Sophie Labelle Verville / Guillaume Labelle / Serious Trans Vibes Comics / Assigned Male / Candycore Comics / Pastel Sexy Times / WafflesArt - Obnoxious webcomics and horrific porn by a crazy fat pedo troon

A kilt is actually a highly manly item of clothing. It was invented by one Hamish McThundercock (also known as “Bonnie Prince Chadlie”) in the 12th century. The problem McThundercock faced was that when he’d done fighting wolves, tossing cabers and punching Sassenachs, women would inevitably feel compelled to throw themselves upon him, and the time lost in taking his trousers off was unacceptable to him. The kilt enabled quick access to his mighty genitals. McThundercock is also credited with the discovery of the multiple orgasm.

Unless you, say, wanted to hide the lines on your face due to an insecure need to appear over a decade younger than you are.

I know you're shitposting, but the invention of pants didn't come until much, much later.

The middle ages had men wearing underwear though and to give a visionary example, think modern day boxer shorts.

If you were high class, the tunic would be longer, like a dress, but what they wore underneath was specific to the male clothing of the time. It was just tunic and the undershirt, their underwear, stockings which tied to strings on your underwear, and shoes.

Women wore an under dress, an over dress, and stockings with garters to hold them in place.

So yeah, while pants weren't worn by men, the underclothes were vastly different and it was more apparent in the lower status classes.

I'm only sperging about this because a lot of people like to think we "downgraded" when pants became a thing for guys. It was just inevitable as an invention.
 
I know you're shitposting, but the invention of pants didn't come until much, much later.

The middle ages had men wearing underwear though and to give a visionary example, think modern day boxer shorts.

If you were high class, the tunic would be longer, like a dress, but what they wore underneath was specific to the male clothing of the time. It was just tunic and the undershirt, their underwear, stockings which tied to strings on your underwear, and shoes.

Women wore an under dress, an over dress, and stockings with garters to hold them in place.

So yeah, while pants weren't worn by men, the underclothes were vastly different and it was more apparent in the lower status classes.

I'm only sperging about this because a lot of people like to think we "downgraded" when pants became a thing for guys. It was just inevitable as an invention.

didnt expect to learn some history on the assigned male thread
 
Sasannach

FTFY.

Anyway.

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Oh this'll be good! Thank fuck Billy is too lazy to do Friday's comic any more as I'm in Scotland for the weekend, thus an edit will likely not be done until I get back.

Don't say that, she'll think we're in cahoots and you're coming here so we can talk about how to stab her over coffee.
 
I think when you're strong enough to chuck massive logs several yards with your bare hands and cleave someone in half with a great sword you kinda get a pass for wearing a green day fan-esque tartan skirt.

Half of the people I've seen wearing them don't fit that description.

I've only really ever seen people wearing them at weddings and at the Royal National Mod. It's usually fat old men that are wearing them.
 
I think when you're strong enough to chuck massive logs several yards with your bare hands and cleave someone in half with a great sword you kinda get a pass for wearing a green day fan-esque tartan skirt.

Nothing wrong with that, as far as I'm concerned.

Some of the things that register as masculine or feminine are cultural. American Indian males wore long hair well before the 1960s made that common, the kilt is worn by men, and so on.
 
I wonder if she will take the angle of "dating education" or diss on the condoms on dildos/the actual curriculum.

Most likely she'll complain how it's not adapted for trans people.

Also, AIDS are more easily acquired anally than vaginally, but that's transphobic
 
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