•It's the fact that it promotes a continuing descent into all things vain. Rather than accepting their perceived (important keyword) flaws, growing, and developing character, they take a chance going under the knife. Plastic surgery rarely produces the desired results and creates more unhealthy obsession with things that would be relatively trivial in a mentally healthy person with proper priorities. Even if, by some miracle, someone is completely happy with their surgery, it only serves to perpetuate the cycle; for themselves and for others. The obsession doesn't go away in these people. Their thinking inevitably moves on to having more things done.
•The plastic surgery craze is insidious because it targets those who are obsessed with their outer appearance, not what's important. The mental and emotional toll on plastic surgery patients is, maybe unsurprisingly, widely disregarded. The simple fact is: mental and emotional stability are increasingly taking a backseat to physical appearance. People just don't realize what they're doing to themselves because they've never really valued anything other than physical appearance in the first place.
•The fact that these things aren't obvious to more people truly shows where our culture is heading.
•Just think about this question: Is the freedom to do whatever we want with our lives a valuable passport even to overpass the limits of morals and ethics.
•People generally aren't against plastic surgery. They're against people who look perfectly fine getting their face cut up because they want to look like their favourite celebrity. It's only people who have, for example, have been in a car accident and had their face shattered, or people who were born naturally deformed.
•The money spent for finding out newer/better surgery options could be used for important causes. For example, plastic surgery is a billion-dollar industry, if plastic surgery were not glorified so much, the billions spent