dontspeakmuch
Pro
Much shorter and tighterJust a little shorter...so what. It's ESSENTIALLY the same thing. Any intellectually honest person would tell you this.
Much shorter and tighterJust a little shorter...so what. It's ESSENTIALLY the same thing. Any intellectually honest person would tell you this.
And we wear pants beneathI'm Kenyan... whats up?
Let's not play like this shyt is regular attire anwhere except some bush country remote village... I'll give u the fact that Islamic folk rock their long garbs but those still ain't skirts or regular people gear
Nah he started doing it when men started wearing Skirts. When men started wearing feminine clothes, he tried to join the trend like a bytch but flip it to be masculine but we all know that it comes from a place of bytch so he gets no pass Will im sorry. I just cant give out that pass, and my pass is very important.Men doing rocking it since forever, he wears and nikkas wanna flip out
Nah its sunnah...but ur probly kufrThey meant because he rocks a beard with no mustache..its kind of a fakkity look.
South Africa is a mixing pot, so its plausible that he encountered it there.That's true, but what does that have to do with Mos Def living in South Africa and wearing a typical Ghanaian attire?
yea European men tho. The king had t be the tallest so he was always getting larger heels, eventually laws were put in place to set a max heel size. Also, look up the prince albert.man it's gonna blow some of your minds when you learn that men also used to wear heels
also somebody unironically said 'Hollyweird'
man it's gonna blow some of your minds when you learn that men also used to wear heels
also somebody unironically said 'Hollyweird'
yea European men tho. The king had t be the tallest so he was always getting larger heels, eventually laws were put in place to set a max heel size. Also, look up the prince albert.
Did they do it for the same reason? I think I remember that being briefly mentioned in an Art History lecture.Not just Europeans, ancient Egyptians too.
Did they do it for the same reason? I think I remember that being briefly mentioned in an Art History lecture.