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...Good luck with that I have many guy friends and I am the only one who finds such figure attractive. Not an easy figure to find around these parts, though.
Actually, I like to think that all women are real women.
I tend to think that they are all blow up dolls for my personal use. I still don't know how they manage to reject me even though they are inanimate objects.
Depends on your meaning of "fake" women though I didn't elaborate or even mentioned this.
"Fake" as in not born as a female.
"Fake" as in not being pro-man while being selfish to use him up and spit him out while having that crazy sense of entitlement(s) and not having a guilty conscience whatsoever about it = pretty much my meaning of "fake women".
I've only ever seen it referenced in comparing 'supermodels' to 'regular women' in real life, not really thin vs. curvy which is where I see it used on the internet.
I think it has more to do with completely unattainable standards that only a very very small minority of women can ever achieve. The women in those magazines? They're NOT real, and a lot of them aren't even women yet, but very young girls and that's what is held up as the standard for beauty, socially at least, not necessarily individually.
I think it's just backlash against being told that only one type of body is attractive, and that's tall and rail thin.
Trouble is, bodies like the ones on Christina Hendricks or Kim Kardashian are just as unrealistic as any model's body, if not more so. I don't think attainability has anything to do with the "real women" backlash. I think it's women who feel unappreciated, so they decide their best method of empowering themselves is spitting on the women in the spot light.
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