These are confusing times, especially for men -- or women who are becoming men, or who love other women -- since commenting on a woman's looks is pretty damn close to against the law. Even noticing is probably a misdemeanor. You certainly can't tell someone she looks hot, or that she turns you on, or that you find her jumbo, newly-enhanced breasts that are fairly bursting out of her low-cut barely-there dress to be "titillating," excuse the pun.
Indeed, any sort of acknowledgement of how someone looks, especially a female, can get you into very hot water. Just ask the dozens of men who have lost their jobs and their families, and others who are awaiting prosecution, for their so-called sexual harassment against attractive women, none of whom were wearing sweatpants, flannel shirts and work boots at the office Christmas party.
Instead, many young women, mimicking their beloved Hollywood celebrities, try to look their best in public, and for them this means looking sexy. Why else do they walk around on stiletto heels? Why do they spend tons of money on makeup, including eyelash extensions and glossy lipsticks, if not to entice? According to the financial website Mint.com, "The average woman drops a cool $15,000 total during her lifetime on cosmetic products, with $3,770 of that going toward mascara alone!"
Then there are the manicures and pedicures and hair products, including color to cover the gray, a natural sign of aging which is definitely not sexy. Why do women who no longer want to be treated as "sex objects" wear push-up bras and thong bikinis and sheer lingerie and skinny jeans and perfumes and colognes and dangling earrings and short shorts? And finally, what's with those butt enhancers, or even worse, butt injections of God knows what, to enlarge their derrieres? What's the point, if they're not seeking to get attention by looking sexy and alluring?
Just asking.
Beyonce at The Met Gala, 2016 |
Instead, many young women, mimicking their beloved Hollywood celebrities, try to look their best in public, and for them this means looking sexy. Why else do they walk around on stiletto heels? Why do they spend tons of money on makeup, including eyelash extensions and glossy lipsticks, if not to entice? According to the financial website Mint.com, "The average woman drops a cool $15,000 total during her lifetime on cosmetic products, with $3,770 of that going toward mascara alone!"
Then there are the manicures and pedicures and hair products, including color to cover the gray, a natural sign of aging which is definitely not sexy. Why do women who no longer want to be treated as "sex objects" wear push-up bras and thong bikinis and sheer lingerie and skinny jeans and perfumes and colognes and dangling earrings and short shorts? And finally, what's with those butt enhancers, or even worse, butt injections of God knows what, to enlarge their derrieres? What's the point, if they're not seeking to get attention by looking sexy and alluring?
Just asking.
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