No he's right, you're just uninformed unlike him
I know you hate the facts but those are it. Human Trafficking, psychological damage to both men and women such that it becomes impossible to be a good husband or wife, and other horrific nonsense is riff in industries like that.
The amount of times they get married, cheat, divorced and various scandals are unnatural for the human and social psyche.
Its even worse in Japan from what I know.
Women like attention and are hypergamous by nature, it destroys them when millions of people are looking at them constantly, their husband's attention won't do it for them anymore and they start to see men like shopping products (This one has more mileage, this one is worth more, etc.)
And for the Men who like providing and protecting, restraint becomes impossible and their rifling through women like paper, and I don't need to explain the psychological damage (assuming they don't get STDs, though this also applies to the women)
There's so much more its not funny.
I didn't even get into the self esteem issues such as the 6 pac every man aims for and won't be able to achieve due to genetics for some if not most. Women starving themselves, PLASTIC SURGERY destroying their bodies the K pop stars being horrific examples of this, etc.
https://www.medicaldaily.com/psycho...ebrity-crushes-impact-childrens-health-358604
"We also see fancams — behind-the-scenes stuff of them recording for the shows — and sometimes we just see them
passing out,
fainting onstage," said the Toronto-based fan who goes by the name Ky on her
YouTube channel. Online, her videos showcase her enthusiastically performing and spoofing the elaborate choreography of K-pop music videos alongside the idols.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/entertainment/kpop-hard-life-1.4545627
A study of 1064 famous musicians, entitled, "Elvis to Eminem: Quantifying the price of fame through early mortality of European and North American rock and pop stars," found that from 3 to 25 years after first becoming famous, North American and European pop stars experienced significantly higher mortality — almost two times higher — than demographically matched populations in the U.S. and the United Kingdom.
While the study blamed elevated levels of
stress,
depression, and substance use for the higher death rates, the fact the higher mortality rate extended up to 25 years from the time they became famous suggested that longer-term risk factors, such as cardiovascular disease, may be initiated, perhaps by earlier unhealthy celebrity lifestyles.
https://www.psychologytoday.com/int...e-potentially-fatal-downsides-of-being-famous
Celebrities themselves are beholden to various contracts and shareholders and so forth, they end up promoting things they are told, not things that are actually good for the health of the people. Assuming they even know what it is they are promoting in the first place (
https://systematicreviewsjournal.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13643-016-0395-1)
..
While this is a story, so it shouldn't matter,
your comments and beliefs are simply incorrect in the face of real facts