The 21-year-old woman claims she was minding her own business and shopping until she noticed other customers giving her hostile looks and even aggressive insults, before supermarket staff asked her to leave the store in the city of Belo Horizon in southeastern Brazil.
“I just got back from the supermarket and they intimidated me for wearing ‘too short clothes,’” Chaves shared on her Instagram account. “Some looked at me with prejudice, others cursed me and, finally, they kicked me out of the site,” added the young woman.
I just came from the supermarket and was bullied for wearing ‘too short clothes’
Although the term “hot phobia” does not exist, it could be defined -in the conditions that she claims to have suffered from- as the rejection of a person who is too sensual.
The adult content producer was distraught over the treatment she received at the store and turned to her 581,000 followers for support. “Do you think so? It seems absurd to me that women continue to treat us like this just because we dress as we want,” Chaves said. “The truth is that we go through it because we are too hot, that’s all.”
However, it was not supported as expected, as most commenters seemed to agree with the reaction of other shoppers and the reaction of store staff. “There is no need to go to a supermarket dressed like this,” commented one of those who participated in Chaves’s publication. “You are embarrassing decent people who are often there with children,” they mentioned on his Instagram account.
I think all these insults have more to do with the ‘hot phobia’ of sexy women that I face on a daily basis.
The comments supported the decision to remove her from the establishment. “I suppose the same thing happened to you as a shirtless man was kicked out of the place,” reads one of the comments to Chaves.
After these reactions, the girl reacted: “I was offended by the gratuitous hatred that I received both in the market and in my Instagram post,” she mentioned. “I think all these insults have more to do with the ‘hot phobia’ of sexy women that I face on a daily basis,” she concluded.
Although the photos are very revealing to say what Chaves herself published, in the case of Mexico the most similar thing that can exist are the charges or accusations of “moral offenses”, however, for this to happen there must be a complaint before an authority. In some states this can be considered a very broad term, but they are grievances against the Police and Good Government Side, although the amount of the sanction is determined by the qualifying judge, It can be around an economic fine between 1,200 and 3,500 pesos.