Deleted member 3177
Life just isn't hard enough
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If you don't know who Lombroso is, he is the father of criminology, the anthropology of criminals. In his attempt to discover similarities between criminals, he discovered that there was a pattern connecting them all: their seemingly inferior physical appearance.
His physical classification of born criminals included a small skull, a large eye socket, a sunken forehead, a lump on the lower part of the back of the head, etc.
These are all characteristics that some of you might be familiar with; they are unequivocally the traits of an ugly male.
Lombroso believed that you could tell if someone was a criminal by looking at their physical characteristics. To him, criminals were mentally and physically inferior in a way that was visible to the naked eye. Their faces were also asymmetrical.
Ever wonder why this forum is so fixated on an adequate sleeping position? Asymmetry is an undesirable trait, though hardly perceivable in most cases, that lowers your trust; while some of you know cases of extremely asymmetric celebrities who are often clamored as good-looking, in conjunction with the rest of the criminal traits, they configure a perfect picture of an ugly man.
This is the world we live in: while Lombroso's theory was discarded a long time ago, it would be hard to find anyone who would disagree promptly that traits of ugliness can often correspond with criminal intention.
This is another reason why you must looksmax: an ugly person will always be disfavored, in all areas of life; moral judgement will be done preemptively on an ugly man; he will always be seen as criminal, or untrustworthy; this applies to your job, to your school life, and to your relationships. This is solid proof that ugliness is not just an enclosed phenomenon, but something that encompasses all aspects of life.
It is truly over if you are born an ugly man; because of our own biology, you might as well have been born a criminal.
Lombroso was heavily influenced by Darwin’s theories of evolution. He even theorized that criminals were the “missing link” between primates and modern man.