Post by Chase on Sept 4, 2007 19:10:30 GMT -5
I drew something in Paint to post along with this, but I think the topic itself is more than enough.
Newsweek.
Things have gotten quite absurd in regards to the U.S. and their ridiculous obsession with vanity. Though, it makes me think that full-prosthetic bodies aren't as impossible as I first believed. Sure, the bipedal motion would need work, but it wouldn't be really needed if those bodies only purpose was to look pretty.
And if I'm getting any modifications to my peener, I'm getting antlers.
Newsweek.
We've become a society obsessed with the quest for physical perfection. If you don't like the nose (or ears or lips or breasts) you were born with, there's a solution: find a doctor and get it fixed. Last year Americans underwent nearly 11 million cosmetic plastic surgery procedures, according to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons. That's an increase of 7 percent from the previous year and more than 400 percent from a decade ago. Clearly, the idea of altering nature's plan for your appearance is now widely accepted. But are there parts of your body that should be off limits?
Last week the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) Committee on Gynecologic Practice issued a statement to its members warning about the dangers of trying to create "designer vaginas" through procedures that purport to trim and slim the vaginal lips, tighten the vagina or add extra bounce to the G-spot with injectable materials like collagen. Over the past few years these procedures have been marketed in magazines and over the Internet largely as boosts to sexual satisfaction, turning labiaplasty (the technical name for surgery that snips the vaginal lips, or labia) into one of the fastest-growing procedures.
Last week the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) Committee on Gynecologic Practice issued a statement to its members warning about the dangers of trying to create "designer vaginas" through procedures that purport to trim and slim the vaginal lips, tighten the vagina or add extra bounce to the G-spot with injectable materials like collagen. Over the past few years these procedures have been marketed in magazines and over the Internet largely as boosts to sexual satisfaction, turning labiaplasty (the technical name for surgery that snips the vaginal lips, or labia) into one of the fastest-growing procedures.
Things have gotten quite absurd in regards to the U.S. and their ridiculous obsession with vanity. Though, it makes me think that full-prosthetic bodies aren't as impossible as I first believed. Sure, the bipedal motion would need work, but it wouldn't be really needed if those bodies only purpose was to look pretty.
And if I'm getting any modifications to my peener, I'm getting antlers.