RE: Women's clothes?
January 16, 2016 at 2:52 am
(This post was last modified: January 16, 2016 at 2:56 am by Heat.)
I don't appreciate that they are distracting, and that women are wearing yoga pants like they are jeans now adays but who the fuck cares about what I think, it's not up to me. I don't like to talk about this much because my opinions are not favorable by the majority in any means. However, why don't I blow off some steam and share what i've thought for a long time on the subject;
I have some minority opinions on the subject, but I know they are incorrect. I hate that it seems every girl now adays is feeling pressured in to wearing provocative and skimpy clothing because it's become a social norm, anyone who isn't dressing like this is seen as less attractive, people who don't want people to look at their body are wearing clothes specifically meant for people to look at their body. Again I know i'm wrong, but I don't like that most women wear yoga pants all the time currently. Yoga pants were never intended to be a fashion trend platforming the ability to flaunt one's body, which is the majority's intention by dressing this way now a-days, they were meant to give maximum flexibility, for, yoga. I don't think it's cute, or pretty to wear skimpy outfits, I think it's attention whoring labeled discreetly as a popular fashion trend. To some extent, yes, I wish women would dress more proper. Not because I think there's anything wrong with someone who wants to flaunt their body, but because people are misguidedly dressing as if they want to flaunt their body when it's the opposite of their intention and will valiantly defend their fashion choice against anyone wanting to question the motives in dressing provocatively when labeling this hypocritically as the opposite. There's this social pre-conceived notion that anyone who wants to criticize the fact that a woman is purposely dressing one way and then turning back around and claiming it's for the bullshit excuse of "comfort", is somehow by definition misogynist and is avocating against a woman's right to chose how to dress. In the reality, this is bullshit indoctrination from the feminist movement that stuck to society in general that any time a man is criticizing a girl's dress code it's for only one reason; that they want to restrict women's clothing from being provocative. As a result we have these arrogant, obnoxious, self-righteous teenage girls dressing with skin tight yoga pants two sizes too small, and a shirt with a mid drift 3 inches thick, that think anyone who comments on what they're wearing in a demeaning or questioning tone deserves to be castrated for even thinking she was dressing so provocatively. It's the lingering idea from before the Woman's Rights movement that women need to dress to appease men's desire for conserving one's beauty, that anyone who decides to ask a polite and respectful girl why she is dressing almost naked is to be immediately labeled as attempting to insult, when in reality they are ironically giving a compliment saying that someone with such a likeable personality doesn't need to dress like to exaggerate and for lack of better words, a slut, in order to feel accepted by her peers, that in reality a woman's personality is in most instances thrown out the window when society is filled with people purposely provoking men with no intention to do so because of a misled social norm acting as a unconscious subtle rule that provocative clothes being criticized is to be immediately labeled as an unfair misogynistic bias disregarded as discrimination punishable by ostracization in accordance to the unwritten superficial make believe fanciful idea that because women now have rights, anything even remotely derogatory shot in her direction is wanting to infringe on those rights.
That's my two cents. Society doesn't, and will never agree with me, so I don't speak about it much. I'm not claiming women shouldn't wear what they chose, but the TLDR would be; If you are going to dress provocatively don't be surprised when called out for it, and don't hypocritically play victim as if it's his fault for even suggesting you were dressing for attention while proceeding to continue dressing solely for that purpose even if unconsciously so.
I have some minority opinions on the subject, but I know they are incorrect. I hate that it seems every girl now adays is feeling pressured in to wearing provocative and skimpy clothing because it's become a social norm, anyone who isn't dressing like this is seen as less attractive, people who don't want people to look at their body are wearing clothes specifically meant for people to look at their body. Again I know i'm wrong, but I don't like that most women wear yoga pants all the time currently. Yoga pants were never intended to be a fashion trend platforming the ability to flaunt one's body, which is the majority's intention by dressing this way now a-days, they were meant to give maximum flexibility, for, yoga. I don't think it's cute, or pretty to wear skimpy outfits, I think it's attention whoring labeled discreetly as a popular fashion trend. To some extent, yes, I wish women would dress more proper. Not because I think there's anything wrong with someone who wants to flaunt their body, but because people are misguidedly dressing as if they want to flaunt their body when it's the opposite of their intention and will valiantly defend their fashion choice against anyone wanting to question the motives in dressing provocatively when labeling this hypocritically as the opposite. There's this social pre-conceived notion that anyone who wants to criticize the fact that a woman is purposely dressing one way and then turning back around and claiming it's for the bullshit excuse of "comfort", is somehow by definition misogynist and is avocating against a woman's right to chose how to dress. In the reality, this is bullshit indoctrination from the feminist movement that stuck to society in general that any time a man is criticizing a girl's dress code it's for only one reason; that they want to restrict women's clothing from being provocative. As a result we have these arrogant, obnoxious, self-righteous teenage girls dressing with skin tight yoga pants two sizes too small, and a shirt with a mid drift 3 inches thick, that think anyone who comments on what they're wearing in a demeaning or questioning tone deserves to be castrated for even thinking she was dressing so provocatively. It's the lingering idea from before the Woman's Rights movement that women need to dress to appease men's desire for conserving one's beauty, that anyone who decides to ask a polite and respectful girl why she is dressing almost naked is to be immediately labeled as attempting to insult, when in reality they are ironically giving a compliment saying that someone with such a likeable personality doesn't need to dress like to exaggerate and for lack of better words, a slut, in order to feel accepted by her peers, that in reality a woman's personality is in most instances thrown out the window when society is filled with people purposely provoking men with no intention to do so because of a misled social norm acting as a unconscious subtle rule that provocative clothes being criticized is to be immediately labeled as an unfair misogynistic bias disregarded as discrimination punishable by ostracization in accordance to the unwritten superficial make believe fanciful idea that because women now have rights, anything even remotely derogatory shot in her direction is wanting to infringe on those rights.
That's my two cents. Society doesn't, and will never agree with me, so I don't speak about it much. I'm not claiming women shouldn't wear what they chose, but the TLDR would be; If you are going to dress provocatively don't be surprised when called out for it, and don't hypocritically play victim as if it's his fault for even suggesting you were dressing for attention while proceeding to continue dressing solely for that purpose even if unconsciously so.
Which is better:
To die with ignorance, or to live with intelligence?
Truth doesn't accommodate to personal opinions.
The choice is yours.
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There is God and there is man, it's only a matter of who created whom
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The more questions you ask, the more you realize that disagreement is inevitable, and communication of this disagreement, irrelevant.