From
Stacy McCain:
The phenomenon of #TrigglyPuff — Cora Segal, the angry feminist who disrupted an event at the University of Massachusetts
this week — deserves extended analysis, and I’ve got a 4,000-word draft
in queue, awaiting the final touches. Spending two days analyzing the
social significance of this comedic phenomenon was perhaps too much, but
that’s my job. You need someone to totally overthink it? I’m available....
Cora Segal is a feminist and her crusade against “fat phobia” is an expression of radical feminism’s anti-male/anti-heterosexual agenda:
Hostility to “beauty ideology” has been a
core theme of feminism since the emergence of the Women’s Liberation
movement in the 1960s. Its first major protest occurred in September
1968, when about 100 feminists staged a
demonstration at the Miss American pageant,
condemning how the contestants “epitomize the roles we are all forced
to play as women.” The protesters claimed “women in our society [are]
forced daily to compete for male approval, enslaved by ludicrous
‘beauty’ standards we ourselves are conditioned to take seriously.”
Lesbianism also emerged early as a core theme of the Women’s Liberation movement. . . .
Radical lesbians played key roles in founding Women’s Studies programs at many universities. . . .
So-called
“fat-positive feminism”
is a movement that “addresses how misogyny and sexism intersect with
sizism and anti-fat bias.” While feminists blame “anti-fat bias” on male
supremacy, the health risks of obesity are serious, according to the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC): “Obesity is a national epidemic and a major contributor to some
of the leading causes of death in the U.S., including heart disease,
stroke, diabetes and some types of cancer.”
Obesity is such a serious problem among lesbians that the National Institutes for Health
funded a $3 million study to determine why “nearly three-quarters of lesbians are overweight or obese.”
When that study made headlines in September 2014,
Mari Brighe wrote at the lesbian blog Autostraddle
that lesbians “tend to be less critical of their bodies than straight
women,” because they don’t “suffer the incessant, unreasonable pressure
of the male gaze.”
As
I have pointed out the evidence is pretty persuasive that homosexuality is largely or entirely the result of childhood sexual abuse. Lesbians are disproportionately obese, not because thin is a sign of male supremacy, but because many lesbians build walls of fat to make sure no other man is sexually attracted to them, like Mom's second boyfriend was. Cora Segal, Exhibit A.
Or are they lesbians because they're too obese to find a man?
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