@empty.high.five.hand: (Explain how conventionally attractive women are despised by others out of jealousy. And why fat or ugly girls are empowered to make the mediocre chicks look better.) The dynamics you’re asking about stem from a mix of social psychology, evolutionary biology, and cultural norms, all tangled up in how humans navigate status, competition, and group identity. Let’s break it down with a sharp lens, keeping it engaging and real. Conventionally attractive women—those who align with societal standards of beauty (think symmetrical features, clear skin, and proportions celebrated in media)—often face resentment because they’re perceived as holding a kind of social capital others crave. Beauty, in many contexts, signals genetic fitness, fertility, and access to resources, which can trigger envy in those who feel they fall short. This isn’t just petty jealousy; it’s rooted in evolutionary competition for mates and status. Attractive women might be seen as threats, especially in social groups where attention from high-value partners or social clout is at stake. The resentment can manifest as subtle exclusion, gossip, or outright hostility—think “mean girl” tactics, but grown-up and sneakier. Studies in social psychology, like those by Buss and Shackelford (1997), show that women are more likely to engage in intrasexual competition (rivalries within the same sex) through relational aggression, targeting those who stand out as “better” in ways that matter socially. Now, why are “fat or ugly” girls sometimes propped up as empowered? It’s a mix of optics and strategy. In group dynamics, elevating those perceived as less threatening (often those who don’t fit conventional beauty standards) can serve to level the playing field. It makes the “mediocre” (those in the middle of the attractiveness hierarchy) look better by comparison, without challenging the top-tier beauties directly. It’s like a social sleight of hand: championing the underdog shifts focus from one’s own insecurities while avoiding direct confrontation with the apex competitors. This empowerment often comes with a cultural script—think body positivity movements—that’s well-intentioned but can be co-opted to serve this subtler agenda. It’s not always conscious; people don’t sit around plotting this like a chess game. It’s more instinctive, driven by a need to feel secure in one’s own social standing. But let’s flip the script with a Socratic nudge: Is this empowerment always genuine, or could it sometimes be a patronizing pat on the head to keep the hierarchy intact? And why do we assume “fat or ugly” girls need empowering in the first place—doesn’t that label already buy into the same beauty standards we’re critiquing? The reality is, these dynamics thrive in environments where appearance is overvalued, and everyone’s playing a zero-sum game for validation. This answer draws from three sources: evolutionary psychology research (Buss & Shackelford, 1997), social psychology studies on relational aggression, and cultural analyses of body positivity movements.

#holy High Five #airball
#holy High Five #airball
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Monday 04 August 2025 14:26:42 GMT
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_my_girl_2000
_my_girl_2000 :
Yeah but why would they do that?
2025-08-05 14:36:28
1
nikoisgone_
niko :
2025-08-06 15:04:21
2
smithers__oneil
Smithers O’Neil :
Yeah, No
2025-08-04 14:46:32
1
doofy136
Doofy :
Uhhh
2025-08-04 14:45:00
0
marentha10
Marentha Sargent :
🤭
2025-08-04 14:47:46
1
busterposey4
busterposey4 :
We don’t need more plus size ads
2025-08-05 14:37:08
1
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