Wednesday, September 4, 2019
Abercrombie and Fitch and the Moral Degradation of America Essay
Abercrombie and Fitch and the Moral Degradation of America      This past month I made my last visit to the popular teenage/college student  retail store Abercrombie and Fitch. Finishing up some back to school shopping, I  was on a quest for jeans, and I knew the place to get them. My last two favorite  pairs were from Abercrombie and Fitch, and I was planning on buying the same  kind once again. Happy and relieved that I would not spend the afternoon  ransacking the mall for one pair of jeans, I entered the store to the pulsating  beat of techno dance music. In front of me was the teenage Mecca of what is  truly hip -- the first thing I noticed were the life-size pictured that covered  the walls -- half-clad muscular and glistening young men, frolicking around with  pouty faced but beautiful young women who were wearing either size 2 short  shorts with bikini tops or 3 layered sweaters. The tables were covered with  overpriced shorts, shirts, and sweaters, strewn about by desperate customers  searching for the perfect outfit. The sales people wh   o roamed the floors were  definitions of cool themselves -- ranging from age 16-22, they modeled their  employee discounts in a haughty way which encouraged the customers to strive for  their ultra-hip look. And strive the customers did. What was the most noticeable  upon entering the store (besides the blaringly loud music which made me wonder  if I was at a clothing store or a dance club) were the herds of desperate young  men and women, who seemed to range from age 12-25, strutting around the store  and searching for anything that had the name A&F on it. I can only imaging  how many nights of baby-sitting it would take some of these eager teenagers to  buy one sweater. The young custome...              ...r yourself and don't allow anyone else to  decide for you.      Even more important than the clothes you wear is how you choose to live your  life -- a choice that is entirely your own and no one else's. No store can  choose a "lifestyle" for you, and no one should talk you into believing that  drinking, having sex, or anything else can make your life better than it already  is. In their desperate attempt to sell their products, Abercrombie and Fitch has  forgotten the individuality of the word "lifestyle". While claming that underage  drinking and just the right outfit will make your life better, they forget that  it is impossible to ever change your individual persona, or who you truly are.  No tomboy flares or martini shakers will change that. That's why I decided to  stick with my old jeans -- they're comfortable, I like them, but most importantly, they're me.                          
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