Salon.com Celebrates Androgynous Japanese Ad
If
there’s any remaining doubt that the left-wing media have little but
contempt for traditional Americans, it ain’t the fault of Salon’s Mary
Elizabeth Williams.
In
an August 26 piece fittingly reposted at the far-left moon-bat site
Alter-Net, Williams lovingly described a Japanese Toyota ad featuring an
androgynous model while getting in a shot at America.
“[T]he
long-haired 19-year-old Ukrainian Stav Strashko struts toward a car as
the camera lovingly follows the model’s perfect, red bikini-bottomed
butt,” Williams wrote. “A jacket is seductively shed. And then Strashko
turns around to reveal – she’s a man, baby! Yup, that bare chest is
flat, but the bulge in the bikini bottom is not.”
Sound
creepy? Not to Williams. This, she wrote, is “the changing way gender
is portrayed in advertising.” The model “represents a new understanding
that gender isn’t always neatly defined, and that if a man can be
alluringly beautiful, that shouldn’t be anything to be laughed at or
scared of.”
Unfortunately,
we Americans aren’t sophisticated enough to appreciate what Williams
asserted was “definitely an idea worth sharing.”
“Why
is the ad not running in America?” she asked. “No doubt because it
would immediately gay indoctrinate all our menfolk and then there would
never be any more babies made and Mitt Romney would never become
president.”
That,
of course, is exactly the mocking nastiness that greets any
conservative critique of the “queering” of mass culture. In 2011, the
Culture and Media Institute caused a media firestorm by pointing out
that clothing manufacturer J.Crew’s marketing materials featuring the
company president painting her young son’s toenails hot pink was a nod
to the gay agenda.
That agenda is advancing. No TV show is complete these days without a gay character or storyline. Gay activist group GLAAD is in a committed relationship with CNN. GM
recently began its own campaign marketing to American gays. But it’s
probably not aggressive enough for Williams, as she exclaimed to Salon
readers, “We still have work to be done, people.”