Author Topic: True Left breakthrough: anti-relativism  (Read 1269 times)

90sRetroFan

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Re: True Left breakthrough: anti-relativism
« on: June 08, 2022, 12:41:44 am »
https://us.yahoo.com/lifestyle/sydney-sweeneys-micro-mini-outfit-body-positivity-213845522.html

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Why Sydney Sweeney’s micromini outfit feels like a threat to body positivity: 'So coveted yet unachievable'
...
Although Sweeney pulls it off beautifully, reluctance from onlookers to praise the outfit has less to do with the styling than it does the messaging about beauty and body standards.

Firstly, no, she does not pull it off beautifully. Here is the photo:



As I have mentioned before, thin body and short/wide face is one of the worst combinations. On the other hand, I of course disagree with the False Leftists (who ironically are incapable of perceiving the ugliness I just described):

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"No shade to beautiful Sydney... but I'm sad we're seeing more of this ULTRA low rise waist and ULTRA flat tummy look again," one person commented on the Instagram post. "So coveted yet unachievable for so many of us with different builds."

Yes, so don't covet it. Just admire those who have it effortlessly. (Not Sweeney, though, because of her face shape as already explained.)

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"This set is created with this very thin body in mind. It's not created for plus and so that in and of itself is frustrating," Gianluca Russo, co-founder of the Power of Plus, previously told Yahoo Life. "A lot of it, too, feels very glorifying of a body type that we've been working against actively for many years now. The body type is very reminiscent of the early 2000s, when we had all these big conversations around anorexia and fashion and bulimia and how these models were treated back in the day, which is not great. And for a lot of people it feels kind of triggering."

Yes, because you look like this:



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Tyler McCall, editor-in-chief of Fashionista.com, also analyzed the trend on her social media in early March, writing that it "reminds me of the thin-at-any-cost mentality of the aughts."

And you look like this:



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"It's still operating on the same model, which is to let trends be dictated by people who are thin and then let it trickle down until it reaches size inclusivity rather than letting a plus-size body like Paloma or Precious [Lee] and Ashley [Graham] and all of them help to lead the trends," he explained, noting that microminis aren't only styled on slim bodies, but also remain exclusively accessible for that body type. "You would hope it would come back in a new inventive way and I think the way it came back was so reminiscent of the way it started, and that's kind of on this exclusionary model."

Thin people waste less cloth per garment, you moron. Why should cloth-wasters (ie. you) be the ones allowed to set trends for clothes?

(I never even understood why larger-sized versions of the same garment cost the same as the smaller-sized versions, given that the former require more cloth to make. This is measurably unfair to those who purchase the latter. If I was in charge of pricing, I would scale up the price of all garments in proportion to size. Similarly, in a fair society, the price of public transport tickets should be scaled according to each passenger's weight, and so on.)

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"Millennials currently having a collective panic attack at the prospect of fitting back into low rise bottoms and crop tops,

I weigh less today than I weighed when 9/11 happened. Anyone whose weight increases with age after completing height growth should be prohibited from reproducing.
« Last Edit: June 08, 2022, 12:48:00 am by 90sRetroFan »