That’s why I believe in it. Otherwise I wouldn’t be able to cope with the idea of so many people escaping justice.
That’s why I believe in it. Otherwise I wouldn’t be able to cope with the idea of so many people escaping justice.
Yes, it’s pretty much what I’m trying to say, amidst being blamed for being a selective feminist or suffering from self-esteem issues of my own. If it’s so hard to figure out her motives, just think about it this way: if she hadn’t explained that this photoshoot was about body acceptance, would have figured it out…
I’m glad to know you’ve recovered and done well.
I’m not sure how adequate your skills are in making assumptions...
Debating is a lost art, my friend.
I’m saying that we’re trying to move into a future that doesn’t ask women to perform real-life Photoshop on themselves to be considered beautiful, so celebrities should not go to such far lengths to beautify themselves and then declare how much they love their bodies. No-one looks like her, and neither does she in…
Good luck on your psychology career! Godspeed.
I can’t even begin.
Thank you! That’s what I’m trying to say. It’s her privilege to be this beautiful, but it’s her duty to recognize that no matter how much she’s struggled, trying to say she’s in the same boat as the rest of the world is careless.
The logic is pretty clear, if you care to not get all huffy and puffy and read my comment in a complete, cohesive manner. You’re harping on about cellulite, when I’ve listed many imperfections the beauty industry throws at us that she could have had. If, however, she is still a recipient of Photoshop, Holy Edition,…
I do, actually. And I hope you learn to argue lucidly without making weird personal assumptions about people.
Here’s a piece of advice: when you read a comment, don’t pick and choose aspects of it to argue against. See how every point works to create a cohesive idea first.
Oh my God. I want to punch someone, but I don’t think that will help me here.
And you should be ashamed of yourself for being this naive. Her great way of fighting her eating disorder issues is by paying homage to GQ magazine’s representation of women? Is she trying to say to all the boys and girls struggling with the same diseases, “Hey! I’m finally cured of my eating disorder because I look…
Please. I’m as skinny as her, yet my body looks nothing like hers. I have patches of discoloration in random places, stretch marks all over my upper legs thanks to growth spurts, hair trailing down from between my breasts to my navel, hair sparsely coating my back and generously around my calves, a few noticeable…
“Let me show you how confident I am of my body that is perfect by all mainstream standards, draped in flattering light and soaked in sexy water droplets.” - Faux Feminist, 2015.
Her responses infuriate me to inexplicable levels.
I don’t get it. I’ve seen Arabic music videos. A lot them stemming from Egypt. I’ve seen the belly dancers as well, who’ve adopted Hollywood’s skimpy outfits in their own countries. And this woman gets arrested? This seems so fishy.
I don’t know what’s up with this sexist school faculty. Clearly, they haven’t seen Mean Girls. Janice wore a tux.
I'm so relieved to know that they have canceled that section. But honestly, all of them need to go. How is it that the biggest scholarship program for women in the United States requires women to be never married and childless? To look like an airbrushed model?