Spot on! I look at girls now and they look at act worse than any street walker ever did. One of the "body positivity" shills Lizzo after telling girls you can be MORBIDLY obese and it is okay is now parading her weight loss (or Ozempic loss). I wrote her once on her Instagram page "well, what are you saying now?" Of course, no response.
How things have changed. In 1966 when I was a junior in high school, girls' skirt styles got a bit shorter and some "daring" skirts were perhaps an inch or two above the knees, still fairly long by today's standards. It was fashionable to wear the shorter shirts with a rib knit turtle neck sweater and matching leggings, and I wore this kind of outfit to school one day. I was stopped in the halls by the principal, who told me to kneel on the ground to see if my skirt touched the ground. It didn't by about an inch, and the principal told me to go home and change the skirt. This was just a regular public high school, too! At that time, everyone would have been horrified by what high school kids are allowed to wear at school today.
I was at the tail end of that era. I had a pretty Sunday dress that had a slightly dipped neckline with big shoulder pads (I so miss the 1980’s!).
My dad FREAKED because he thought the neckline would reveal more than it should. That was only if I bent way over which my hand did (and still does) go to my top to keep it close needed or not.
Times were sure different. Clothing just shows our morals and values and lack of a two parent home.
Watched "Night Moves " last night, with Gene Hackman and Melodie Griffith, age 17 Severl nude scenes, and she plays exactly the young girl/woman you describe here. . Her first big role ( 2 previous movies, one at 16, also nude scenes). Poor Melodie was pimped out early and often, and battled addiction , and multiple marriages (often to Don Johnson, whom she met when she was 14 and him 22) .
From Blblical Man (I know the title is jarring)
Your Daughter Will Become A Whore
(Because You Were Too Weak To Be Called One)
The brutal truth about why your mother's judgment saved you, and your "kindness" will destroy her
I watched her scroll through her daughter's Instagram.
Crop top. Duck lips. Comment section full of flame emojis from men old enough to know better.
She's thirteen.
"I don't want to shame her," mom whispers. "I want her to feel empowered."
Crap.
Your mother knew better.
She called them whores.
The girls with:
- Skirts too short
- Makeup too thick
- Boys too many
- Reputations too loose
You hated her for it.
- Called her judgmental
- Called her toxic
- Called her outdated
But your mother's cruelty was a shield.
Her judgment was armor.
Her "toxic shame" was a wall between you and a world that devours soft girls.
Look at your daughter now:
She's learning the new curriculum:
- Trading dignity for likes
- Selling skin for validation
- Learning her worth in DMs
- Measuring love in emojis
You're so proud of being "sex positive."
So enlightened about "body autonomy."
So educated about "empowerment."
While your daughter learns to sell herself cheaper than any street walker.
At least they charge cash.
She gives it away for hearts.
Your mother knew:
- Every girl is one validation away from ruin
- One "you're not like other girls" from destruction
- One "you're so mature for your age" from becoming prey
But you?
You teach "self-expression."
You celebrate "confidence."
You praise "body positivity."
While old men lick their lips and type "so pretty" on your baby's photos.
Your mother's hard words built walls.
Your soft words build graves.
She knew:
- Reputation is female currency
- Dignity is feminine power
- Modesty is tactical warfare
- Judgment is preventive medicine
But you taught your daughter:
- "Don't let them shame you"
- "Express yourself freely"
- "Your body, your choice"
- "Ignore the haters"
Congratulations.
You protected her from your mother's judgment.
And fed her to wolves instead.
Here's the raw truth:
Your mother called those girls whores because she saw their futures:
- Empty beds after empty nights
- Validation addiction at 40
- Beauty fading faster than options
- Worth measured in body count
She saw what you're too weak to see:
A world that buys girls wholesale and sells them back broken.
Finish it here: https://wilderreport.substack.com/p/your-daughter-will-become-a-whore
Spot on! I look at girls now and they look at act worse than any street walker ever did. One of the "body positivity" shills Lizzo after telling girls you can be MORBIDLY obese and it is okay is now parading her weight loss (or Ozempic loss). I wrote her once on her Instagram page "well, what are you saying now?" Of course, no response.
How things have changed. In 1966 when I was a junior in high school, girls' skirt styles got a bit shorter and some "daring" skirts were perhaps an inch or two above the knees, still fairly long by today's standards. It was fashionable to wear the shorter shirts with a rib knit turtle neck sweater and matching leggings, and I wore this kind of outfit to school one day. I was stopped in the halls by the principal, who told me to kneel on the ground to see if my skirt touched the ground. It didn't by about an inch, and the principal told me to go home and change the skirt. This was just a regular public high school, too! At that time, everyone would have been horrified by what high school kids are allowed to wear at school today.
I was at the tail end of that era. I had a pretty Sunday dress that had a slightly dipped neckline with big shoulder pads (I so miss the 1980’s!).
My dad FREAKED because he thought the neckline would reveal more than it should. That was only if I bent way over which my hand did (and still does) go to my top to keep it close needed or not.
Times were sure different. Clothing just shows our morals and values and lack of a two parent home.
Watched "Night Moves " last night, with Gene Hackman and Melodie Griffith, age 17 Severl nude scenes, and she plays exactly the young girl/woman you describe here. . Her first big role ( 2 previous movies, one at 16, also nude scenes). Poor Melodie was pimped out early and often, and battled addiction , and multiple marriages (often to Don Johnson, whom she met when she was 14 and him 22) .
Wow… very powerful.
Wow
Thanks Tri Torch!