All victims deserve justice.

Confrontation makes me nervous.

Gender doesn't exist in my book.

Justice can rarely exist without honesty.

My strength does not come from my clothing.

The VS Angels are beautiful, but so are you.

My very first runway show, I was in 'Vogue.'

I grew up believing I was just an ugly girl.

Illamasqua is a great brand with great people.

My sex appeal lies in suits and ties, but my body is femme.

I have what some people consider to be a 'hippie' mentality.

I had lice in third grade, and my mom shaved all my hair off.

I am a 100 percent determined to be a Victoria's Secret model.

My reputation was that I had bad BO, and I was poor, and I was ugly.

Victoria's Secret is entitled to brand themselves the way they want to.

No mater what I wear - whether my choice or not- I guarantee I will be me.

I'm more comfortable modelling as a man because I don't get any criticism.

I'm a proud woman. I'm a proud man. I'm a proud whatever people think I am.

I model as male, female, and everything in between. I model as all genders.

The Olympics represent a global standard - for men, for women, for athletics.

The gender thing doesn't exist; it's a social construct you don't have to fit into.

You have to be satiated with just being authentically yourself at the end of the day.

My name is Rain Dove, and my pronouns are just a sound. You can use whatever you want.

My goal is to eradicate poverty. I think we can't have equality until we eradicate poverty.

There's something so empowering about knowing I can pick up an axe and split a piece of wood.

I want people to realize that they aren't their bodies. They are something more than their bodies.

I want to tell people that there are more ways to be beautiful, there are more ways to be handsome.

You don't see Victoria's Secret women running around with even short hair. That's too crazy for them.

I will conquer Femmeness... And then, I will turn it on its head and redefine it for the world to see.

You could ask a lot of people in my childhood, and they'd say I was very prudish about showing off skin.

When someone thinks of the term, 'pretty girl,' they don't typically think of someone who looks like me.

The way woman is defined by marketable modeling and commercial standards... It makes me feel alien to myself.

To be existing at all is beautiful simply because of how complicated and unexplainable being alive really is.

It bothered me that women were taught they can't be beautiful just being themselves - it filled me with rage.

The great thing about fashion is that you can create a very unique version of yourself to display to the world.

I hope, by never hiding, I can show there is never anything to be ashamed of when we are being our true selves.

I look like what we have taught society a lesbian looks like. I just do. I have the short hair. I got the muscles.

I have nothing against the Victoria's Secret Angels. They're all beautiful people, and I respect where they are at.

I may not be the conventional girl, but that doesn't mean I'm not a pretty girl. Or that any girl isn't a pretty girl.

Victoria's Secret is a brand, not a socio-political movement. But at the same time, there is that one-dimensional look.

I just see clothing as cloth, and I see it as art, and I see it as a way to express yourself artistically in this world.

A gender capitalist is someone who takes advantage of opportunities given to people based on their perceived sex or gender.

I see the wielding of a pronoun as something that can be freeing for some members of society but a shackle to others like myself.

I find when I'm perceived as male in society, there is an enormous amount of pressure, but it comes with respect, so it's a balance.

When I'm a gender capitalist in the fashion world, I basically can go to any casting that I want to as long as somebody likes my face.

I believe that everyone who is human is androgynous, but I don't think there are a lot of people that are presented as truly androgynous.

Not everyone will see your beauty, and not everyone will find you attractive or believe you are worthy of their clothing or publications.

During my career path, I've experienced first-hand what people deem as beautiful. It's not me. It's not most people. It's limited and small.

When a brand says, 'Our product is great, and we think it'll be great for anyone that loves it, too,' that's the ultimate marketing message.

I love high fashion. I want to do it, but in order to be able to make a change, you have to be able to talk to the masses, not the 1 percent.

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