What is completely unfair?
Post your answer in the LEAVE A COMMENT section below. I’m not the boss of you, though. Don’t write anything for all I care! I mean, I do all this writing–it’d be unfair to me if you didn’t do just a little, too.
. . .here are my thoughts.
What is completely unfair?
Discrimination. An atheist shouldn’t be the first choice for pastor. The applicant with two bankruptcies probably won’t make a great CFO. And I’ll assume sight is a prerequisite for figure skating judges. Some forms of discrimination are fair. But imagine a fashion designer discriminating against women who aren’t at least 3 of the 4: young, thin, rich, famous. How would one hide this blatant discrimination? Perhaps with a design studio on the upper floor of a mansion, accessible only by invitation and ascension of a steep, winding staircase. Such was the case in Phantom Thread, the Daniel Day-Lewis film in which the method actor undoubtedly refused to even look in the general direction of any woman greater than a size 6, or with physical limitations requiring access to a non-existent elevator. If you were the wrong size, or not financially well-off, he denied you the opportunity to wear his fashion. In my opinion, those rich, skinny lasses suffered the real indignity—wearing his ridiculous looking garments. Anyone who’s ever seen my wardrobe, though, would be right to argue I have no basis for comment. Yet I am, anyway. Discrimination in the fashion industry is completely unfair!