Empowerment or Decadence? Boonie Blue and the Fake Feminism that Promotes Hypersexualization

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In a recent interview that has stirred up social media, Boonie Blue, a woman who defines herself as empowered, attempted to justify hypersexualization and promiscuity as tools of female liberation. Her statements, far from inspiring respect or admiration, reveal the dangerous direction in which modern feminism has led many young women: toward moral confusion, a loss of dignity, and the commodification of their bodies.

In Blue’s own words:

“Yes, it’s empowering for women, not just for me, but for other women. Most of them—the ones who aren’t lazy.”

According to this vision, the “empowered” woman is not someone who studies, works hard, or builds a strong family. No. In this narrative, empowerment means capitalizing on the sexualization of the female body to make money, as if that were the peak of women’s progress.

Control… or Submission in Disguise?
Blue claims that by taking part in the hypersexualization of herself through platforms like OnlyFans, she is in control. She says she chooses what to show, how to manage her image, and in her own words:

“I’m making money with it… I’m in control and, even when I’m not in control, I love it.”

This contradiction exposes a disturbing truth: this isn’t empowerment—it’s self-deception. When a woman says she loves being out of control, she is admitting her surrender to a culture that strips her of her intrinsic worth and reduces her to a visual commodity.

This is the same brand of feminism that criticizes the objectification of women in media—but celebrates it when it’s labeled as “freedom” or “self-expression.”

Moral Collapse Disguised as Empowerment
Perhaps the most unsettling moment of the interview came when Boonie Blue openly spoke of her extreme promiscuity:

“Why do you think sleeping with 1,000 men was something necessary to do? Is there some point you’re trying to prove?”

One might expect this question to be a critique. But no—it’s posed naturally, as if it were a badge of honor, a revolutionary act, when in reality it reflects a deep identity and values crisis.

Does this really represent all women? Has the women’s rights movement been reduced to selling one’s body for clicks, views, and subscriptions?

Selective Feminism: Who Gets to Decide What’s Empowering?
In yet another example of the moral elitism of the left, Boonie Blue throws a veiled judgment at women who don’t follow her path:

“It’s empowering for the ones who aren’t lazy.”

So now, a woman who chooses not to hypersexualize herself is “lazy”? The mother raising children, the young woman studying medicine, the loyal wife caring for her home and community—are these women without ambition?

This rhetoric is not only offensive; it is destructive for an entire generation of young people seeking guidance, role models, and purpose.

What Real Feminism Used to Mean
True feminism—the kind that fought for the right to vote, for equal job opportunities, for respect for motherhood and female dignity—has been hijacked by a movement that promotes self-destruction disguised as freedom.

Boonie Blue does not represent all women. She represents a loud minority applauded by progressive elites, but rejected by millions of mothers, daughters, and grandmothers who understand that a woman’s value is not measured by how many men desire her or how many dollars she earns by showing her body, but by her character, her strength, her wisdom, and her love.

What Kind of Society Do We Want to Build?
The United States needs to rebuild its values. It needs to protect women’s dignity, not celebrate it when it’s degraded. And it needs leaders—not influencers—who teach girls that their bodies are not commodities.

Popular culture has glamorized the vulgar. But not everything that glitters is gold.

The post Empowerment or Decadence? Boonie Blue and the Fake Feminism that Promotes Hypersexualization appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

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