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In reply to the discussion: This United thing has gone too far [View all]womanofthehills
(11,040 posts)33. Agreed - sexist to me also - all young girls wear leggings - these were teen girls
Has anyone on here checked out women's jeans lately? I was at Walmart looking for a cheap pair but ALL the jeans are skin tight like leggings - kind of legging jeans. You can barely tell the difference between leggings and jeans. Look around - it's what all the kids are wearing. I ended up getting much tighter jeans than I usually wear because my daughter told me I was so out of date.
If you are a human American person, you probably know that millions of female persons in our soon-to-made-great-again country wear leggings ― especially young girls. Last year, online legging sales overtook jean sales. My daughter, who is 6, hasnt worn jeans in years because obviously stretchy leggings are 1,000 times more comfortable and you can get them with glitter and butterflies. Many, many adult women also pointed out that United was continuing in an age-old tradition of shaming and sexualizing girls for wearing certain clothes.
If you are a human American person, you probably know that millions of female persons in our soon-to-made-great-again country wear leggings ― especially young girls. Last year, online legging sales overtook jean sales. My daughter, who is 6, hasnt worn jeans in years because obviously stretchy leggings are 1,000 times more comfortable and you can get them with glitter and butterflies. Many, many adult women also pointed out that United was continuing in an age-old tradition of shaming and sexualizing girls for wearing certain clothes.
If you are a human American person, you probably know that millions of female persons in our soon-to-made-great-again country wear leggings ― especially young girls. Last year, online legging sales overtook jean sales. My daughter, who is 6, hasnt worn jeans in years because obviously stretchy leggings are 1,000 times more comfortable and you can get them with glitter and butterflies. Many, many adult women also pointed out that United was continuing in an age-old tradition of shaming and sexualizing girls for wearing certain clothes.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/why-we-lost-our-minds-over-leggings_us_58dc05b4e4b01ca7b4295705?w9f9sv5genw6u5wmi&
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How is it strict when it allows shorts but not leggings? Sounds plain old sexist to me.
pnwmom
Mar 2017
#4
Oh, yeah? Then how come numerous United Airlines tweets simply said they had the
pnwmom
Mar 2017
#20
We are not flying as "guests" of the airlines when we pay for our tickets. We are customers
pnwmom
Mar 2017
#22
This is the part you're not understanding. The airline didn't acknowledge that these girls
pnwmom
Mar 2017
#24
...which didn't go over well when most other airlines said "leggings? no problem!"
brooklynite
Mar 2017
#28
Agreed - sexist to me also - all young girls wear leggings - these were teen girls
womanofthehills
Mar 2017
#33
Frankly, I wish the airlines would institute a proper dress code for ALL passengers
SoCalNative
Mar 2017
#5
The airline had plenty of time to tell their story. Instead, they repeated on Twitter
pnwmom
Mar 2017
#32
One of the rules is you aren't supposed to advertise that you are flying non-rev.
Hassin Bin Sober
Mar 2017
#14
So they want to have it both ways. They want you to be discreet so other people aren't jealous.
pnwmom
Mar 2017
#35
We didn't see the girls in question or the leggings. Why are we making judgements?
OregonBlue
Mar 2017
#9
It really was a non-issue when you realized it was about an employee discounted fare.
WoonTars
Mar 2017
#10
And if you don't want to get bad publicity as an airline then don't tell your customers
pnwmom
Mar 2017
#37
The whole point of the policy is to have non revenue passengers blend in with revenue
grantcart
Mar 2017
#27