ใ ในใ 2026 ๐ฐ๐ท
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ใ ในใ 2026 ๐ฐ๐ท
@SC2_Veloce
[veilรณutสei] ์ธ๋ฐ์์ด ์ธ๋ชจ์๋ ์๋ฆฌ๋ฅผ ์ํฉ๋๋ค.





Toda essa situaรงรฃo resumida em: os coreanos nรฃo tem essa percepรงรฃo de que fazer de tudo pra ter uma pele super clara alem do seu tom natural รฉ racismo, eles veem isso como preferรชncia tipo cor de cabelo



ํ๊ตญ ์ฌ๋ฆ๋ง ์ ๋์์ด ์พ์ฒญํ๊ณ ์์ํ๊ฑฐ์? 7์์ ๋์ฒด ์ด๋ค ์ง์ฅ์ ๋ณด์ฌ์ฃผ๋ ค๊ณ ์ง๊ตฌ๊ฐ ํ๊ตญ์๊ฒ ์ด๋ ๊ฒ ๊ด๋ํ๊ฑฐ์ง?





้ๅฝใๅฅฝใใใ็กใใ ใจใใใๅซใใใใใใใ ใใใ้ๅฝไบบใๅซใใใจ่จใใใใจๅฎ้ใซๆฅใใใจๅ จ็ถๅซใใงใฏ็กใใ ๅฝๅฎถใฌใใซใซใชใใจ็ใพใใใใฎๆๆ ใชใใชใฎ๏ผw ้ๅฝไบบใๆฅๆฌไบบใซๅฏพใใฆๅใๆ่ฆๆใฃใฆใใฎใใญ๏ผ ใใฎใฎใฃใใใฃใฆๅใพใใชใๅฃ๏ผ





Stop whitewashing and love your skin color๐ค๐ค๐ค









So the Brazilians now claim that "make themselves look like ghosts" referred to makeup, and they're criticizing Koreans for wearing slightly lighter makeup than their skin. This doesn't make it any better, Brazilians. That is still policing the physical representation of an Asian people. You have no right to do it. There is nothing wrong with a Korean wearing slightly lighter makeup than her skin. It's makeup. So the style isn't what Brazilians like? So? They're Korean. Not Brazilian.


@Ouiwops ๅคฉๅคฉ้ชไฝ ็ๆฏ้ฉๅฝไบบๆฅๆฌไบบ่ฟๆฏๅทด่ฅฟไบบๅ๏ผไฝ ๅฐๅบๅไธๅ็ๆธ ๅ๏ผๆฅ้ฉ็ฐๅจๆไฝ ๆฏๅ ไธบๅฏไปฅๆๆจไธญๅทด๏ผๅๅคดๅฐฑๆ ไฝ ไธๅ.่ฐๅคฉๅคฉ่ฏดไฝ ๅ่ฏๅ๏ผไธบไปไน่ฆๅธฎๅคฉๅคฉๅฎณไฝ ็ไบบๅ๏ผไปไปฌไผๅจๅ้ข็ฌไฝ ๅป๏ผๅทด่ฅฟๅฐฑ้ชไบๆฅ้ฉ ้ชไบไธญๅฝๅ๏ผๆ็ๆธ ๆฅๅ๏ผไบบๅทด่ฅฟๅคง้จๅไธ็ดๅจ่ฏดไธญๅฝ็ๅฅฝ่ฏ๏ผไฝ ่ฟ็ญไบๆฏๅธฎๅฎณไฝ ็ไบบ้ชๆฏๆไฝ ็ไบบ

You know what genuinely exhausts me? For years, there has been this bizarre online trend where people take screenshots of Koreans in natural lighting, or even paintings and illustrations of Koreans, use a color picker on random parts of their skin, turn it into color charts, and then start mocking Koreans by saying their skin color is "wrong" or "fake." Now that some Koreans are doing the exact same thing back, people who are seeing it for the first time are suddenly saying, "Why are Koreans like this? Don't they understand lighting? Don't they know what sunlight is?" But that's exactly the point. This is almost identical to what many Koreans have been dealing with for years. Just because you didn't personally see it doesn't mean it never happened. The people making those comparisons know what lighting is. They know what sunlight is. They know skin looks different in shadows and direct light. Yet for years people were still taking color samples from someone's face, comparing the shaded areas to the lit areas, and using that as "proof" that Koreans were bleaching themselves. That's why so many Koreans see this as mirroring. It's not that they suddenly forgot how lighting works. It's that they're repeating the exact same absurd method that was used against them for years to show how ridiculous it looks when it's done to someone else.



So the Brazilians now claim that "make themselves look like ghosts" referred to makeup, and they're criticizing Koreans for wearing slightly lighter makeup than their skin. This doesn't make it any better, Brazilians. That is still policing the physical representation of an Asian people. You have no right to do it. There is nothing wrong with a Korean wearing slightly lighter makeup than her skin. It's makeup. So the style isn't what Brazilians like? So? They're Korean. Not Brazilian.









