Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A sports event is not an adult only event. Who are you people who have never heard of taking kids to a football game? It is a public sports event. By nature it is a family event - it is a public sports game. Almost ever stadium even has family sections. I am sure there were thousands of kids at the game.
This wasn't at a strip club. This was on a public stage at a sports venue - it was a football game.
9/10 kids - especially any kid who doesn’t actually play football, which according to DCUM is a heathenly sport for the lower class - could care less about watching a game on TV for 3+ hours, especially if it is not their team. Please stop. You’re embarrassing yourself.
Anonymous wrote:A sports event is not an adult only event. Who are you people who have never heard of taking kids to a football game? It is a public sports event. By nature it is a family event - it is a public sports game. Almost ever stadium even has family sections. I am sure there were thousands of kids at the game.
This wasn't at a strip club. This was on a public stage at a sports venue - it was a football game.
Anonymous wrote:A sports event is not an adult only event. Who are you people who have never heard of taking kids to a football game? It is a public sports event. By nature it is a family event - it is a public sports game. Almost ever stadium even has family sections. I am sure there were thousands of kids at the game.
This wasn't at a strip club. This was on a public stage at a sports venue - it was a football game.
Anonymous wrote:OK, so let me get this straight. Here are some images captured from J.Lo's performance. I could capture more, but you get the idea. These types of dance moves are appropriate for children? Because Super Bowl has always been a family event. I guess not anymore. And don't tell me this is typical Latino dance stuff...sorry, I am Latino and I don't buy that.
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Anonymous wrote:It cracks me up because I guarantee that some of the pearl clutchers in here are the same ones posting in Tweens and Teens that their teenager should be able to wear those almost-thong bikini bottoms to the public pool. Or that their skirts can be as short as they want. Yet they’re here condemning these gorgeous performers and posting pictures that represent a millisecond facial expression in time. Please.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder how many of the posters saying these pictures are female empowerment would take pictures of their young daughters doing these poses and post them online as examples of female empowerment.? If you believe that is empowering for your daughters, wouldn't you be proud of your 6, 8, or 10 year old for showing they feel empowered too as a female?
If my daughter were 50 and looked like this and was worth hundreds of millions of dollars I’d be happy for her to headline one of the largest events perhaps the largest? in the world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The moves in those pictures are what some of these posters are apparently teaching their young daughters to do because it is their definition of empowering. That way when someone asks the child what makes them empowered as a female, they can demonstrate their female empowerment by rubbing their crotch and their boobs and asking guys to touch their asses.
You are really teaching this is female empowerment to your young daughters? This is your role model for female empowerment that you want your daughters to emulate?
Are you on your period?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OK, so let me get this straight. Here are some images captured from J.Lo's performance. I could capture more, but you get the idea. These types of dance moves are appropriate for children? Because Super Bowl has always been a family event. I guess not anymore. And don't tell me this is typical Latino dance stuff...sorry, I am Latino and I don't buy that.
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Seriously she looks like she’s having an orgasm in that second picture.
So no when Harry met sally at your house. It when white women do it it’s cute?
Oh please. My 10 year old watched it. The point was that the show was very sexual in nature, despite one (or several) poster(s) claiming it wasn’t. It clearly was.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder how many of the posters saying these pictures are female empowerment would take pictures of their young daughters doing these poses and post them online as examples of female empowerment.? If you believe that is empowering for your daughters, wouldn't you be proud of your 6, 8, or 10 year old for showing they feel empowered too as a female?
If my daughter were 50 and looked like this and was worth hundreds of millions of dollars I’d be happy for her to headline one of the largest events perhaps the largest? in the world.