The trouble with being overweight is not the strength issue as much as its the stamina issue.
Potential employers, aside from issues like 'public image', see obesity as a money losing item under insurance for reasons of diabetes, hypertension and heart problems.
Then there is this stuff:
June 29, 2010 -- Adult obesity rates increased in 28 states in the past year, with the No. 1 ranking going to Mississippi, where 33.8% of adults are obese, according to a new report, "F as in Fat: How Obesity Threatens America's Future 2010."
Other major findings in the report:
38 states have adult obesity rates above 25%. (No state had an obesity rate above 20% in 1991.)
10 of the 11 states with the highest rates of obesity are in the South.
The number of states where obesity rates exceed 30% has doubled in the past year, from four to eight -- Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and West Virginia.
19.1% of people in Colorado are obese, the lowest rate of any state.
The number of adults who report they do not engage in any physical activity rose in 12 states in the past year.
Adult obesity rates for African-Americans and Latinos are higher than obesity rates for whites in at least 40 states and the District of Columbia.
Among adults who did not graduate from high school, 33.6% were obese, compared to 22% with college degrees.
12% of high school students are obese and 15.8% are overweight.
10 of the 11 states with the highest rates of diabetes are in the South, as are the 10 states with the highest rates of hypertension.
High rates of obesity are associated with lower incomes, race, ethnicity, and less education, according to the report from the Trust for America's Health (TFAH) and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
So you are seen as less educated, and far less healthy.