Repulsive Albino Black Tricked into Thinking She is Beautiful by Callous Fashion Designers

Sven Longshanks
Daily Stormer
October 3, 2014

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Beauty?

Just when you thought things could not get any more ridiculous, the fashion industry is now promoting a repulsive albino Black as a model.

Albinism is a genetic disorder that makes Blacks look even worse than they normally do, yet this model actually believes that her being on the television will change children’s idea of what beauty is.

You cannot teach people what beauty is – only someone who had no idea of what it was would think it could be taught.

Whoever is behind this is having a very cruel joke at this model’s expense.  Either that, or Blacks really do have no idea of what beauty actually is (this is hard to believe, as they clearly all have an obsession with White women).

At least it shows that race is far more than just skin deep, and this is supposed to be one of the most beautiful of the albino Blacks!

CNN:

It’s well known the fashion industry is one of the toughest to break into. To conform to the traditional stereotype of a model you need to be skinny, stunning and have legs that go on forever, right?

Try telling that to Refilwe Modiselle — she’s breaking all the rules while sashaying down the catwalk as Africa’s first albino model.

“I was being tenacious and saying ‘no, wait a minute. This is a different representation of what African beauty is,'” Modiselle tells CNN.

“You’re told that a black child should be brown-skinned, but what do you then call a girl like myself? I’m not tall either. But there I was modeling with the likes of your Adiambo’s, your famous models that have really done well.”

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Seeing this on the television is meant to change your idea of what beauty is.

In 1999, Modiselle was just 13 years old when she was first approached to do a five-page shoot for a youth magazine aiming to showcase how the African fashion landscape would change with the turn of the millennium. It was her first taste of fashion, but she got the bug.

Yet it wouldn’t be until she finished her high school education and entered college (at the behest of her mother) that Modiselle found herself in front of a camera again.

The move kickstarted her career and soon the South African student was staring back at herself from glossy magazine pages and gliding down runways at high-profile events, like Mercedes Benz Africa Fashion Week.

“I was defying everything about what society says defines a model. I’m basically saying ‘OK, let’s teach our kids a different definition of beauty, or a definition that’s always been there but has just always been disregarded.”

Albinism is an inherited condition caused by a lack of melanin, a pigment in skin, hair and eyes. While it is fairly common globally — one in every 17,000 people are born with some form of the genetic disorder — albinos across Africa are often subject to discrimination and even, in some countries, hunted and killed because of their appearance.

“People with albinism are often not given the opportunity to get into such industries because we’re not known as extroverts, we’re not given a chance to be identified in society as people who have the potential to represent something,” she says.

Actually, albino Blacks don’t often get into the modelling industry because they are butt-ugly. But since the Jews run the fashion industry, it is not surprising that they seek to force this on us and pretend that it is beauty.

It was only just the other day that they told us an empty space was invisible art.

This must be invisible beauty.