"Accountability isn’t simply seen when a character regrets their past actions. Accountability means that the narrative itself, the storyline, is telling the viewers that what this character did is wrong."
An example of lack of accountability would be if "Designated Hero A" gleefully lit five orphan puppies on fire in episode 3, but the series never referenced that again in its next 50 episodes, despite "Designated Hero A" remaining the designated hero and protagonist of the series.
Still really funny that Marvel named a movie “Endgame” and sold it as the final culmination of the MCU where they killed off two main characters and retired a third and then were shocked when people started loosing interest in the MCU after that
I know this is a big draw for a lot of women when it comes to lolita fashion, so maybe that's where that kind of idea comes from? But lolita clothing is designed to be over-the-top girly and specifically not sexy. And some people are definitely super into it anyway.
My little sister enjoyed her work as a docent in part because she thought the more modest clothing would result in fewer men being weird to her. In the end, it absolutely didn't, though.
So I don't think it's impossible that some ace people might be drawn to historical clothing for that reason... I just don't think it'll actually help them.
"ace people are drawn to historical costuming because it's unsexy by modern standards" is an interesting take I've just seen
I feel like it's complicated a bit by the fact that some people do find historical clothing sexy, though. which, for me personally, is both good (ladies with whom I might wish to flirt) and bad (for femmes like me: creepy old men at balls trying to act out some sort of bizarre not-actually-historically-accurate fantasy; catcallers who will holler at ANYTHING that looks female; right-wing guys who think you're a tradwife)