Hitler would have sorted them out.

bring on Marjorie Dawes! Fat Fighters!
Fire Brigade Called in to Move Obese Patients
Essex had the most calls, and the Fire and Rescue chief there said: "I cannot imagine for a minute that anyone would suggest that we leave people lying on the floor, stuck in their baths or in bed upstairs because of their size."
I love the way they say "Emma, 19, weighs 17st, while her older sister Samantha, 21, weighs 18st."
Im 22 and am around 17 stone and ive just done an 8 hour shift at work on my feet all day and im perfectly fine. Its lazyness, they deserve to be shot for it.

I blame the x-factor for getting that girls hopes up.
The auditions are held at the hotel I used to work at and the way it would work is that you would have a first audition in front of some people which is not on TV and they tell you that your either through to the next stage or your not.
I think that they ask some of the biggest muppets to come back for the TV auditions just to make up the numbers and make it more of an interseting show.
They should just tell them on there first try that they are a load of crap and to go home instead of inviting them back to make fools of themselfs on tv and get their hopes up !!!!!!!!!

'I don't have breakfast most days. Sometimes I don't have lunch either, and might only have a salad roll for tea. I'm always eating lettuce and apples and stuff.'
Her dad Philip ('22 stone, but I used to be 26') nods in agreement. 'I'm the same. Cornflakes for breakfast, a roll for lunch and one of those microwave meals for my dinner.'
A Weightwatchers one, Dad!' interjects elder daughter Samantha (circa 18 stone). For her part, Samantha says she 'is always eating salads'.
Only Mum Audrey (20ish stone, but understandably reluctant to be specific) seems off message. She has been asleep on the sofa for most of our interview, but wakes up in time to raise the issue of Easter eggs.
She points out that her girls get one each every year. Both leap in with clarifications. 'Only a little one, Mum,' says Emma. 'Tiny. Like those little mini eggs,' says Samantha, holding her thumb and finger about two millimetres apart.'
She admits there might be crisps and chocolate in the kitchen cupboards, 'but they aren't for us. They are for our niece. You have to have those things in the house for children, don't you?'
'We're the victims in all of this. It's not our fault we can't work. We've been accused of sitting around watching telly all day, well, it's just not true.
'We love TV,' Philip had told the magazine. 'It's on from the moment we get up. Often I'm so tired from watching TV I have to have a nap.'
Oh this family gets better every week.
They are medical miracles, they eat nothing but salads and weight watcher meals yet their bodies turn it all to fat, load of garbage.
lulz
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/a...nefits--work-Who-blame-Anyone-themselves.html
From cheets64 post said:Only Mum Audrey (20ish stone, but understandably reluctant to be specific) seems off message. She has been asleep on the sofa for most of our interview, but wakes up in time to raise the issue of Easter eggs.

Hitler would have sorted them out.