Is it fair to say that someone's attitude towards body positivity and diversity should also be judged by who they sleep with?

There are many angles you can look at it from, and they're not always consistent in how we collectively respond - for example, we all agree that writing "No fats, femmes, and Asians" in your dating profile is vile, but we all have met someone who only sleeps with very skinny white twinks and it slides.

Please vote and elaborate!

Yes
25%
No
75%
Poll ended at .
@HisNameIsOx I couldn't keep to the character count, so I've written you a mini-essay instead! (Now as a PDF for easier viewing) https://drive.google.com/file/d/1FBovAqRnzOjqFN9i0gJLLARDyDeUHKIG/view?usp=sharing
@Shade I feel everything you wrote, and I believe it to be a common code of conduct amongst my immediate surroundings - you are allowed to have a preference, just don't be a dick about it. I also feel what you said about the lasting effects of being outside of the beauty standard - we share a body type, and I feel are the most likely group to experience casual disrespect to abuse due to it. But, I also feel like you've missed my bigger question a little;
@Shade with being legitimate preferences, how much do our partbners say about how we address, express, or support diversity? And yeah, that's a hard one to answer.

@HisNameIsOx I didn't perhaps extend my essay to reach this conclusion, but my conclusion would be:

You have enough time in your life that on balance, being polite and respectful (and even openly supportive of) people you are not attracted to is always going to be the right thing over mistreating them.

But I won't judge anybody on the diversity or otherwise of their actual sexual partners. The balance here swings the other way.