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Anonymous
>>127575 That graph is clearly not scientific, clearly made by some kid in Excel, doesn't back up its sources, and doesn't corroborate itself. Is it saying 91% of the 21% are fat? Or 91% of America is fat?
The current rate of obesity of America is 31%, though that rarely actually considers body fat percentage, rather BMI, which can be figured by height and weight with no other measurement.
For example, my BMI is like 30. I get counted as obese. But my body fat percentage is 20% and my Fat Free Muscle Index is 24.6, and at my weight that means I'm carrying about 10 pounds more than what is "normal" or "average." That puts me in the overweight category, but not obese.
>>127577 A scale to measure "normality" would just see how much everyone has in common with each other across a wide set of criteria. Though its funny you demand I define normal, where as you accept "lolz evry1is crazy fatgodlover in murrika"
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