nah you gotta listen to hoyo, make hoyo macaan happyThat treatment is only for daughters sxb
Don't let hooyo c*ck you![]()
nah you gotta listen to hoyo, make hoyo macaan happyThat treatment is only for daughters sxb
Don't let hooyo c*ck you![]()
Virginia Gould writes that the true purpose of the law was to control women "who had become too light skinned or who dressed too elegantly, or who, in reality competed too freely with white women for status and thus threatened the social order."[5] She also notes that there is no evidence it was ever enforced and the women who followed the law turned the headdress into a "mark of distinction. The women who were targets of this decree were inventive and imaginative. They decorated tignons with their jewels and ribbons, and used the finest available materials to wrap their hair. In other words, "[t]hey effectively re-interpreted the law without technically breaking the law"[4]—and they continued to be pursued by men."