ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] Alk@sh.itjust.works 5 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Dieting is effective in a vacuum. Much of the time dieting isn't effective because people are too busy, uninformed, too stressed, working 2 jobs, have mental disorders, don't live near accessible sources of healthy food, have incredibly low willpower, are being lied to by food companies, lied to by their governments health systems, coerced into an unhealthy but profitable lifestyle, or all of the above.

Sure you could say "well just fix all of that and you'd be healthy" and you'd be right. But we all know that's not going to happen, especially en masse.

Semaglutide helps people in those situations avoid the consequences of obesity. Sure it may have its own downsides. But it's the easiest of many solutions, often the only one that will feasibly work for someone.

Not everyone can "pull themselves up by their bootstraps" and get healthy without help. If they could, the world wouldn't be so obese on average. You have to acknowledge this is a mostly global issue and traditional solutions would have fixed it by now if they always worked.

[–] SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca -1 points 21 hours ago (1 children)

you know obesity is really only a US problem? Right?

[–] Alk@sh.itjust.works 2 points 20 hours ago

How about you actually do some research before you make claims like that? It's a bit worse in the US, but obesity is a global problem. Any country with an obese population of 20% or more of the total population I would consider as having a serious national obesity problem. Several first world countries are at above 30%. A couple are above 40%, including the US. Even half of that is still in "crisis" territory.