News:

SMF - Just Installed!

 

The best topic

*

Replies: 12082
Total votes: : 6

Last post: Today at 07:46:08 AM
Re: Forum gossip thread by DKG

Why can’t we hate men? (Washington Post Editorial)

Started by Wazzzup, June 09, 2018, 10:16:07 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Rancidmilko

Quote from: "Dinky Dianna"Suzanna Danuta Walters is a stupid c*nt.


Who was viciously beaten with all the ugly sticks someone could find.



http://freshfiction.com/images/authors/23775.jpeg">
There\'s always a bigger fish.

Odinson

Quote from: "Herman"
Quote from: "Odinson"White women are the true privileged ones..



They never had to develope a brain since some1 else always fought their battles and paid for their stuff.

That stupid cunt professor is not disadvantaged. The fact that taxpayers are subsidizing her six figure salary to say loony shit is proof of that.


A lot of these feminists are making 6-figure salaries..







The thing is that they think they have had it worse than men..

Anonymous

Quote from: "Red_brazilian_nut"
Quote from: "Dinky Dianna"Suzanna Danuta Walters is a stupid c*nt.


Who was viciously beaten with all the ugly sticks someone could find.



http://freshfiction.com/images/authors/23775.jpeg">

Is that her Rbn?

Anonymous

Quote from: "Red_brazilian_nut"
Quote from: "Dinky Dianna"Suzanna Danuta Walters is a stupid c*nt.


Who was viciously beaten with all the ugly sticks someone could find.



http://freshfiction.com/images/authors/23775.jpeg">

She's as beautiful as she is intelligent.

Frood

Blahhhhhh...

Anonymous

Quote from: "Dinky Dianna"From the distance it looks like Leo Sayer.

https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcS33Y9jRV2vzcm-Mi0FUTvESmGKzvBbv6aaPCuXFJsQc_LCdJVkYA">

Anonymous

Quote from: "Odinson"
Quote from: "Herman"
Quote from: "Odinson"White women are the true privileged ones..



They never had to develope a brain since some1 else always fought their battles and paid for their stuff.

That stupid cunt professor is not disadvantaged. The fact that taxpayers are subsidizing her six figure salary to say loony shit is proof of that.


A lot of these feminists are making 6-figure salaries..







The thing is that they think they have had it worse than men..

The problem is they have it too good.  And we are forced to pay for their antisocial rants.

Wazzzup

Quote from: "iron horse jockey"
Quote from: "Odinson"
Quote from: "Herman"
Quote from: "Odinson"White women are the true privileged ones..



They never had to develope a brain since some1 else always fought their battles and paid for their stuff.

That stupid cunt professor is not disadvantaged. The fact that taxpayers are subsidizing her six figure salary to say loony shit is proof of that.


A lot of these feminists are making 6-figure salaries..







The thing is that they think they have had it worse than men..

The problem is they have it too good.  And we are forced to pay for their antisocial rants.


The only thing worse than their bullshit is knowing that we actually have to pay taxes to fund it.  This was something I had hoped trump would help clean up.  There should be legislation that Universities that take federal money have to abide by the first amendment, i.e. that non lefties can dissent otherwise they lose all federal funding, grants, etc.  Maybe even take away accreditation (Herman suggested that and its a damn good suggestion).  Its a moral crime that leftist assholes have taken over the education system, to brainwash young people, and it needs to stop.

Wazzzup

Quote from: "Fashionista"
Quote from: "Wazzzup"We have a racial absurdity thread . Well this is certainly some gender absurdity right here.  Just goes to show how low the Washington Post has sunk that they would print this trash.



Suzanna Danuta Walters, a professor of sociology and director of the Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Program at Northeastern University, is the editor of the gender studies journal Signs.



It's not that Eric Schneiderman (the now-former New York attorney general accused of abuse by multiple women) pushed me over the edge. My edge has been crossed for a long time, before President Trump, before Harvey Weinstein, before "mansplaining" and "incels." Before live-streaming sexual assaults and red pill men's groups and rape camps as a tool of war and the deadening banality of male prerogative.



Seen in this indisputably true context, it seems logical to hate men. I can't lie, I've always had a soft spot for the radical feminist smackdown, for naming the problem in no uncertain terms. I've rankled at the "but we don't hate men" protestations of generations of would-be feminists and found the "men are not the problem, this system is" obfuscation too precious by half.



But, of course, the criticisms of this blanket condemnation of men — from transnational feminists who decry such glib universalism to U.S. women of color who demand an intersectional perspective — are mostly on the mark. These critics rightly insist on an analysis of male power as institutional, not narrowly personal or individual or biologically based in male bodies. Growing movements to challenge a masculinity built on domination and violence and to engage boys and men in feminism are both gratifying and necessary. Please continue.



But this recognition of the complexity of male domination (how different it can be in different parts of the world, how racism shapes it) should not — must not — mean we forget some universal facts.



Pretty much everywhere in the world, this is true: Women experience sexual violence, and the threat of that violence permeates our choices big and small. In addition, male violence is not restricted to intimate-partner attacks or sexual assault but plagues us in the form of terrorism and mass gun violence. Women are underrepresented in higher-wage jobs, local and federal government, business, educational leadership, etc.; wage inequality continues to permeate every economy and almost every industry; women continue to provide far higher rates of unpaid labor in the home (e.g., child care, elder care, care for disabled individuals, housework and food provision); women have less access to education, particularly at the higher levels; women have lower rates of property ownership.



The list goes on. It varies by country, but these global realities — of women's economic, political, social and sexual vulnerabilities — are, well, real. Indeed, the nations in which these inequities have been radically minimized (e.g., Iceland) are those in which deliberate effort has been made to both own up to gender disparities and to address them directly and concretely.



So, in this moment, here in the land of legislatively legitimated toxic masculinity, is it really so illogical to hate men? For all the power of #MeToo and #TimesUp and the women's marches, only a relatively few men have been called to task, and I've yet to see a mass wave of prosecutions or even serious recognition of wrongdoing. On the contrary, cries of "witch hunt" and the plotted resurrection of celebrity offenders came quick on the heels of the outcry over endemic sexual harassment and violence. But we're not supposed to hate them because . . . #NotAllMen. I love Michelle Obama as much as the next woman, but when they have gone low for all of human history, maybe it's time for us to go all Thelma and Louise and Foxy Brown on their collective butts.



The world has little place for feminist anger. Women are supposed to support, not condemn, offer succor not dismissal. We're supposed to feel more empathy for your fear of being called a harasser than we are for the women harassed. We are told he's with us and #NotHim. But, truly, if he were with us, wouldn't this all have ended a long time ago? If he really were with us, wouldn't he reckon that one good way to change structural violence and inequity would be to refuse the power that comes with it?



So men, if you really are #WithUs and would like us to not hate you for all the millennia of woe you have produced and benefited from, start with this: Lean out so we can actually just stand up without being beaten down. Pledge to vote for feminist women only. Don't run for office. Don't be in charge of anything. Step away from the power. We got this. And please know that your crocodile tears won't be wiped away by us anymore. We have every right to hate you. You have done us wrong. #BecausePatriarchy. It is long past time to play hard for Team Feminism. And win.

I pledge to never vote for feminist women..



My husband has no interest in running for office, but if my son, my brother or my nephew do, they will all be better candidates than your misandry lunatics..



My husband is in charge of many skilled trades people and does a good job......does that bother you?



You step away from your position at Northeastern University and stop poisoning young minds..



And the only tears that should be shed for you are tears of pity.[/quote]This is why this man-hating feminism will probably never widely catch on.,  Because most women have brothers, fathers, husbands, children, etc that they care about and could never hate.  Hating men, like this woman, while annoying and stupid, is probably not that dangerous.  To my knowledge men and women have never had a war against each other in all of human history



However dividing people in tribal ways, race, culture, ethnicity, which is something else the left loves to do, is very dangerous, and of course many wars have been fought over these things.

Anonymous

Quote from: "Wazzzup"
Quote from: "Fashionista"
Quote from: "Wazzzup"We have a racial absurdity thread . Well this is certainly some gender absurdity right here.  Just goes to show how low the Washington Post has sunk that they would print this trash.



Suzanna Danuta Walters, a professor of sociology and director of the Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Program at Northeastern University, is the editor of the gender studies journal Signs.



It's not that Eric Schneiderman (the now-former New York attorney general accused of abuse by multiple women) pushed me over the edge. My edge has been crossed for a long time, before President Trump, before Harvey Weinstein, before "mansplaining" and "incels." Before live-streaming sexual assaults and red pill men's groups and rape camps as a tool of war and the deadening banality of male prerogative.



Seen in this indisputably true context, it seems logical to hate men. I can't lie, I've always had a soft spot for the radical feminist smackdown, for naming the problem in no uncertain terms. I've rankled at the "but we don't hate men" protestations of generations of would-be feminists and found the "men are not the problem, this system is" obfuscation too precious by half.



But, of course, the criticisms of this blanket condemnation of men — from transnational feminists who decry such glib universalism to U.S. women of color who demand an intersectional perspective — are mostly on the mark. These critics rightly insist on an analysis of male power as institutional, not narrowly personal or individual or biologically based in male bodies. Growing movements to challenge a masculinity built on domination and violence and to engage boys and men in feminism are both gratifying and necessary. Please continue.



But this recognition of the complexity of male domination (how different it can be in different parts of the world, how racism shapes it) should not — must not — mean we forget some universal facts.



Pretty much everywhere in the world, this is true: Women experience sexual violence, and the threat of that violence permeates our choices big and small. In addition, male violence is not restricted to intimate-partner attacks or sexual assault but plagues us in the form of terrorism and mass gun violence. Women are underrepresented in higher-wage jobs, local and federal government, business, educational leadership, etc.; wage inequality continues to permeate every economy and almost every industry; women continue to provide far higher rates of unpaid labor in the home (e.g., child care, elder care, care for disabled individuals, housework and food provision); women have less access to education, particularly at the higher levels; women have lower rates of property ownership.



The list goes on. It varies by country, but these global realities — of women's economic, political, social and sexual vulnerabilities — are, well, real. Indeed, the nations in which these inequities have been radically minimized (e.g., Iceland) are those in which deliberate effort has been made to both own up to gender disparities and to address them directly and concretely.



So, in this moment, here in the land of legislatively legitimated toxic masculinity, is it really so illogical to hate men? For all the power of #MeToo and #TimesUp and the women's marches, only a relatively few men have been called to task, and I've yet to see a mass wave of prosecutions or even serious recognition of wrongdoing. On the contrary, cries of "witch hunt" and the plotted resurrection of celebrity offenders came quick on the heels of the outcry over endemic sexual harassment and violence. But we're not supposed to hate them because . . . #NotAllMen. I love Michelle Obama as much as the next woman, but when they have gone low for all of human history, maybe it's time for us to go all Thelma and Louise and Foxy Brown on their collective butts.



The world has little place for feminist anger. Women are supposed to support, not condemn, offer succor not dismissal. We're supposed to feel more empathy for your fear of being called a harasser than we are for the women harassed. We are told he's with us and #NotHim. But, truly, if he were with us, wouldn't this all have ended a long time ago? If he really were with us, wouldn't he reckon that one good way to change structural violence and inequity would be to refuse the power that comes with it?



So men, if you really are #WithUs and would like us to not hate you for all the millennia of woe you have produced and benefited from, start with this: Lean out so we can actually just stand up without being beaten down. Pledge to vote for feminist women only. Don't run for office. Don't be in charge of anything. Step away from the power. We got this. And please know that your crocodile tears won't be wiped away by us anymore. We have every right to hate you. You have done us wrong. #BecausePatriarchy. It is long past time to play hard for Team Feminism. And win.

I pledge to never vote for feminist women..



My husband has no interest in running for office, but if my son, my brother or my nephew do, they will all be better candidates than your misandry lunatics..



My husband is in charge of many skilled trades people and does a good job......does that bother you?



You step away from your position at Northeastern University and stop poisoning young minds..



And the only tears that should be shed for you are tears of pity.
This is why this man-hating feminism will probably never widely catch on.,  Because most women have brothers, fathers, husbands, children, etc that they care about and could never hate.  Hating men, like this woman, while annoying and stupid, is probably not that dangerous.  To my knowledge men and women have never had a war against each other in all of human history



However dividing people in tribal ways, race, culture, ethnicity, which is something else the left loves to do, is very dangerous, and of course many wars have been fought over these things.[/quote]
I am not going to lose sleep over anything that deranged prof has to sat. Like you said, no gender wars yet. But, prog race whores use her insane rhetoric to divide us.