A woman argued that being single in your 30s is not proof of bad character, challenging a stereotype that often unfairly labels unmarried women in that age group as flawed or undesirable. Her point was meant to question societal assumptions that tie a person’s worth or suitability for marriage to age or relationship status.
One insensitive comment responded: “If 100 million hit ur account today, will u buy a car built 35 years ago or a newer model?”
This remark is problematic because it objectifies women by comparing them to used products, reducing a human being’s value to age in the same way one might evaluate a commodity. It promotes ageist and sexist thinking, implying that older women are inherently less desirable or valuable. Such comparisons dehumanize people and reinforce harmful social pressures, rather than encouraging respectful or meaningful discussion about relationships, maturity, and individual choice.


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