Why? Because women are now getting (a long awaited and well deserved) real world lesson on the actual, overwhelming physical superiority of the male of the species. (That is not to say men are superior to women, but that any activity involving strength, speed, endurance and aggressiveness … men may as well be a different species. We could repeat it with an intellectual one too, but it’s not as easy/obvious to demonstrate).
I still doubt many (if any) women will revisit their demands that all those roles and jobs that were exclusively male (but only the high status, air-conditioned and high-paying ones of course) be ‘opened up’ for them. That they might re-evaluate the whole concept of meritocracy is perhaps a pipe-dream (after all the impossibility of ever getting a/any woman to admit she was wrong about anything is a meme/stereotype for a reason), but a man can hope, right?
I, partially, actually welcome this freak-show.
ReplyDeleteWhy? Because women are now getting (a long awaited and well deserved) real world lesson on the actual, overwhelming physical superiority of the male of the species. (That is not to say men are superior to women, but that any activity involving strength, speed, endurance and aggressiveness … men may as well be a different species. We could repeat it with an intellectual one too, but it’s not as easy/obvious to demonstrate).
I still doubt many (if any) women will revisit their demands that all those roles and jobs that were exclusively male (but only the high status, air-conditioned and high-paying ones of course) be ‘opened up’ for them. That they might re-evaluate the whole concept of meritocracy is perhaps a pipe-dream (after all the impossibility of ever getting a/any woman to admit she was wrong about anything is a meme/stereotype for a reason), but a man can hope, right?
One bit of good news: According to Shitefart News, this appalling (and ugly) deviant has been rejected for NCAA "Woman Of The Year"....
ReplyDeletehttps://www.breitbart.com/sports/2022/07/26/transgender-swimmer-lia-thomas-loses-bid-for-ncaa-woman-of-the-year/