Plastic surgery is the heritage of New York Magazine readers. It is cultural appropriation for incels to use it, and that's not OK.https://twitter.com/NYMag/status/1133325076869337090 …
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People ache for someone they can hate without feeling guilty about it. Journalists just fill that void.
I mean, I'm no exception, I just cut out the middleman and hate the journalists.
Uncanny: There actually was an Amazing Journey cover story much like that in NYM ~10 years ago, "Suddenly Skinny" about a woman who had stomach staple surgery and then dumbed her nerdy slacker husband for some hot rich dude.
Correction....Memory was slightly off — he asked her for divorce. But otherwise the drift of the article was the samehttp://nymag.com/nymetro/health/features/1868/ …
read this earlier; was full of rage at the narrative for exactly the reason you point out - New York Magazine speaking power to truth
Ugly low-status person gets plastic surgery, discovers that physical appearance is not the reason they were low-status
If your takeaway on a mass media piece about a designated public scapegoat is that they deserve what they get, well sure.
The notional 'incel movement' is a scapegoat for a number of awful things done by self-identified 'incels', and that's awful and undeserved. The social outlook and suite of opinions that the movement promotes is far more unattractive than the guys promoting it, though.
Old ladies get collagen injection look young with plump lips; find out that friends call them ‘fish lips’ behind their back
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