Tuesday, June 17, 2025

Predators Wear Lip Gloss Too” — A Conversation the World Keeps Dodging

๐Ÿง  “Predators Wear Lip Gloss Too” — A Conversation the World Keeps Dodging ๐Ÿ’„๐Ÿ
Let’s talk about the elephant in the room. Actually, scratch that — let’s talk about the predator in a pink blouse that society keeps pretending is just “flirty,” “bold,” or “misunderstood.”

Because guess what? Women can be predators too.
Yes, I said it. Now inhale deeply. Let it settle in.




๐Ÿ‘ฉ‍๐Ÿ’ผ When the Villain Doesn’t Have a Beard

We’ve all seen it — the viral street interviews, TikTok clips, and awkward podcasts where women boldly say things that, if a man said them, he’d be cancelled by breakfast and jailed by lunch. Things like:

“If he’s 17, that’s basically grown.”

“I could train a young one.”

“You know, boys mature slower… I’d guide him.”


Excuse me?
If a man said that about a 17-year-old girl, the world would combust. Social media would need a fire extinguisher. But because it’s a woman, we laugh? We say “go queen” and keep scrolling? Where’s the outrage then? Where’s the feminist fury? Where’s the equality?




๐Ÿ—ฃ️ Equality Isn’t Cherry-Picked Outrage

You can't claim equality and then flinch when it's time to apply the same standards. Equality is not a buffet where you only pick the sweet stuff and leave the bitter truth behind.

We raise hell when men are predators — and rightly so. But when women cross those same lines, there’s a strange silence. Or worse: defense. Excuses. Gaslighting.

> “She’s just being playful.”
“He probably liked it.”
“Boys are always ready anyway.”



Can we pause for a second and hear how twisted that sounds?




๐Ÿ“ฒ Everyday Predators in Your Feed

Go scroll through your social media right now. Look at the street-style interviews and comment sections under “wild confessions” videos.

Notice how women casually admit things like:

Hooking up with underage boys.

Fantasizing about students.

“Accidentally” flashing young family members.


And somehow, it becomes content.
Entertainment.
A meme.

But it’s not funny. It’s proof of how normalized female predatory behavior has become when dressed in humor and good looks.




๐Ÿ‘ถ Boys Are Not Bulletproof

Young boys and teen males can be victims. Period.
And when the abuser is a woman, society often treats them like they should’ve been grateful.
That’s not empowerment. That’s abuse wrapped in double standards and sprinkled with toxic femininity.




⚖️ Let’s Make This Clear

A woman can be a pervert.

A woman can be a groomer.

A woman can be a predator.

A woman can be a rapist.


And none of those behaviors deserve to be feminized into harmless “quirks.”
Abuse is abuse — no matter the gender of the person wearing the guilty smile.




๐Ÿง  Let’s Rewire This Thinking

If we really care about justice — if we really want to protect kids, teens, and even adult men — then we must stop sugarcoating female predators like they’re just confused aunties with wild imaginations.

They are dangerous.
They deserve to be called out.
And most importantly — victims deserve to be heard, believed, and supported, even when the abuser wears heels and lip gloss.


Its about time we start holding all of them accountable.

Disclaimer: Images used on this blog are for illustrative purposes only and remain the property of their respective owners. No copyright infringement is intended.

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