Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hot take: I think boys and men casually not wearing shirts in public (outside of the pool/beach) is peak male privilege. Girls and women simply cannot do the same.
Eh I don’t care about guys being able to take their shirts off. I care about male privilege but about things like glass ceilings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So for everyone for whom this is NBD, do your kids regularly wander around inside the house without a shirt? Just curious - my family on both sides were pretty buttoned up so I can’t fathom this happening in any of those households…but it certainly would have helped everyone keep cool!
I had stereotypically trashy neighbors who moved from Florida. Everyone was overweight and dressed inappropriately. All year long the 50 something year old mom and daughters wore too small athletic shorts and belly shirts. The 20 something year old son wore athletic shorts and no shirt all year long. It was bizarre and gross. My pearls were damaged from being clutched so hard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I personally wouldn’t want the extra sun exposure for my child. Men who get melanoma often get it on their upper back/shoulders due to going without a shirt.
There is actually no link between melanoma and UV. There is a link between squamous cell and basal cell skin cancer and UV. This is a deadly myth actually. The most deadly melanomas often happen in dark-skinned people in strange places (e.g. inside their vagina, under a nail bed) and it doesn't occur to them that its melanoma until it is way advanced because of the myth of skin cancer = fair skinned people + sun exposure. P.S. Squamous cell and basal cell skin cancer are way less deadly than melanoma
https://www.bmj.com/content/337/bmj.a764https://www.bmj.com/content/337/bmj.a764
Anonymous wrote:Wow I counted. 7 Karens on this thread
Anonymous wrote:So for everyone for whom this is NBD, do your kids regularly wander around inside the house without a shirt? Just curious - my family on both sides were pretty buttoned up so I can’t fathom this happening in any of those households…but it certainly would have helped everyone keep cool!
Anonymous wrote:So for everyone for whom this is NBD, do your kids regularly wander around inside the house without a shirt? Just curious - my family on both sides were pretty buttoned up so I can’t fathom this happening in any of those households…but it certainly would have helped everyone keep cool!
Anonymous wrote:I agree with prior posters. No one wants to come out and say it but it's low class unless the kids are at the pool or playing shirts or skins. I've lived in 3 different neighborhoods and have never seen boys roaming around shirtless other than the circumstances listed.
Anonymous wrote:I do not really want to see any person outside shirtless frankly, and neither do my daughters (their preference). As a mom of 2 daughters, it bugs me that no one bats an eyelid when a boy is shirtless but it would make people Americans uncomfortable if even a very young girl (eg 6-7) was shirtless in public. And I’m not arguing for the solution to be that everyone be allowed to go shirtless. Why is it so wrong to teach all kids to keep their shirts on? It is obviously not impossible if 50% of kids can do it.
I may be an outlier, I know. I also don’t love it when men go shirtless because I’ve had many instances when I’m running where a shirtless man passes me closely and his sweat (that would have been caught by his T-shirt if he was wearing one) hits me in the face. So gross.