“Where are the male allies?”
It’s a question I’ve seen asked relentlessly for the past 24 hours.
And it leaves me confused.
How can the political left spend years and years berating and mocking men, calling us “toxic”, comparing us to bears, and denying our lived experiences…
Can’t men just be human beings?
Why is a man’s value always based on what he provides, particularly when it comes at the cost of his own safety, or even life?
We’re not your meat shields.
Give it a rest.
The real scoop is that Tea were storing 13,000 highly sensitive photos of users / IDs that (a) they told users were 'immediately deleted' but weren't, and (b) were stored in a publicly available data bucket (!!), with no password or encryption, that literally
Yes, Kamala Harris has lost.
And no, it's not 'men's fault'.
The reason why men didn’t vote for Harris, is the same reason as any other group - she didn’t provide any policies for them.
It's not that deep.
So put down your 'patriarchal white supremacist society' nonsense, and
This is a letter a father found, written by his 13 year old daughter, which he posted on Reddit a few hours ago.
She said it was "just something off TikTok".
Shouldn't this kind of message be part of the conversation on "social media radicalisation"?
What if his son wrote it?
Why is boys succeeding in one area of education ‘a problem’, when girls are ahead in every other one?
We shouldn’t be rooting for either sex, certainly not when they’re children, and especially when one group is already ahead at such an enormous degree.
Trash journalism.
‘Men could always vote!’
This is one of the biggest distortions of political history.
When British women won the vote in 1918, half of men couldn’t vote either; and until 1832, only ~3% of men could vote.
For most of history NOBODY could vote. This was true across the world…
Why is ‘the best representation of healthy masculinity’ a man laying down his life for others?
This comes across as profoundly narcissistic, and just devalues men’s lives even more.
"If by my life or death I can protect you, I will. You have my sword."
Aragorn may be the best representation of healthy masculinity ever to grace the silver screen.
J.R.R. Tolkien’s lived experiences in war, as well as his deep inspiration drawn from medieval fantasy,