Actress Traumatizes Millions by Not Being Fat and Wearing Low-Rise Skirt

Editor’s Note: This story is almost two weeks old. Snake Baker has been fired and his family ambushed in an alley with a broken bottle by a gypsy we keep on the payroll for just such occasions.

As predicted, specific, individual women are now being openly attacked for not being fat.

This was obviously going to happen when attractive women were removed from the porno culture and replaced with fatties.

Related: Victoria’s Secret Embraces Ugliness, Signaling That the Porno Age is Already Totally Over

This is a warning to all women with good bodies: get fat, or else.

Yahoo News:

Sydney Sweeney had her toned midriff on full display at the MTV Movie and TV awards where she wore a micro-miniskirt paired with a super-cropped collared top by Miu Miu. While the low-rise trend has already been seeing a resurgence, the red carpet moment is triggering a response from people who’d like to leave it in the past.

“What in the early 2000’s is this?” someone commented on a video posted to WhoWhatWear of the actress showing off her pink ensemble, made complete with rhinestone and buckle details on the skirt. Another wrote, “Not me thinking this was a throwback post.”

Many likened the Euphoria star to Tara Reid, Paris Hilton and Elle MacPherson, who have worn similarly revealing looks in the past. 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.

“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.”

That’s just an obvious lie. Assuming a woman does not have a birth defect of some kind, she has the ability to be reasonably attractive into her thirties. Obviously, the tits are going to go to hell regardless, starting from the age of 20 or so (unless they’re very small). But bras exist, and we are talking here about the midriff.

I have seen women in their 40s with nice midriffs.

Sweeney has a uniquely ratlike, malformed, ugly face, so of course she’s going to show off the rest of her shape if she wants to draw attention to herself.

I think women should be forced to wear the niqab in public, but very recently, we had a pornographic culture that encouraged women to be sexy. Now they’re saying you have to be fat. The porno culture, it seems, was a stepping stone on the road to ugliness. Everything of Satan ultimately leads to ugliness – even women showing off sexy bodies leads to ugliness.

“Watch body positivity go down the drain once the low rise fashion takes over again,” and “Low rise NEVER AGAIIIN! Young generations: learn from the pst!! Don’t ruin your body!!!” wrote two others.

Similar sentiments have been expressed by body acceptance advocates who have watched the micro-miniskirt’s comeback via Miu Miu after the high fashion brand put the itty bitty skirts on its runway in Paris in October. The trend is among others from the early 2000s that have seen a resurgence, however, it is seemingly the most exclusive.

“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.”

That’s a lie. There was a conversation around anorexia, yes, but that was a completely different thing – it was called “heroin chic.” There were some really gross, emaciated women with bones pointing out being used as models.

That is gone now, and it has nothing at all to do with this:

That is a healthy woman who goes to the gym with passion to make up for her asymmetrical and mutated face. She has an extremely healthy body, and I guarantee she is nothing remotely close to anorexic, and eats a lot of protein and fat. She clearly is not a drug addict, and would have very good bloodwork.

If you can’t tell the difference between anorexia and a healthy, fit shape – you’re fat.

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.”

According to reactions to Sweeney’s look, the fixation and idealization of that specific body type remains.

“Sexy skinny,” one person wrote in response to her look. “Love the abs and hips,” another commented.

Although the low-rise skirt isn’t at fault for the praise of Sweeney’s figure, the instance lends itself to a larger conversation about the trend and the ways that it represents fatphobia in the fashion industry, according to Russo.

“Millennials currently having a collective panic attack at the prospect of fitting back into low rise bottoms and crop tops,” one person wrote. “We’ve been through it, let’s not bring it back,” another pled.

There you have it.

Being healthy is fatphobic, just like being white is racist.

Just like “female equality” led to female domination, “anti-fat shaming” has led to “healthy body shaming.”

It’s all sick.

The society is sick.

Everything should be nuked.