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Body PositivityNovember 19, 2025
Fat pride influencers live large at "Fat Con 2025," and here's what you missed!
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Plus size influencers attend ‘Fat Con’ in Philadelphia.
“When you become a certain size, it becomes part of your identity.” pic.twitter.com/zuqMwWUJSA
— Oli London (@OliLondonTV) November 18, 2025
If you are proud of your bad life choices, so much so that you demand the rest of the world cater to your uncontrollable gluttony, that tells you more than you need to know—which is exactly why a bunch of fat pride influencers attended FatCon in Philadelphia.
According to the event page, “Philly FatCon is a revolutionary two-day convention curated for fat people, by fat people.”
How good do you think they felt about themselves after the event? Did that give them the justification they needed to not do everything in their power to improve their health? Because I would assume so, as they claimed this was a forum to bond over their similar “lived experiences.”
What does the “lived experience” of a fat person even mean? I get that they probably have more trouble shopping for clothes and fitting in seats, but is that really something that must be bonded over? That remains unclear.
Question: Would skinny people have been allowed to attend the event? What if the skinny person believes they are fighting or struggling with their own body image? Would they have been included? Because something tells me otherwise.
One of the “fat activists” claimed she’s all in it to fight against weight stigma.
According to the World Obesity Federation, “Weight stigma refers to the discriminatory acts and ideologies targeted towards individuals because of their weight and size. Weight stigma is a result of weight bias. Weight bias refers to the negative ideologies associated with obesity.”
Call me crazy, but that sounds like a personal problem. It is an objectively bad thing for your health to be overweight, and the sooner these influencers realize that, the better off they will be.
That being said, the truth hurts, but not as much as how much the extra pounds might hurt. And while I am no medical doctor, I think they would be a lot less miserable if they lost a few pounds—or one hundred. I don’t know. That’s my two cents. You can draw whatever conclusion you wish.
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