Women: Where are all the good men?
Tim Pattern examines the chains that bind and the possibilities that could be realized from male liberation from expectations.
Tim Pattern examines the chains that bind and the possibilities that could be realized from male liberation from expectations.
Social expectations of both alphas and betas (being providers, chivalry, etc) are tossed aside, and we refuse to see ourselves as inferior because of it. We are doing what we want, taking our lives into our own hands.
“Feminism is a drive to increase female power with no clearly stated endpoint, and that feminism is impelled by a bottomless disaffection toward all things male.”
According to a recent poll only 18% of U.S. people consider themselves feminist.1 On that account we can expect readers of romance novels to comprise not more than 18% feminists, and likely far less due to the fact that feminists disparage traditional approaches to romance…. at least according to their rhetoric. A more generous National Geographic/Ipsos survey2 …
Julie Borowski has some advice for people who parrot that vacuous phrase ‘check your privilege’: how about you first check your own ignorance, and while you’re at it, check your manners.
The vexing lack of gratitude from feminists on the “progress” of women pales in comparison to the problems that “progress” is causing. Kalan Chinuck follows feminism to the inevitable conclusion of complex solutions.