This man has caused irreparabel damage to the weightlifting community.

This man has caused irreparabel damage to the weightlifting community. Mark Rippetoe should be forced to face the consequences of his actions... but he won't.
You are looking at a man that's going to get away with it.

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  1. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    That man has gotten more people to get strong then anyone else. That man has also had a huge impact in making people train with barbells and he is reason your gym even has a squat rack, platform and a barbells.

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      You can't expect zoom zooms to know what lifting community was like 20 years ago

  2. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    > ACCESSORIES ARE POINTLESS.
    > SHOW MUSCLES ARE USELESS.
    > YOU MUST DO ONLY 1/2/3/4.
    > NO YOU CAN'T DO PULL UPS WITHOUT WEIGHTS NOO!!!
    > NOO YOU CAN'T DO DIPS WITHOUT PROGRESSIVE OVERLOAD TO GET STRONGER!!!
    > Agh 25kg dip broke my back NOOO CURSE YOU!

    Its the people that shill for this idiot that are the biggest problem.

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      his advice would be based if he placed more priority on progressive overload for upper body lifts and keeping a better bodyfat percentage, instead of making his lifters bloated abomiantions with hute glutes and nothing else because they bulk on 1k cals a day and spend 90% of their training doing wide stance low bar squats (useless bullshit) and deadlifts (huge glute builder)
      literally just training people to become sissies

      picrel = average rippetoe client physique

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        picrel = you only follow one person's advice forever and never think for yourself. They deserve their fate, also do GOMAD, Squats & Oats!~

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        God I wanna put a guy on a SS programs for 4 months but in the last month pump him full of estrogen and wax him completely. IS THAT TOO MUCH TO ASK!?!?!?

        • 1 year ago
          Anonymous

          check @poundpoundcake on twitter or smth like that, he's basically the SS end result

  3. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    former pledges dan smith and chris johnson of theta delta chi of Massachusetts Institute of Technology filed lawsuits against the fraternity citing underage violations of minors occurring in their initiation rituals in late januaries. The plaintiffs also alleged that Theta Delta Chi upperclassmen held pledges against their will in a secret room in the basement of 372 memorial drive in cambridge ma. the pledges are held in the basement of tdc mit for a week without access to running water, fresh food, toilets, or tooth brushes. their cell phones, wallets are also taken from theta delta chi pledges against their will. pledges are not provided adequate nutritious food and water for the week they are held without their will; they are only offered Mountain Dew to drink; and grocery store cereal to eat.

  4. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    people dont know where to start and rippetoe provides a set of 5 exercises which make it very easy to get started
    i would not know where to start without stronglifts (which is starting strength)
    these 5 exercises are the perfect base to branch off of

    idk how anyone could hate rippetoe besides moronic larping dyels and zoomers

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      I did SS for a few months, then made my own brosplit. Made me squat and deadlift, I rate it 7/10.

      >A noob doesn't have weak links, they're just weak
      This is an argument against specificity, not for it. Avoiding accessory lifts just means that some parts of their body will become strong while other parts stay weak. Noobs need holistic training more than any other group tbh, when you're more advanced you're going to need more specificity and focus on lagging areas.

      And I agree with this. Biggest problem of the program is the
      >your last set of 5x5 was a desperate mess of survival where you folding over 5 times in a row? heh add 5lbs next week :^)
      You teach noobs to only go to technical failure in squats and deadlift. Sure if you're 17 and not a frail genetic dead end like I was it works out, but this mentality is catastrophic for a good portion of noobs and will get them hurt.

  5. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Are you kidding me? He was a Godsend for me. Especially when I was a 23-year-old trying to sift through this board's absolute bullshit.

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      same
      its called STARTING strength for a reason
      there is no better place to start, period
      then later you branch off

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        Stronglifts? Arnold's Golden Six?

        • 1 year ago
          Anonymous

          >Stronglifts
          "I can't believe it's not starting strength"

        • 1 year ago
          Anonymous

          >Arnold's Golden Six?

          • 1 year ago
            Anonymous

            It would be decent conditioning for someone who's never done anything fitness related then hop on something more specific.

        • 1 year ago
          Anonymous

          stronglifts is starting strength

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      no one in this board actually lifts, that's why they shit on SS

  6. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Lmao if you homosexuals actually opened your ears and listened to the man he clearly states he doesn't give a frick about aesthetics. He only cares about strength.
    Anyone that follows his guide to a T for purely aesthetics is a moron. Blame yourself for being stupid.

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      Yet his points are still gay af, accessory lifts help build up the missing links from your body that help further your physical performance in lifting.

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        A noob doesn't have weak links, they're just weak
        >I'm not a noob though
        Then why are you doing STARTING strength

        • 1 year ago
          Anonymous

          I just like roasting the shills that keep promoting his "fitness" advice.

        • 1 year ago
          Anonymous

          >A noob doesn't have weak links, they're just weak
          This is an argument against specificity, not for it. Avoiding accessory lifts just means that some parts of their body will become strong while other parts stay weak. Noobs need holistic training more than any other group tbh, when you're more advanced you're going to need more specificity and focus on lagging areas.

          • 1 year ago
            Anonymous

            If you have a noob do nothing but squats his arms will grow from it for a while.

            • 1 year ago
              Anonymous

              I don't buy that tbh, some people can barely grow their triceps from bench so how the hell would squats grow your arms when your arms don't get stimulated at all from squatting? And even if they do, you know what will give a noob 100x more arm growth? Arm isolation.
              >but it will generate too much fatigue
              Curls with fricking 15lb dumbbells is too much fatigue now? What?

              Again, no one is saying that noobs shouldn't be doing the big compound lifts. People are saying that they should be doing those as well as isolation lifts for the smaller muscle groups that don't get stimulated particularly well.

              • 1 year ago
                Anonymous

                It only applies to noobs but they've done a lot of studies on high school football players where they had them only do squats, and progressively overload on them and they got arm gains. Ofc it stops soon enough but by then if you're training properly you'll be close to intermediate level.

                [...]
                You Black folk need to start qualifying these statements by specifying that "a while" means about 3 months. You're the reason people come here and say "I've been doing 5x5 compounds for 2 years now and still look like shit, wtf bro you lied to me"

                Nobody actually does that
                Those are bait threads

              • 1 year ago
                Anonymous

                >It only applies to noobs but they've done a lot of studies on high school football players where they had them only do squats, and progressively overload on them and they got arm gains.
                Even then this still doesn't justify skipping 10 minutes of arm work at the end of the session, which would produce much better results. Most people want big arms to some extent, even among the more strength-oriented people some of them have big arms as a side-goal, so why not throw in some arm isolation? It takes very little time to do, and novices don't even need that much to begin with. 3 sets of curls and tricep extensions 1-2x a week is more than enough to get much better results than 0 sets per week.

              • 1 year ago
                Anonymous

                Then do that
                it's not like you're not allowed to

            • 1 year ago
              Anonymous

              You're obviously never been past beginner.
              A novice doing stronglifts will gain ALL muscles. The 5 lifts are enough and they're underdeveloped and catch up fast, that's known as noobie gains.
              [...]
              Absolutely, I've trained a couple of beginners with 5x5 and they gained arms without isolating. Squatting is the most important for a beginner.

              You Black folk need to start qualifying these statements by specifying that "a while" means about 3 months. You're the reason people come here and say "I've been doing 5x5 compounds for 2 years now and still look like shit, wtf bro you lied to me"

            • 1 year ago
              Anonymous

              > Arms will grow just from squats.

              Show me this fricking moronic logic in action, I'm waiting. Oh right it doesn't exist in evidence. Arms require some form of volume to build up. They are our tools to interact with the world so they are more tolerant to abuse in endurance fashion.

          • 1 year ago
            Anonymous

            You're obviously never been past beginner.
            A novice doing stronglifts will gain ALL muscles. The 5 lifts are enough and they're underdeveloped and catch up fast, that's known as noobie gains.

            If you have a noob do nothing but squats his arms will grow from it for a while.

            Absolutely, I've trained a couple of beginners with 5x5 and they gained arms without isolating. Squatting is the most important for a beginner.

            • 1 year ago
              Anonymous

              >A novice doing stronglifts will gain ALL muscles.
              No shit all their muscles will grow to some extent, but the proportions will be heavily distorted. I skipped curls and tricep extensions for months at a time out of laziness early in my training history, and you know what happened? My arms stopped growing, while my chest, back and legs kept growing just fine. There is no reason why noobs shouldn't add a few sets of curls and tricep extensions at the end of the session, do you seriously think that this is somehow too much for them when those lifts barely produce any fatigue?

              • 1 year ago
                Anonymous

                >but the proportions will be heavily distorted
                By doing compound movements? Without steroids? Hell no.
                >stopped growing, while my chest, back and legs kept growing
                Genetics, and arms are unequally trained by most. Look at ancient Greek statues, compare their hamstrings, calves, and core muscles, to the average curlbro's physique.
                >shouldn't add a few sets of curls and tricep extensions at the end of the session
                If you really think there's no added fatigue, go for it. You're focusing more on aesthetics from very early on. Starting Strength is really just about strength, it's just that aesthetic is much easier early on for any beginner to be satisfied.
                Honestly I've been doing mostly compounds for over two years and my arms are pretty impressive but I understand it's genetic, short and thick, I'm prone to muscularity, I don't store much fat there, etc. I really don't care much about aesthetic and appreciate the fact that I'm lucky for it.

              • 1 year ago
                Anonymous

                >By doing compound movements? Without steroids? Hell no.
                Actually yes. Plenty of people, including myself, get very little arm growth from compounds alone. Bench goes up, chest gets bigger, triceps stay the same size. Chinup goes up, lats get bigger, biceps stay the same size. For many people, the bigger muscle does most of the work, while the smaller ones don't get taken as close to failure and therefore don't grow as much. Not to mention the fact that some muscles barely get worked at all on most compound lifts (eg long head of the tricep, since it crosses the shoulder joint).
                >Genetics, and arms are unequally trained by most. Look at ancient Greek statues, compare their hamstrings, calves, and core muscles, to the average curlbro's physique.
                Not training those muscles is also a mistake. I do a ton of work for my hamstrings (probably one of my best bodyparts tbh), calves, abs, and other muscles that do get neglected among curlbros. But you don't want to neglect arms like squatbros either unless you have a good reason to.

            • 1 year ago
              Anonymous

              You're not an intermediate after 3 months on SS, lol.

              Whole body of a untrained person will grow from 3 months on SS without specific arms work if done right, including arms. Do you really think someone that started out with SS for 3 months without specific arms work would have had noticeable bigger arms if he had added specific arms work for those 3 months after 3, 6, 9, 12, 24 months etc.?

              It's really weird to watch people try to come up with some kind of logical, training-oriented explanation for Mark Rippetoe's pure "too cool to look good" attitude. That's literally all it is. He doesn't tell people to train arms because he doesn't give a shit how people look because he's autistic and thinks it's manlier to not care.

              Even in his own book he says, "Fine, just do the fricking curls at the end if you really want to do them". Why do you tie yourselves in knots coming up with reasons they shouldn't?

  7. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    cow maker

  8. 1 year ago
    Anonymous
  9. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    IT'S JUST MEANT AS SOMETHING YOU DO TO GET STARTED. FOR SOMEONE INTO AESTHETICS THEY COULD just do it FOR 3 MONTHS THEN DO SOMETHING ELSE. THERE'S NO FRICKING NEED FOR CURLS OR WHATEVER THOSE FIRST 3 MONTHS ANYWAY, IT WON'T DO ANY DIFFERENCE.

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      >your legs chest and back will grow during the first 3 months if you train hard and eat enough food
      >your arms? uhh they wont grow at all from arm isolation, wait until you're an intermediate
      ??????

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        You're not an intermediate after 3 months on SS, lol.

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        Whole body of a untrained person will grow from 3 months on SS without specific arms work if done right, including arms. Do you really think someone that started out with SS for 3 months without specific arms work would have had noticeable bigger arms if he had added specific arms work for those 3 months after 3, 6, 9, 12, 24 months etc.?

        • 1 year ago
          Anonymous

          >Do you really think someone that started out with SS for 3 months without specific arms work would have had noticeable bigger arms if he had added specific arms work for those 3 months after 3, 6, 9, 12, 24 months etc.?
          You could say the same thing about literally any other bodypart. If a beginner skipped bench for the first 3 months, would he have a noticeably smaller chest after 6, 9, 12, 24 months? Probably not. The point is that most people want big arms, and the first step to getting big arms is adopting the habits of a big-armed person, which would involve training your arms to some degree. Aka doing curls and tricep extensions. Might as well start doing that at the same time as everything else

  10. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    he's a big guy

  11. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    He has purposely trained them wrong, as a joke.

  12. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    The worst thing about Rippetoe is his programming. The idea that you HAVE to add weight to the bar every week is nonsense.
    You can have the same weight on the bar for months and still make gains by fricking with the rep ranges and time under tension. Just treat the big 3 like bodybuilding movements and go heavy occasionally. It’s a far safer way to train.
    Doing nothing but 3x5 with no accessory work = fat.

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      5lbs every week is too much anyways, the plateau you hit doing that is basically the limit you had from the beginning, but now you're conditioned enough to reach your peak current strength
      higher reps, 5-10 for me, with productive intensity, is how i build up my strength
      i then "activate" my strength by peaking, AKA adding weight every week and doing lower reps at higher % intensity, which allows me to hit a true max
      the linear progression plateau that new lifters hit is basically already like 95% of their strength, it was just latent because they weren't prepared for it
      hypertrophic training is what works for me

  13. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Since he's turned so many into fatasses, can we really call SS "fitness"?

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      we can call SS "fatness"

  14. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    He's a fat moron, you'd be better off listening to oy vey micheal greger

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