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June 14, 2004
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Who's Overweight? 3 Out Of 4 NBA Finalists

What do basketball stars Kobe Bryant, Karl Malone, and Ben Wallace all have in common? Pound for pound they're some of the best players in the NBA -- but they aren't considered fit by obesity scaremongers. The U.S. government actually considers them "overweight." Lakers superstar Shaquille O'Neal is officially "obese." In fact, by the federal government's standard, 75 percent of the players in the NBA Finals are classified as either overweight or obese. Find out if you're "overweight" like Kobe Bryant with our body-mass index calculator.

Why does the government think these top athletes need to lose weight? Because current government standards make no distinction between muscle and fat. And in 1998, the U.S. government changed the cutoff for overweight. As a result, more than 30 million Americans (including Bryant and Wallace) were shifted from a government-approved weight to the overweight category -- without gaining an ounce.

The same standard that misclassifies Lakers and Pistons as too heavy is behind the continuous flow of alarmist headlines touting the horrors of the growing "obesity epidemic." It serves to create an artificial "crisis" (or epidemic) that requires Draconian policy shifts. The self-described "food police" at the Center for Science in the Public Interest, trial lawyers led by John "Sue the Bastards" Banzhaf, and government bureaucrats all love to take advantage of misleading statistics about the number of overweight Americans to advance their agenda of "fat taxes" and obesity lawsuits.

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  • Activist Cash

    Center for Science in the Public Interest
    Background | Quotes | Financials
    The Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI) is the undisputed leader among America’s “food police.” CSPI’s joyless eating club has issued hundreds of high-profile — and highly questionable — reports condemning soft drinks, fat substitutes, irradiated meat, biotech food crops, French fries, and just about anything that tastes good. read more here »

    OpEds

    Eat well, but don't skip your exercise
    Unsuccessful dieters and overzealous policymakers might consider that they might have been focusing on the wrong side of the weight-loss equation. read more here »

    Lack of exercise is the problem
    State-by-state obesity trends make more sense when you look at the other side of the obesity equation — physical activity. Simply put, residents of states with high obesity rates tend to move less. read more here »


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