Thankayou bunches.
As for the objectification of women, eh what can I say... everything is for sale for a price. You take a woman with little education, and wave enough cash in front of her to fill her heating oil tank, when she's making minimum wage and can't afford basic expenses, hells yeah she might take her shirt off a couple nights a week. When we stop allowing ourselves to be bought, we won't be able to complain that we're being objectified any more. Dammit, I demand to be paid for the contents of my [big] head rather than the perkiness of my [ehhh... notsofast!] boobs! I work my ass off and keep my pants ON!
And then there's always the other bit... who's scamming whom? Who is getting the raw end of the deal when a dude making $10 an hour pays a stripper half a day's wages for a lap dance? Junk food for thought...
stinkyattic Reviewed by stinkyattic on . The Objectification of Women In The Mainstream Media You see it all the time, most predominantly in Hip-Hop/Rap culture. We've all heard the media's response, and we've all heard the rap political answer. "It's just music. We don't shy away from the truth." While I think this point is valid, I also know pain when I see it. And somewhere y'all, there is a stripper in order to take her mind off of how she makes her living. Somewhere yall, there is a rapper in order to take his mind off of how he makes his living. This goes way beyond gender ever Rating: 5