Karol G hurries off her Coachella set before Becky G’s statement on immigration, leaving Becky to finish the show on her own:
“¡Que viva Mexico! ¡Que viva Colombia! Y a todos nuestros inmigrantes, te queremos mucho… you heard what I said. ¡¿Y donde está mi gente Latina?!”
For a society where many men, grown men, not even boys anymore, walk around in sagging jeans, boxers on full display, singlets hanging loose like they just rolled out of bed…
Notice something?
Nobody is whistling at them.
Nobody is trailing them down the street.
Nobody is calculating how to corner them, touch them, or violate them.
But let a woman step out
Fully dressed. Covered. Sometimes even overdressed just to feel safe,
And somehow, she’s still the target.
Still the one being stared at.
Still the one being followed.
Still the one being reduced to a body.
So let’s stop the performance.
This has never been about “what she wore.”
It has never been about “decency.”
It has never been about “temptation.”
Because if it was, the streets would be unsafe for men too.
But they’re not.
No one is catcalling men for wearing sagging jeans.
No one is sexually attacking men because their boxers showed.
So what’s the real issue?
Power.
Entitlement.
And a society that keeps asking women to adjust…
Instead of asking men to control themselves.
Until we’re honest about that, we’ll keep having the wrong conversations and the wrong people paying the price.
“But women sexualise themselves”… no, men sexualise our existence.
There’s a fetish for the schoolgirl, the teacher, the secretary, the nurse, the nun, the “innocent” girl, the “experienced” woman, the boss, the assistant, the submissive, the dominant, the “barely legal,” the mother, the babysitter, the neighbour, the coworker every version of us gets turned into something sexual.
Covered? There’s a fetish. Modest? There’s a fetish. Uncovered? There’s a fetish. Even discomfort, even vulnerability is sexualised.
The same woman will be sexualised and then shamed for it in the next breath. That contradiction isn’t ours to carry.
Saying women sexualise themselves is just a way to dodge accountability because no matter what we do, you were already going to sexualise us anyway.
The most important Oscar speech tonight wasn’t about film.
The director of “Mr. Nobody Against Putin” just said this from the stage:
“You lose your country through countless small acts of complicity. When we act complicit when a government murders people on the streets. When oligarchs take over the media and control how we produce and consume it. We all face a moral choice. But even a nobody is more powerful than you think.”
He was talking about Russia.
The audience knew he was talking about America too.
Elon Musk owns the platform you’re reading this on.
David Ellison is buying CNN — Pete Hegseth said it will be “far better” when he does.
The DOGE deposition videos were removed from YouTube.
The Epstein files are sealed.
The Pentagon won’t release a casualty count.
Countless small acts of complicity.
That’s how you lose it.
A nobody is more powerful than you think.
Never stop connecting the dots.
Nada más 8 días para que se cumpla un año de que Bad Bunny nos regaló el álbum del siglo.
En todo este tiempo no salió (y lo mas seguro es que no salga en mucho) nada mejor, solamente queda agradecerle al señor Benito por ‘DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS’.