I didn't see a topic on this but I wanted to bring this to the forum's attention on how the political gender war is being brought to kids in America. This will come to nobody's surprise and I'm sure it's even worse in countries like Canada, UK, Australia, and Scandinavia, but I thought the forum could use a specific example on how this is being framed for children growing up and to see an example of how future children will be influenced in a certain way.
The first video interviews boys in their vulnerable teenage middle and high school years. There's about three minutes of actual interview video for each video but for those that don't want to watch, this one basically brings up a good point on how boys do feel pressure to keep their feelings to themselves.
But, that's where the positivity ends. The negatives are not surprising in that the interviewer frames some questions as if boys are automatically harassers and rapists, and basically trains the boys to be future white knights. Also, for my positive point earlier, they of course don't dive deeper as to why guys keep their feelings to themselves, which is because we know the truth of it losing frame to our women and being more important to keep our cards hidden.
This one was a bit painful to watch if I have to be honest. These are college guys maybe a couple of years younger than me that I feel like will all grow up to be betas.
One big thing this interview did was villainize men who talked about women in any kind of sexual way. None of the boys felt comfortable with locker room talk and depicted it as evil that men were talking about women as "objects" instead of equals. I think one big thing this feminist movement has caused is for some men to lose any kind of sexual feelings. We're forgetting that this stuff is normal with people who have a ridiculous amount of hormones and the more I read and see, the more I believe the numbers about sexual escapades being down in this generation.
The other part talks about alcohol consumption. The implied frame is that responsibility falls on men to stop things from getting carried away, whether white knighting sober or controlling yourself drunk. One part I agree with here is that people can change from good to bad when drunk, because I've seen and done that myself. However, what I don't agree with is that everything should fall on men. This interview fails to account women for getting themselves drunk and implies that any kind of drunk sex is automatically the man's fault and can't be consensual.
This last video kind of gave me chills not really because of anything specifically said in here, but because of how ABC used these innocent little girls to fulfill their propaganda. Seriously, if you watch the video, you'll see that boys feeling superior or tyrannically abusive was never a thought in their mind and they were thinking what normal little girls think of with the worst thing happening with "their space" is getting lice from a hug.
I understand that can be good and bad but my overall point is I feel like ABC is contributing to a problem of villainizing boys and men to people that don't have or see a problem that frankly is overblown and put under a ridiculous microscope that is only worsening the problem of framing men in the younger western generation.
There was one more video that just aired today that interviewed high school girls. It had one good point about bringing up social media validation but I feel like the whole segment is kind of coddling the girls compared to the boys which none of us would be surprised about and bringing up a gender war that doesn't need to happen.
The first video interviews boys in their vulnerable teenage middle and high school years. There's about three minutes of actual interview video for each video but for those that don't want to watch, this one basically brings up a good point on how boys do feel pressure to keep their feelings to themselves.
But, that's where the positivity ends. The negatives are not surprising in that the interviewer frames some questions as if boys are automatically harassers and rapists, and basically trains the boys to be future white knights. Also, for my positive point earlier, they of course don't dive deeper as to why guys keep their feelings to themselves, which is because we know the truth of it losing frame to our women and being more important to keep our cards hidden.
This one was a bit painful to watch if I have to be honest. These are college guys maybe a couple of years younger than me that I feel like will all grow up to be betas.
One big thing this interview did was villainize men who talked about women in any kind of sexual way. None of the boys felt comfortable with locker room talk and depicted it as evil that men were talking about women as "objects" instead of equals. I think one big thing this feminist movement has caused is for some men to lose any kind of sexual feelings. We're forgetting that this stuff is normal with people who have a ridiculous amount of hormones and the more I read and see, the more I believe the numbers about sexual escapades being down in this generation.
The other part talks about alcohol consumption. The implied frame is that responsibility falls on men to stop things from getting carried away, whether white knighting sober or controlling yourself drunk. One part I agree with here is that people can change from good to bad when drunk, because I've seen and done that myself. However, what I don't agree with is that everything should fall on men. This interview fails to account women for getting themselves drunk and implies that any kind of drunk sex is automatically the man's fault and can't be consensual.
This last video kind of gave me chills not really because of anything specifically said in here, but because of how ABC used these innocent little girls to fulfill their propaganda. Seriously, if you watch the video, you'll see that boys feeling superior or tyrannically abusive was never a thought in their mind and they were thinking what normal little girls think of with the worst thing happening with "their space" is getting lice from a hug.
I understand that can be good and bad but my overall point is I feel like ABC is contributing to a problem of villainizing boys and men to people that don't have or see a problem that frankly is overblown and put under a ridiculous microscope that is only worsening the problem of framing men in the younger western generation.
There was one more video that just aired today that interviewed high school girls. It had one good point about bringing up social media validation but I feel like the whole segment is kind of coddling the girls compared to the boys which none of us would be surprised about and bringing up a gender war that doesn't need to happen.
As far back as I could remember, I always wanted to be a player.
2018 New Orleans Datasheet
New Jersey State Datasheet