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Bands in which there ie at least one musician with an electric guitar and men with very long hair promote transgenderism

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@Zergling_man

Then does the way the band dresses in metal music with "men" with long hair promofe transgenderism?

@shortstories I probably don't know metal history well enough for this, largely because, IMO, older metal just isn't that good compared to what we have now. (I have the mandatory amount of respect for them paving the way, and that's about it.) For example, I'm not sure if "glam metal" and "hair metal" refer to the same thing or not, and I don't know if that knowledge is important.

There certainly were a lot of suspiciously tight leather suits that fit the image for a while, and given that metal (like many things) started with a pretty heavy dose of "fuck authority/puritanism/religion", I would not be surprised if that image was deliberately chosen because it's kinda gay. Arguably different from transgenderism but well, they told us there wouldn't be a slippery slope and we saw how that turned out, so close enough, sure.
But what I was trying to get at earlier, and I probably should have worded it differently to convey this, is that metal now is well free of that culture, and simply having long hair and electric guitars [and, well, the other point is that that's not even exclusive to metal, even punk bands tend to fit those criteria] doesn't really imply much else. Like I saw three bands at a show last week, IIRC all three of them had at least one long-haired guy, and as far as I can tell, all of them are Christian [inasmuch as a non-entity can have a faith].
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