Play Victim in Tank Tops: The Savage Double Standard Women Refuse to Admit
Funny how that works in practice.
All across India, men show up to college, events, and offices in proper, modest clothes — shirts, trousers, kurtas, nothing flashy or revealing. They just get on with it. Meanwhile, a huge number of women turn up in shorts, tank tops, crop tops, and outfits that leave very little to the imagination — in lecture halls, corporate floors, and public events. Then, the moment anyone raises an eyebrow, they flip the script and scream that women don’t have the freedom to wear what they want.
It’s peak hypocrisy.
College isn’t a fashion runway. The office isn’t a nightclub. These are places of learning and work, not personal catwalks. Yet somehow the conversation always twists into “oppression” instead of basic decency and professionalism.
Here’s the brutal reality:
- Men have quietly followed modest dress codes for decades without playing victim.
- women demand absolute freedom to dress provocatively, then weaponise “choice” when society reacts.
- The same people who cry about objectification are often the ones dressing to invite attention.
Mandatory dress codes aren’t regressive — they’re common sense. They create equality in environments where the focus should be on brains, not bodies. If “freedom” only means the right to show skin and then complain about consequences, it’s not freedom. It’s entitlement dressed up as feminism.
Time to stop the circus. Enforce the rules everywhere. Modesty isn’t oppression — it’s respect.