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I think OP makes a valid and often overlooked point. Lookism and heightism are powerful yet largely ignored forms of bias that have real consequences in people’s lives. These forms of discrimination are so deeply normalized that they’re rarely questioned, even in “”progressive”” spaces. While race receives a lot of attention, the consistent preference for conventionally attractive and tall men remains untouched.
People are often hesitant to talk about these issues, maybe because they don’t fit easily into the usual stories we tell about discrimination.
Reminds me of this:
Also brutal:
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• Attractive children and adults are judged, treated more positively, and exhibit more positive behaviors and traits than unattractive children and adults, even by those who know them.
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• Differences in facial shape alone between candidates can predict who wins or loses in an election.
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• Both self-rated attractiveness and attractiveness rated by other persons predict endorsement of belief in a just world. Both attractiveness measures have a relationship with participant's level of life satisfaction.
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• The physical attractiveness of the producer influences the attractiveness of humour.
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• Facially unattractive males receive a more negative response in terms of perceived characteristics from violating social norms than facially attractive males.
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• Facial attractiveness is assessed rapidly (13 ms) and from small silvers of visual information.
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• University instructors who are viewed as better looking receive higher instructional ratings.
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• Facial physical attractiveness significantly predicted a measure of individuals' development stability (the ability of an organism to buffer its development against random perturbations).
• Attractiveness appears to be ingrained in our biology. Face preferences affect a diverse range of critical social outcomes, from mate choices and decisions about platonic relationships to hiring decisions and decisions about social exchange.
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• Perceivers attributed more desirable interpersonal traits to physically attractive targets. People desire to form and maintain close social bonds with attractive targets and then project these motivations onto those targets.
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• People were able to identify left-wing or right-wing political attitudes form looks alone. The closer the ratings of our participants came to the politician's actual political score, the higher the likelihood of being reelected to the new parliament.
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• We rapidly and spontaneously draw inferences about other people's personality characteristics from their appearances and that these inferences can impact our decisions in a variety of important domains.
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• For males, rated face and body attractiveness, respectively, accounted for 52% and 24% of the variance in overall attractiveness.
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• The preference for attractive faces by infants that has previously been observed for human faces can also be observed for domestic cat faces.
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• Like adults, close relationships between facial trustworthiness and attractiveness judgments existed during childhood, especially for girls.
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• People seem to believe that physical attractiveness implies positive personality traits ('beauty is good effect'), but the effects of attractiveness seem to be greater for male targets. The stereotypes about gender personality seem to be largely shared among men and women.
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• Cuteness not only compels us to care for cute things but also prepares us to do so via its effects on behavioral carefulness.
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• People do judge a book by its cover, but a beautiful cover prompts a closer reading, leading more physically attractive people to be seen both more positively and more accurately.
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• For both males and females, physical attractiveness was related to positive self-concepts and high resistance to peer influences. In addition, for males, this association was related to a sense of responsibility (internal control) for one's own behavior.
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• Teachers judge attractive children as more sociable, more popular, academically brighter, more confident, and more likely to be leaders than unattractive children.
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• Physical attractiveness influences self-concept (core self-evaluations), income, and financial well-being (financial strain).
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• Bonus: Lower attractiveness and higher weight in white women linked to greater interest in black males.
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SAY IT WITH ME, SAY IT LOUD!, ITS OVER!