0% of college grads are virgins according to NPR
07-23-2014, 12:05 AM
"Freelance writer Noah Berlatsky talks about sex in college — or, rather, not having sex in college. Berlatsky was among the 10 percent of students who remain virgins throughout college, and this felt to him like an embarrassment."
Noah isn't just a freelancer for NPR. He's a regular contributor over at the Atlantic, where he churns out such feminist-friendly "gems" as "A Short History of Male Feminism," "How Boys Teach Boys to Be Boys," and "There's More to Making Non-Sexist Art Than Not Being Sexist." All his work can be found
here.
Berkaltsky is one of the leading voices of The Cathedral. Nothing is ever equal enough or non-sexist enough for Noah. And look at where that mindset led him:
1). No sex during the best years of his life.
2). Becoming a major voice in a new generation of journalists.
Think about that.
As a former journalist, I want people to know that he exemplifies the type of maladjusted outlier that shapes public opinion. The normal people get pushed aside by these types. When feministspeak and politically correct memes get out into the public and you wonder how they got there, remember Noah and is sexless years in college.
And also think of the women he works with, who are often so disturbed they make his sexless plight seem positively normal. These people call right wingers "wingnuts." Hahahaha. That's projection. They're the nuts.
Journalism used to be a blue collar field -- the intellectual side of being a cop or a fireman. Now it's a halfway house for trust fund kids with issues.
Back in the 20th century, sexless (and sexually maladjusted) priests and nuns shaped public opinion about male-female relations, telling us what were "sins." These writers are their modern day equivalent, demanding we kowtow to their ideas of "morality," when they're some of the least normal people around.
I used to look back in anguish at the summer I turned 19. No money. No job. No car. Parents on my ass about my lousy college major. Pregnancy scares with two women. Anxiety issues. Now these are my proudest memories. Why? Because they fall into the category of normal; I made a good life for myself in the end.
Yet I write here by choice, having quit being a voice for the mainstream media. Noah is at the Atlantic reaching millions. That says something about journalism and our society. And it's not good.