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Dylan Mulvaney is a caricature of what it means to be a woman. When will corporate America treat us fairly

The ire of conservative consumers has now focused on makeup brand Maybelline for partnering with trans woman and biological male Dylan Mulvaney for a makeup ad last month.

Maybelline, the iconic makeup brand that millions of women have relied on for more than a century, has sadly followed the idiotic and damaging trend of snubbing women in favor of a grown man who dresses up like a little girl. 

Is this how Maybelline sees its millions of consumers – as air-headed little girls who prance around talking like a baby? 

No matter how much makeup he puts on or whether he wears high heels and dresses, Dylan Mulvaney is still a man. Biological facts are just that – sex is immutable and is stamped on every part of your being.   

TRANS ACTOR WHO APPEARED IN BUD LIGHT COMMERCIAL DOESN'T ‘BELIEVE IN THE ALLYSHIP OF ANHEUSER-BUSCH’

But, even if Mulvaney, often called an "influencer," is trying to alter his physical characteristics, no woman or even little girl we’ve ever known acts the way he does.  

Trans poet and activist Alok Vaid-Menon appeared on a bridal magazine cover. (Photo by Slaven Vlasic/Getty Images for Tribeca Film Festival) (Slaven Vlasic/Getty Images)

Yet the corporate elites and marketing teams at Maybelline, Budweiser, Nike, Tampax and a dozen other companies think this guy should be the face of what a woman is in 2023. Otherwise, why would they glamorize and monetize mocking women in this vulgar and hideous fashion? 

These companies can’t find an actual woman to promote their makeup, bras, and tampons?   

The slap in the face hurts worse when you say to women, "You just aren’t good enough to promote our female products." Let’s leave it to a man to promote sports bras and menstrual products. 

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