18 Replies to “Getting to the Bottom of Things”

  1. Fashion 19th Century
    The bustle was a typically Victorian fashion. Although most bustle gowns covered nearly all of a woman, the shape created by the combination of a bustle and corset (accentuating the rump, waist, and bosom) resulted in highly idealized representations of female sexual identity, at once exaggerated and concealed by the structures of adornment.
    http://thegraphicsfairy.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Victorian-Bustle-Dress-2-GraphicsFairy.jpg

  2. Being too skiny or too fats like Rob Ford who is white or fatt among black women ring bills for illnes of digestion liver guts blood pressure linked to kidney desease or may black women abused b their man and food nott digest well or because theyy are too poor mentally and financially and abused for their color by society. Iis being too riich or too poor as person or country proof linked to mentall illness seen in africa or india not color of skin. Or perhaps method of life style or how such as ontario government make money for poor by sell LCBO or indirectly pharmecutical with drug marijina mixed or allow marijina medical prescription even 3 gram is too much to exhale some got 15 gram do not worry remaining of medical marjina can sell to school yard to reduce seixxx drive among teengars. Or cash over fix the Toronto roads while 1 billion need to fix subidized housing and 180000 are poor waiting for subsidized housing and new apartment condo in downtown are empty and OW still under payment poor in toronto and

  3. Yet so many leftists go out of their way to pretend they’re black.
    We demand a law that any white person wearing a Rasta hair style needs to be hauled before the CHRC on charges of RAAAACISM!

  4. @Trigger Warnings: R.Crumb!! Did he also do “Fritz the Cat”? I no longer remember.
    I’d be a rich man today if my spouse, shortly after we were married, had not decided to dispose of 10 or 12 R.Crumb comic books in perfect condition …. sigh

  5. Hmmm… Just visit peopleofwalmart.com and you can confirm that a large behind is not scrictky a black trait 😉

  6. As I understand it, the particular focus of the charge of racism depends entirely upon the “butt prosthetics” applied to women with small behinds, excluding women with fat asses acquired by overindulging their appetites.
    Fashion 19th Century
    The bustle was a typically Victorian fashion. Although most bustle gowns covered nearly all of a woman, the shape created by the combination of a bustle and corset (accentuating the rump, waist, and bosom) resulted in highly idealized representations of female sexual identity, at once exaggerated and concealed by the structures of adornment.
    http://thegraphicsfairy.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Victorian-Bustle-Dress-2-GraphicsFairy.jpg
    Yes, the Victorian fashion known as ‘the bustle’ is the very definition of ‘butt prosthetics’ and Victorian women who wore them gave zero thought about Negro women.
    Note the comparison made in the article between “Black Face” as worn by Al Jolson, and butt prosthetics.
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PIaj7FNHnjQ
    By the way, Al Jolson was not a racist either.
    I think it’s time to rehabilitate his cultural image and put this sort of Leftist cultural revisionism where it belongs, on the ash heap of history.

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