Valeria Lukyanova, also known as the "Human Barbie," recently gave a shocking interview in which she said she is repulsed by children, loathes the family lifestyle, and dislikes the mixing of the races.
She s
poke to her high standard of beauty with Michael Idov of GQ. Her unusual appearance has been achieved in part through a breast enlargement, a nose job, and a rumored surgery that removed her lower ribs to give her an 18-inch waist.
Urgent: Do You Approve Or Disapprove of President Obama's Job Performance? Vote Now in Urgent Poll
"Ethnicities are mixing now, so there's degeneration, and it didn't used to be like that. Remember how many beautiful women there were in the 1950s and 1960s, without any surgery? And now, thanks to degeneration, we have this," Lukyanova said.
Elaborating her point, she said, "For example, a Russian marries an Armenian. They have a kid, a cute girl, but she has her dad's nose. She goes and files it down a little, and it's all good . . . Everyone wants a slim figure. Everyone gets breasts done. Everyone fixes up their face if it's not ideal, you know? Everyone strives for the golden mean. It's global now."
The controversial 28-year-old from Moldova has made headlines since 2012 when she began posting her self-made videos to YouTube, which appeared to be motivational and new age-inspired.
Asked about her plans for the future and if she intends to ever have kids, Lukyanova responded, "The very idea of children brings out this deep revulsion in me . . . I'd rather die from torture because the worst thing in the world is to have a family lifestyle."
She said most people have kids selfishly, and this is a big reason why she chooses not to be a mom.
"Most people have children to fulfill their own ambitions, not to give anything," she said. "They don't think about what they can give this child, what they can teach her. They just try to shape her according to some weird script — whatever they couldn't do in life, like becoming a writer or a doctor."
The interview appeared to be an altogether confusing and unexpected venture for the Russian editor-in-chief.
After their dinner meet up — during which Lukyanova only drank a glass of carrot juice — he concluded, "Her beauty, though I hesitate to use the term, is pitched at the exact precipice where the male gaze curdles in on itself. Her features are the features we men playfully ascribe to ideal women; it's how we draw them in manga and comics and video games. Except we don't expect them to comply with this oppressive fantasy so fully. As a result, she almost throws our idea of a supervixen back in our face."
Urgent: Assess Your Heart Attack Risk in Minutes. Click Here.