*'What a weird period of time they lived in.'*
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Trixie, that you? As long as they had a good time
(Also because I am curious: do implants really last longer than human skin and organs?)
Yeah. My wife had her implants taken out after 30 years; They looked brand new. Plastics are not forever, but last a very very long time.
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The real scary thing about those rings is that they canāt actually be taken off. Wear them long enough, and the neck muscles atrophy to the point where youāre incapable of holding up your own head. Take the rings off and your head flops over like a wet noodle.
Itās one of those status things. They donāt have to take the rings off because theyāre wealthy. Fair skin or white cloths meant you didnāt do manual manual outside. Nowadays, tan skin means you have enough downtime to either go to the beach or tanning salon.
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Body mods will go the way of the dinosaur. Itāll all be digital avatars or things like the āsurrogatesā movie.
Surrogates was a terrible movie.
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Surrogates was a terrible movie.
Wasnāt that bad! I could definitely see humanity getting to that point.
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The mysterious ātits and assā perioid, right before our machine overlords emerged.
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Not really against younger people, we have 70 year old stars with these augmentations.
The phone is the keystone for the young comment. Even though ime boomers use their phones more than younger generations, I see more boomer memes about āphone use hahahaā than any other
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Wasnāt that bad! I could definitely see humanity getting to that point.
It was pretty bad and all the problems were changes from the comic. The comic had the timetable for everything much more believable and went into the benefits of surrogates.
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Variants of this image are half the image reactions on Lemmy
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That bag strap wouldnāt hold up that long
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That bag strap wouldnāt hold up that long
Plastics make it possible!
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Today on misogynist lemmy:
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Seriously the lamest boomer humor. I can see my angry conservative uncle posting this, nothing better to do than tear people younger than him down
Boomer women are like this too tbqh
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Kinda rough to think of all women that way
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Today on misogynist lemmy:
Hmmm. I donāt see myself as a misogynist. And donāt quite understand why I would be considered one for posting this content. (Was it because I didnāt find a male equivalent to share as well?)
I found it was āpunching upā at those who spend thousands, or tens of thousands of dollars, to fake their reality. That being said, I understand the feeling of insecurity about your looks, as Iām a balding man. I could have spent the money to use Rogaine or a similar product when I started to go bald early on. But after a few years of thinking about it (back then), researching peopleās takes for and against it, the cost to maintain it and finally, what kind of person I would consider myself if I did so. I ended up on the long road of accepting who I am. It hasnāt been easy, especially in my 20s, when your appearance means so much more. But in the end, Iām glad I didnāt go down that path. Iāve come around and have accepted that this is me, and Iām fine with the lack of hair. (It sure cuts down on haircut costs haha.)
The bigger problem I have overall and why I ended up posting this image, was that I wanted people to A, have a laugh at the unrealistic and realistic sides of things depicted. B, spend some time thinking about their purchasing habits and more so, of what they purchase. And C, bring into question the āfakenessā that our civilizations have been living in. And no, itās not just women who are living a āfakeā life or more āfakenessā than men are. Thatās not my stance on this. My stance is that itās ridiculous how many āthings we needā to live a good life or better. Of course, that opens things up into a philosophical debate of what āis needed,ā but I have yet to find another species that needs a variety of tens/hundreds of thousands of things to work out, to live a good life on this planet. (And thatās another thing, weāre not the only species on this planet. So what gives us the right to generate and ādisposeā of these toxic products, byproducts, etc.?)
This is just a starting point for discussion.
Iād like to hear from you @mathemachristian@lemmy.blahaj.zone about the topic at hand. But first, why do you think Iām a misogynist?
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Hmmm. I donāt see myself as a misogynist. And donāt quite understand why I would be considered one for posting this content. (Was it because I didnāt find a male equivalent to share as well?)
I found it was āpunching upā at those who spend thousands, or tens of thousands of dollars, to fake their reality. That being said, I understand the feeling of insecurity about your looks, as Iām a balding man. I could have spent the money to use Rogaine or a similar product when I started to go bald early on. But after a few years of thinking about it (back then), researching peopleās takes for and against it, the cost to maintain it and finally, what kind of person I would consider myself if I did so. I ended up on the long road of accepting who I am. It hasnāt been easy, especially in my 20s, when your appearance means so much more. But in the end, Iām glad I didnāt go down that path. Iāve come around and have accepted that this is me, and Iām fine with the lack of hair. (It sure cuts down on haircut costs haha.)
The bigger problem I have overall and why I ended up posting this image, was that I wanted people to A, have a laugh at the unrealistic and realistic sides of things depicted. B, spend some time thinking about their purchasing habits and more so, of what they purchase. And C, bring into question the āfakenessā that our civilizations have been living in. And no, itās not just women who are living a āfakeā life or more āfakenessā than men are. Thatās not my stance on this. My stance is that itās ridiculous how many āthings we needā to live a good life or better. Of course, that opens things up into a philosophical debate of what āis needed,ā but I have yet to find another species that needs a variety of tens/hundreds of thousands of things to work out, to live a good life on this planet. (And thatās another thing, weāre not the only species on this planet. So what gives us the right to generate and ādisposeā of these toxic products, byproducts, etc.?)
This is just a starting point for discussion.
Iād like to hear from you @mathemachristian@lemmy.blahaj.zone about the topic at hand. But first, why do you think Iām a misogynist?
So first off it targets women getting cosmetic surgery and not really men getting them, since societally one is more accepted than the other. (Hair transplant vs boob job). The societal pressure to look a certain ideal is much higher on women than on men, and the ridicule women receive for surgeries done is disproportionally higher. So simply hiding behind āI meant all people not just womenā when you very explicitly made fun of a (fictional) woman getting cosmetic surgery is just retrofitting a defense.
Secondly, presenting it as a generational thing presents it as just that, not as a wealth inequality thing.
Thirdly, body modifications (tattoos, piercings and surgeries) should not be ridiculed or shamed. They are part of how someone chooses to present themselves to the world and everyone should be free to do that just how they want. It doesnāt matter how misguided you think it might be, not your body not your say. This ties neatly into fighting the transphobic idea that āany surgery will look fake and trans women can always be āclockedāā.
I wrote more about the misogyny reinforced by āhaha plastic surgery is for dumb bimbosā here: https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/comment/15796191
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Hmmm. I donāt see myself as a misogynist. And donāt quite understand why I would be considered one for posting this content. (Was it because I didnāt find a male equivalent to share as well?)
I found it was āpunching upā at those who spend thousands, or tens of thousands of dollars, to fake their reality. That being said, I understand the feeling of insecurity about your looks, as Iām a balding man. I could have spent the money to use Rogaine or a similar product when I started to go bald early on. But after a few years of thinking about it (back then), researching peopleās takes for and against it, the cost to maintain it and finally, what kind of person I would consider myself if I did so. I ended up on the long road of accepting who I am. It hasnāt been easy, especially in my 20s, when your appearance means so much more. But in the end, Iām glad I didnāt go down that path. Iāve come around and have accepted that this is me, and Iām fine with the lack of hair. (It sure cuts down on haircut costs haha.)
The bigger problem I have overall and why I ended up posting this image, was that I wanted people to A, have a laugh at the unrealistic and realistic sides of things depicted. B, spend some time thinking about their purchasing habits and more so, of what they purchase. And C, bring into question the āfakenessā that our civilizations have been living in. And no, itās not just women who are living a āfakeā life or more āfakenessā than men are. Thatās not my stance on this. My stance is that itās ridiculous how many āthings we needā to live a good life or better. Of course, that opens things up into a philosophical debate of what āis needed,ā but I have yet to find another species that needs a variety of tens/hundreds of thousands of things to work out, to live a good life on this planet. (And thatās another thing, weāre not the only species on this planet. So what gives us the right to generate and ādisposeā of these toxic products, byproducts, etc.?)
This is just a starting point for discussion.
Iād like to hear from you @mathemachristian@lemmy.blahaj.zone about the topic at hand. But first, why do you think Iām a misogynist?
I am not the person you responded to. I just wanted to say that I stopped and thought, āwow, that stuff probably DOESNT decompose, huh?ā as I scrolled. Thoughts of misogyny or wondering how old the poster must have been never crossed my mind, so I was surprised to see some of these comments. I guess itās nice itās such a talking point.
Im glad you posted a detailed response on why you posted it either way, just in case anyone else was curious.
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Hmmm. I donāt see myself as a misogynist. And donāt quite understand why I would be considered one for posting this content. (Was it because I didnāt find a male equivalent to share as well?)
I found it was āpunching upā at those who spend thousands, or tens of thousands of dollars, to fake their reality. That being said, I understand the feeling of insecurity about your looks, as Iām a balding man. I could have spent the money to use Rogaine or a similar product when I started to go bald early on. But after a few years of thinking about it (back then), researching peopleās takes for and against it, the cost to maintain it and finally, what kind of person I would consider myself if I did so. I ended up on the long road of accepting who I am. It hasnāt been easy, especially in my 20s, when your appearance means so much more. But in the end, Iām glad I didnāt go down that path. Iāve come around and have accepted that this is me, and Iām fine with the lack of hair. (It sure cuts down on haircut costs haha.)
The bigger problem I have overall and why I ended up posting this image, was that I wanted people to A, have a laugh at the unrealistic and realistic sides of things depicted. B, spend some time thinking about their purchasing habits and more so, of what they purchase. And C, bring into question the āfakenessā that our civilizations have been living in. And no, itās not just women who are living a āfakeā life or more āfakenessā than men are. Thatās not my stance on this. My stance is that itās ridiculous how many āthings we needā to live a good life or better. Of course, that opens things up into a philosophical debate of what āis needed,ā but I have yet to find another species that needs a variety of tens/hundreds of thousands of things to work out, to live a good life on this planet. (And thatās another thing, weāre not the only species on this planet. So what gives us the right to generate and ādisposeā of these toxic products, byproducts, etc.?)
This is just a starting point for discussion.
Iād like to hear from you @mathemachristian@lemmy.blahaj.zone about the topic at hand. But first, why do you think Iām a misogynist?
but I have yet to find another species that needs a variety of tens/hundreds of thousands of things to work out, to live a good life on this planet.
Then again, we are a bald ape (that almost died out) living outside their environment, needing clothes and housing to protect from the elements. Which then led to cities and agriculture. The rest is just convenience.
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Archaeologists circa 2184 will have a much more interesting job.
He took me to the future in the flux thing
And I saw everything
Boy bands, and another one, and another one
And another one
Triple-breasted women swim around town
Totally nakedYear 3000, Busted
not the reinterpretation from Jonas Brothers -
Well, it looks like subcutaneous injections off silicones do see small molecules of it wrapped in vacuoles in the blood (though the injections are of fluids, so canāt be certain of the breakdown of more solid forms [https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6358378/]). Silicones do burn, producing silica powder, which means it is subject to oxidation-reduction reactions in some manner. Some silicones break down readily in organic processes. The wikipedia article notes clay as being particularly catalytic. The medical grade silicones donāt have even that little bit available for long term study (especially of the thousands of years variety youād need for this picture), but Iād take a wager even they would eventually decay. Buuuut, the decay would likely be slower than skin/organs.
So would silicon be subject to the same fossilization process as bones? Or whould it have a simmilar decay to cartilage?
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wen mantis blades/cyberpunk stuff?
We have to wait for the government to finish shitting the bed, then the corpos can take over and sell whatever bullshit the CEOs think itās rad.