PILOT SPIN
Spin Zone => Spin Zone => Topic started by: Number7 on October 16, 2025, 04:22:47 PM
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The attached article clearly identifies why feminists are failing to secure stable, long term relationships with men. The nose ring has supplanted the fake ass covid mask in pointing out which women are self-centered, unstable feminists and makes it easy to avoid them.
The self identifying need of feminists to proclaim their individuality by insisting on uniform markers such as colored hair, tattoos, underarm hair, and nose rings guarantees that men will automatically reject them as potential relationships, making these ultra- leftist, egomaniacs angry and vicious because their obsession with ultra leftist identity also makes them non starters for men seeking someone with whom they can look forward to having a peaceful, loving relationship.
https://www.zerohedge.com/political/feminists-have-discovered-nose-ring-theory-and-theyre-not-happy
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Ew, and yep. Makes sense.
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I just don't find inked up pierced up women to be attractive.....at all.
EDIT: Just went back to the article and watched the X rants from those women, what a bunch of losers. Yeah, no wonder decent men arn't interested. The one who makes $600 every two weeks? Boo hoo, lose the piercings and go to school.
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I think the ink fad is fading. I'm seeing less on younger women these days. Also, almost none of the girls that work out at my gym have piercings anywhere. Neither do my GFs friends.
It's definitely peaked, and on the downside now.
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I think the ink fad is fading. I'm seeing less on younger women these days. Also, almost none of the girls that work out at my gym have piercings anywhere. Neither do my GFs friends.
It's definitely peaked, and on the downside now.
I sure hope so.
There are also those who mature and come around, even with the nose ring and tattoos, like this lady:
https://www.tiktok.com/@officialalicemusique/video/7550398980786556167
Maybe eventually it will become a fashion that started out signaling something but eventually became part of mainstream culture. I hope not though. I will never not think “snot” when I see a nose ring.
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I sure hope so.
There are also those who mature and come around, even with the nose ring and tattoos, like this lady:
https://www.tiktok.com/@officialalicemusique/video/7550398980786556167
Maybe eventually it will become a fashion that started out signaling something but eventually became part of mainstream culture. I hope not though. I will never not think “snot” when I see a nose ring.
Agreed, with the exception that I think “booger.”
Here is a wonderful Ted Kooser poem I always think of when I see tattoos. I think people are using them to maintain some sort of unique relevance, but when so many people are covered with tattoos, it seems more like everyone is trying to hide behind them.
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Some of the younger women at my gym have very dark, and demonic tattoos. I wonder what they're trying to convey? It's honestly a bit scary, and I'd think twice about dating anyone with body art like that. A friend of mine suggested they just want to seem "edgy". Maybe. I may ask one of them what it all means. Lol.
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Agreed, with the exception that I think “booger.”
Here is a wonderful Ted Kooser poem I always think of when I see tattoos. I think people are using them to maintain some sort of unique relevance, but when so many people are covered with tattoos, it seems more like everyone is trying to hide behind them.
All of these tatted and pierced folks are going to look rediculous when they're 65yr old retirees at the beach.
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I have 4. My wife has a couple more and just finished a session a few days ago to color an older tattoo.
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We have a number of female friends in their sixties, and seventies with multiple tattoos that might have looked nice twenty to forty years ago. Now they look saggy and dull, flop around when they move, and generally seem ridiculous.
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Some, limited, tattoos on men, I can find sexy. Or at least not repulsive. On women for some reason, they’re never attractive.
But that’s just me and maybe has roots in childhood where the only tattoos I ever saw were on military men and just arms. Never once saw one on a female. Sometimes what is normalized in childhood sticks with you for life.
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Some, limited, tattoos on men, I can find sexy. Or at least not repulsive. On women for some reason, they’re never attractive.
But that’s just me and maybe has roots in childhood where the only tattoos I ever saw were on military men and just arms. Never once saw one on a female. Sometimes what is normalized in childhood sticks with you for life.
Call me a prude, but I hate to see an arm (sleeve) tattoo.
It always looks like they need to go wash.
That is left over from childhood too, I guess.
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My wife says that I will never have a tattoo or anything pierced. I'm OK with that. Well... except for that pencil lead I have stuck in my palm from grade school.
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My wife says that I will never have a tattoo or anything pierced. I'm OK with that. Well... except for that pencil lead I have stuck in my palm from grade school.
I had pencil lead from grade school stuck in my elbow for years, but I can’t find it now. I’m not sure where it went.
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Well, that’s new to me. You pencil lead people, why the heck didn’t you or someone or a doctor pull it out? Or are you trolling us?
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I have 4. My wife has a couple more and just finished a session a few days ago to color an older tattoo.
Hey jb!!! You can be our road to understanding. Why did you and your wife get these tattoos?
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Well, that’s new to me. You pencil lead people, why the heck didn’t you or someone or a doctor pull it out? Or are you trolling us?
Just to be a bit of a buzzkill, pencil lead isn’t actually lead and isn’t toxic
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Just to be a bit of a buzzkill, pencil lead isn’t actually lead and isn’t toxic
But was it in 1962?
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Well, that’s new to me. You pencil lead people, why the heck didn’t you or someone or a doctor pull it out? Or are you trolling us?
I had one of those big erasers that stuck to the end of a #2 pencil after the tiny eraser wore out. It never fit right so I thought I'd just force it on by banging it on the table (you can see where this is going). Two hits worked fine, but on the third I lost my grip. The pencil stayed upright on the table and my hand banged back down on the point. I pulled it out of my hand OK, but the lead left a trace of black where the point stuck in. Nothing in there but a trace of lead and a funny little black mark.
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But was it in 1962?
it's my understanding that pencils never had lead.
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I had one of those big erasers that stuck to the end of a #2 pencil after the tiny eraser wore out. It never fit right so I thought I'd just force it on by banging it on the table (you can see where this is going). Two hits worked fine, but on the third I lost my grip. The pencil stayed upright on the table and my hand banged back down on the point. I pulled it out of my hand OK, but the lead left a trace of black where the point stuck in. Nothing in there but a trace of lead and a funny little black mark.
I don’t recall the exact details but I think I was in the first grade so only 6 years old. I seem to remember metal chairs with holes in the seat and some kid had stuck a pencil through one with the point up, and I ended up falling over onto it. Memory is very fuzzy, but the memory of looking at my elbow and seeing a broken tip embedded there is very clear. The top layer of skin healed over it and it was visible under there for years and years, well into my adulthood. I eventually forgot about it and then one day noticed it was gone.
Why didn’t I go to the teacher with my “injury” and get her to dig it out with tweezers or something? I was a stupid 6 year old. Never occurred to me. 😂
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Why didn’t I go to the teacher with my “injury” and get her to dig it out with tweezers or something? I was a stupid 6 year old. Never occurred to me. 😂
reminds me of what me and my sisters learned as wee children. Early on we learned to never tell our mom about a splinter, we just didn't enjoy Mom using a needle to remove the splinter. We loved our Mom, and she wasn't mean or cruel about it, but we really didn't like it.
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I, too, embedded a piece of pencil lead in my hand.
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Hey jb!!! You can be our road to understanding. Why did you and your wife get these tattoos?
Just like them. My first was when I was 18 and fresh out of Parris Island.
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Just like them. My first was when I was 18 and fresh out of Parris Island.
Well that's the difference. Parris Island vs rainbow haired commie brat.
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reminds me of what me and my sisters learned as wee children. Early on we learned to never tell our mom about a splinter, we just didn't enjoy Mom using a needle to remove the splinter. We loved our Mom, and she wasn't mean or cruel about it, but we really didn't like it.
Yep. Needle and tweezers. Needle heated up over a match to sterilize it. Then when the splinter is dug out she added a healthy smear of Mercurochrome. Stung like crazy. I'm not sure how we survived childhood.
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Never once saw one on a female. Sometimes what is normalized in childhood sticks with you for life.
I remember seeing the tattooed lady at the county fair.
I also remember seeing the fat lady at the fair. As I remember it, she would be considered average today.
My baby brother (just turned 59), finally had the rebel flag tattoo removed from his arm. He got it because his ex-wife liked it. But he had a history of employers going out of business and found himself looking for jobs often. He finally admitted that rebel flag kept him out of a lot of jobs. And being divorced and looking, most women his age found it distasteful.
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I have absolutely no problem with the Battle Flag of the Army of Northern Virginia.
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I have absolutely no problem with the Battle Flag of the Army of Northern Virginia.
Nor do I.
But when my brother keeps borrowing money from me because he can't get a job because of his tattoo, then I'm going to tell him he needs to get rid of the tat or live with it's consequences. It was my fault that I kept giving him money until he finally faced reality.
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I, too, embedded a piece of pencil lead in my hand.
Top of right knee for me. Eventaully went away (absorbed?)
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added a healthy smear of Mercurochrome. Stung like crazy. I'm not sure how we survived childhood.
That stuff was worse than the injury itself!
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That stuff was worse than the injury itself!
It worked, though.