Ding, ding, ding, we have winner. Exactly right. If he was "stalking" which requires multiple instances over multiple days (not seconds or minutes) there is NO DOUBT they would have charged Z. To the folks who want to prematurely convict Z, "continued observation" and "reestablishing lost observation" now qualifies as "stalking".
I remember seeing this hot girl walking in front if me in the mall when I was a young man. I wanted to strike up a conversation with her and ask her out. I followed her hoping she would go to the food court. I lost sight of her a few times as she went in to a few stores and reestablished sight of her when she exited. Little did I know, she should have had me charged with "stalking" instead of marrying me 14 months later.
wrong. what was Georgies BMI?..can't find it? ding, ding, ding! because his SENSEI martial arts man NEVER calculated it..um, that's the first thing you do when you join the gym.
[h=2]Classification[/h] Main article:
Classification of obesity
Obesity is a
medical condition in which excess
body fat has accumulated to the extent that it may have an adverse effect on health.[SUP]
[1][/SUP] It is defined by
body mass index (BMI) and further evaluated in terms of fat distribution via the
waisthip ratio and total cardiovascular risk factors.[SUP]
[12][/SUP][SUP]
[13][/SUP] BMI is closely related to both
percentage body fat and total body fat.[SUP]
[14][/SUP]
A "super obese" male with a BMI of 47 kg/m[SUP]2[/SUP]: weight 146 kg (322 lb), height 177 cm (5 ft 10 in)
In children, a healthy weight varies with age and sex. Obesity in children and adolescents is defined not as an absolute number but in relation to a historical normal group, such that obesity is a BMI greater than the 95th
percentile.[SUP]
[15][/SUP] The reference data on which these percentiles were based date from 1963 to 1994, and thus have not been affected by the recent increases in weight.[SUP]
[16][/SUP]
BMI | Classification |
---|
< 18.5 | underweight |
18.524.9 | normal weight |
25.029.9 | overweight |
30.034.9 | class I obesity |
35.039.9 | class II obesity |
≥ 40.0 | class III obesity |
BMI is defined as the subject's mass divided by the square of their height, expressed kilograms per square meter and calculated as: