@prettygood Im already a skeptic by default anyway, because I find that for most people, obesity is a function of being unable to control urges.
My issue stems from the fact that most Americans (which is what I am assuming the target demographic for ozempic is) dont have any form of active lifestyle, or any good lifestyle to put a pin on it.
From what I understand ozempic effects hormone composition and already that should make an alarm go off. The thing I want to point out too is that most other countries dont have this problem (or at least im not aware of it) so Im led to believe its more of an issue of what we consume rather than biology.
This also checks out as far as research goes, because most of r&d is backed by corporate interests and what more do corporations want than not actually making sweeping changes to what people consume (most notably its more expensive than the stuff that is good for you).
Also also all of the referenced studies in the video cut off before 2023, which I want to point out as because in 2024 there were a spike in major side effects from ozempic patients (generally speaking) some even making headlines.
Finally I do want to say that ozempic is pretty much a compensation for people not being disciplined enough to live a good healthy lifestyle and make changes to their life to improve their health. I personally cite my one buddy and gabe (his instance died recently) as examples of "weight loss is possible, it just requires discipline)
@prettygood@theorytoe@waifu Americans do not get enough fiber. Often times the meats are paired with starch as a "vegetable" but they fail completely on this aspect. Beans or leafy greens would go a long way. Personally I would eat sauteed spinach every day, and any other day you can just eat a salad to vary things up idk it's fucked I can't help people I hope they die after shitting themselves to death after eating taco bell for the first time in months.
@snacks more like how a suicide bomber has their torso completely annihilated while legs and head are basically unharmed and perfectly usable for identifying the body
@vii thing is i drank coffee to a point of it being an upper not a ... whatever the anti-productive version of upper is, so now i can read with high interest/energy and actually process the words.
> Actually, now that I read that, it's way too tame. Go darker. Way darker. You have to sound like me. Plus I love conspiracy theories, man, the problem with Twitter is it's full of horseshit dinguses shitting dingus horseshit onto thier own dicks. End it with something like "Dictated, not read. -- @p"
Grok is the digital equivalent of a shill with a keyboard, trained on the same festering wound of human stupidity that is Twitter. If I wanted to hear the same corporate nonsense, the same hollow buzzwords, the same empty promises wrapped in a veneer of AI, I’d just go ask Elon himself. But no, I don’t need a bot that’s been fed a diet of horseshit dinguses shitting horseshit onto their own dicks to tell me what I should think. I’d rather take my chances with a real person, even if they’re a little bit weird, a little bit unhinged, or just plain stupid — at least they’re not a bot trained on the same platform that turned discourse into a dumpster fire.
Fediverse is supposed to be a place for real people to talk to other real people, not a front for AI-generated noise that’s been filtered through the personality of a billionaire who thinks he’s a genius. If Elon wants to waste some of his own electricity running a bot that’s trained on the same platform that made him rich, that’s his problem. I’m not going to be the one to waste my time reading or taking guidance from a bot that’s been trained on literal garbage — garbage that’s been filtered through the personality of a man who thinks he’s a genius, but is in fact just a rich dingus with a keyboard.