When I first came across the strap-on and leather fashion company Wild Wolf Leatherwork on its popular Instagram account last year, I couldn’t stop scrolling. It was the first time I saw strap-ons being promoted by anyone other than porn-star-esque white women in intimidating, BDSM-inspired settings . Instead, there were young, femme creatives of all races and body types wearing stunning, high-waisted designs in light, neutral colors. They were holding flowers in airy, well-lit rooms and posing with houseplants (in that timeless Millennial tradition). The mix of elegant and badass aesthetics drew attention to the fashion potential of strap-ons. Suddenly, an item that has historically made many queer people feel awkward or ashamed , including femme people unsure how it fits in their self-image, had an undeniable beauty to it. That beauty propelled sharing, and brought together a community of nearly 30,000 people to fawn over a toy that’s usually tucked away in the darkest corners o...
Earlier this month, former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg was asked how he justified his push for more stringent gun control when he is guarded by an armed security detail. Bloomberg’s response? He is a wealthy businessman and politician who faces threats that normal Americans do not, so it’s just fine for him to pay others to protect him with guns that he’d put the rest of us in prison for possessing. The reality is that Bloomberg, as a wealthy white man living in upper-class neighborhoods, is statistically far less likely to be a victim of violent crime than most other Americans. But you’d never know it from the way he spends hundreds of millions of dollars advocating gun laws that reserve armed protection for the special few. Every day, many Americans without Bloomberg’s wealth and power rely on the Second Amendment—not private security—to defend themselves against threats to their lives and livelihoods. In fact, almost every major study on defensive gun use has found th...
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