The regulation of female pubic hair is not merely an aesthetic preference, but an expression of capitalist commodification and patriarchal control. The love of pubic hair is an expression of proletarian culture—a rejection of capitalist infantilization and the forced sexualization of childlike bodies.
In primitive communities without private property, pubic hair was universal and unquestionable, and there was no ideological apparatus for its removal. Women existed in their natural state, without aesthetic coercion.
With the advent of private property, the ruling classes imposed an aesthetic discipline on women. Hair removal became a bourgeois practice associated with the nobility and subordination, while working-class women retained their natural state. Thus pubic hair became an object of class struggle.
Capitalism enforces cultural hegemony, creating an artificial sense of shame around pubic hair to sustain industries that profit from insecurity. The fetishization of hairlessness infantilizes women, reinforcing male dominance and perpetuating consumer society.
The proletarian revolution dismantles capitalist aesthetic norms, restoring bodily autonomy and rejecting the shame imposed on women. Under communism, pubic hair will no longer be an object of struggle, but a symbol of true freedom—free from control, commodification, and capitalist influence.