>>39395667>Honestly, I'm willing to bet she was the way she was because of people like you. People telling her that being a living stick figure is healthy. That she's fine the way she is.I never claimed her lifestyle choice was "healthy". But that doesn't mean that keeping all that weight off wasn't difficult as fuck likely requiring a hellava lot of willpower to stick with whatever crazy ass diet she was on. Let's be 100% real here; she was CLEARLY fully in control of her actions and exploiting all these pathetic moralfags in order to get more and more views/ publicity, thereby capitalizing on their "good intentions". She has clearly decided to give up on the skeleton physique because now she has both a ton of efame, internet "friends", and, most importantly, piles of cash.
Regardless of her intentions however, what truly bothers me is all the people who'd tell her she didn't have the right to make herself as skinny as she was. As if keeping the pounds off was somehow morally reprehensible. One thing I simply cannot tolerate is other people trying to pressure their peers into thinking the same, acting the same, or in this instance looking the same. If you wanna be a huge landwhale, you should be ALLOWED to. No, you shouldn't get on a moral highground and pretend it's something to be proud of, but it shouldn't be something people pretend is morally wrong. The same thing applies to little miss skeleton princess and her CHOICE to be extremely skinny. I like actual diversity of human beings; whether that be in relation to mental processes, personalities, or physical aesthetic. The last thing I want is for everyone to look, act, think the same because society discourages individualism, thereby turning the human population into living, breathing yet entirely robotic entities.