(Part 2) Top products from r/SampleSize

Jump to the top 20

We found 6 product mentions on r/SampleSize. We ranked the 26 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

Next page

Top comments that mention products on r/SampleSize:

u/DoubleFelix · 3 pointsr/SampleSize

Why are the T/A charts stacked on top of each other? This makes it look like 20% of people prefer average tits, but 10% prefer large asses instead. Also, one of them is upside down which makes it even more confusing.

I also don't know what's going on with the blue-orange bars even though I think you tried to explain it.

Generally I find your graph very confusing. You may wish to read Creating More Effective Graphs, a textbook I rather like that we used in school.

u/joot78 · 1 pointr/SampleSize

I did take it! :)

P.S. My favorite NK defector(s) book is Nothing to Envy - if you read just one, go with that!

u/Mikesapien · 2 pointsr/SampleSize

A person is not born "either male or female."

First, there's biological sex. According to Fausto-Sterling (2000), roughly 1.7% of all live births are intersex. Other estimates put the figure somewhere between 1-2%. Intersex conditions are conditions in which a human body cannot be classified as distinctly male or distinctly female. There are numerous variables that factor into this, and it isn't well understood yet. Some intersex conditions include hormonal insensitivities, or chromosomal mutations, such as XXY, XYX, XYY, or XXX instead of the standard XX (female) or XY (male).

Second, there's gender, which your second question specifically asks about. One may identify as any variety of genderqueer, such as two-spirits, genderfluid, bigender, trigender, pangender, agender, "third" gender / "other" gender, gender-neutral, gender-ambiguous, transgender, etc. Likewise, one may be born into one sex (or intersex), but identify as another gender, as is often the case when surgeons "assign" intersex children.

The assumption that a person is "either male or female" is called gender binarism, and it's exclusive, antiquated, and presumptuous.