全 17 件のコメント

[–]Sunhappy_DClate 20s | new relationship 5ポイント6ポイント  (0子コメント)

I totally agree with this. I didn't notice this WaW effect until a few years ago but it's freakin everywhere now and super distracting.

Just look at my post from a few days ago. We could outright say that a woman threw hands at a dude (this is physical violence mind you!), and everyone would say that's wrong but the moment a man defends himself and let's say just pushes a woman down to the floor it's OMG VIOLENCE, ABUSE -- THROW HIS ASS IN JAIL. It's like society will totally nullify a woman's wrong doing, whatever it is, just because she's a woman, even if her crime is equal to or GREATER than a man's.

I feel like this is sexist. If women are being told they are physical and intellectual equals of men, that they should have the same social, political and economic rights of men, then the consequences and attitudes assigned to men should ALSO be assigned to women and hold the same weight.

There are no exceptions to equality.

[–]BeautifulSpaceCadet 5ポイント6ポイント  (0子コメント)

Very thoughtful post and excellently structured. You know, what I'm about to say is a very generalized statement so treat it as such. But the article that stated how under-served women feel really got me thinking -- I think a lot of women feel like 1st class citizen means a lot more than it does, and 2nd class means a lot less. First off, would it be nice to have "equal" classes? I guess but that will always bring us back to who is "more equal", and even how we quantify that. How do you compare apples and oranges? But the crux of what I'm saying is I think many confuse life being hard for a "second class citizen", when what they are really experiencing is life being hard.

Being a man isn't some free ticket to ease and breeze through life (quite the contrary, but why go there). I think if we could genuinely satisfy every feminist complaint and switch men and women's global standing, feminists' reaction would look a lot like this (the scene from Mad Max where Furiosa realizes her happy place doesn't exist lol).

[–]HieronymusBoschCloneAwesomely Anonymous 3ポイント4ポイント  (11子コメント)

Wow, blog.jim.com. Now there's a site I would have bet serious money on never seeing here.

Nice post! The difficulty in being a responsible woman today means that those that do should be rewarded justly.

[–]TempestTcup[S] 3ポイント4ポイント  (9子コメント)

LOL, we link him all the time in the IRC :)

[–]HieronymusBoschCloneAwesomely Anonymous 3ポイント4ポイント  (8子コメント)

Really? I'm kind of in shock that you gals find him tolerable. It's obvious he doesn't harbor any malice toward his wife or woman in general, but he writes some interesting stuff (and with clearly provoking titles):

[–]Suzanne_by_the_River 3ポイント4ポイント  (4子コメント)

I've read a lot of that blog. I specifically remember liking the correlation tied between the parable of the good Samaritan and the functioning of a high trust society in that last link. I believe that's an insightful observation; Christianity can be powerful when it's doctrine is used to build up and enforce a high-trust culture where it is "behavioral neighbors" who deserve that nice brothers-in-christ treatment. Unfortunately Christianity loses it's power when everyone is a "neighbor", including the Levites and Priests of the world. This undermines the very foundation our greatest civilization was built on.

~~~

Unrelated, I've noticed you're super into blogs :P Do you have any suggestions for reading that I might not have heard of?

[–]tintedlipbalm 4ポイント5ポイント  (0子コメント)

This undermines the very foundation our greatest civilization was built on.

I've had similar thoughts and want to expand upon this in my journal, can you link me to the blog entry pls?

Edit: Oh, if you meant the "How to Genocide Inferior Kinds in a Properly Christian Manner" entry I am just reading it now lol.

[–]HieronymusBoschCloneAwesomely Anonymous 1ポイント2ポイント  (2子コメント)

The power of religion is to form high-trust societies, arguably why they form in the first place. Progressivism functions just like a religion, complete with priests (journalist/newsanchors) and moral lecturing. But the worst has to come from heretics like the Pope, which might as well be a communist because I can't really tell the difference. If I were a Christian, I'd certainly consider becoming a sedevacantist.

As for blogs, here are some of the ones I've found good enough to read to completion:

Very good blogs I'll complete eventually:

  • 28sherman - Only read a few posts, but I like what I've read. Runs the aforementioned "Weimerica Weekly" podcast.
  • Anomaly UK - Ditto.
  • Steve Sailer - Haven't finished reading it because he's been blogging for 15 years, but it's all good. You might like this post. And people think conservatives are all that different.
  • Slate Star Codex - Rationalist (in the Lesswrong sense), psychiatrist, and futurist that writes on a whole array of un-pc topics.
  • The (wo)manophere blogs listed here.
  • List of Reactionaries - In case you read all the above :)
  • And if you're a mathematician, I really like Terry Tao's blog.

Well this should get you started. If you let me know your interests, I can suggest more. Try not to become too much of a misanthrope after you've finished. :D

Best,

HieronymusBoschClone

[–]TempestTcup[S] 2ポイント3ポイント  (1子コメント)

LOL, I read about 1/3 of those :)

I also enjoy hbd chick and especially her twitter; she retweets a lot of really interesting people and a lot of different ideas and studies. Her retweets showcase a lot of the people on your list.

[–]HieronymusBoschCloneAwesomely Anonymous 0ポイント1ポイント  (0子コメント)

I didn't bring up the HBD-sphere since there's an awful lot there, but hbdchick, jayman, pumpkin person, khan's, hsu's, and cochran's blogs are some of my favorites. I don't agree with a lot of what they say since they are too pessimistic on the effects of social conditioning, but they do good work in an incredibly hostile field.

[–]TempestTcup[S] 3ポイント4ポイント  (2子コメント)

Well, I didn't say that we always agreed with him, but we link a lot of blogs to use as a topic of conversation :)

[–]HieronymusBoschCloneAwesomely Anonymous 3ポイント4ポイント  (1子コメント)

Well I'm a huge fan of his, although it takes a while to find the core ideas within the morass of hyperbole and sarcasm.

If you want to give the aussie a listen, he appears around an hour into this podcast.

[–]TempestTcup[S] 3ポイント4ポイント  (0子コメント)

it takes a while to find the core ideas within the morass of hyperbole and sarcasm.

Yes, absolutely! Under all of that there is a kernel of truth. Even what I quoted sounds crass, but makes a good point.

[–]HieronymusBoschCloneAwesomely Anonymous 0ポイント1ポイント  (0子コメント)

This actually reminds me of a rather sneaky way progressive politics have backfired on their loudest proponents. If you're a woman or minority and make it in the industry several years without taking advantage of your progressive perks, that actually makes you more valuable than your bulk standard straight white male.

[–]littleteafox 4ポイント5ポイント  (1子コメント)

This trend is most seen on television commercials featuring the smart woman and the bumbling man, which seems to be the norm these days.

Ugh, reminds me of the show Everyone Loves Raymond. I could not STAND it. There are many other sitcoms that exhibit the same type of dynamic -- nagging "overwhelmed" smart wife who is too good for her dumb idiot man-child husband. I watched maybe 1-2 episodes of that before I noped out.

[–]tintedlipbalm 5ポイント6ポイント  (0子コメント)

I feel sorry for everyone in that dynamic. Not only is he an idiot but the woman married one. For any bad trait a [fictional] husband has, it reflects twice as poorly on the woman IMO, because she picked him.

[–]CoochQuarantine 3ポイント4ポイント  (0子コメント)

I see this all the time now. I can't help but get annoyed with it. I was actually just thinking to myself about how I never see women in tv shows telling corny dad jokes. It is usually guys. I love dad jokes. I tell them all the time.