23 January 2012

Someone call the Nobel Committee

I have found a(nother?) universal constant: The whining of the feminist.

The Daily Mail, in an editorial of April 17, 1912, claimed that it was The Law of the Sea that: ‘Those who are saved are not the strong and able-bodied but the weak and the dependent — not the grasping millionaire from the private suite on the promenade deck, clutching a roll of bank-notes . . . but the defenceless wives and sisters and children.’
Yet surprisingly, perhaps, such an attitude provoked sharp responses from early feminists, who believed that ‘women and children first’ infantilised women, and it gave rise to the slogan ‘Votes not Boats’ for the female sex.
The Mail published several feminist ripostes to its celebration of chivalrous behaviour on the Titanic.
Flora Annie Steel — a forgotten name now, but a famous author in 1912 — wrote a poem in the paper saying that the men who perished in the Titanic disaster achieved a mercifully quick death and instant glory whereas their wives were left to grieve and fend for themselves. ‘Women and children last! That is the law of the land.’

Item: Feminists complain they're infantilised when men die in order to let them live.

Item: Feminists complain when they're left to die in order to let men live.

Item: Feminists complain when men want to have sexy times with them.

Item: Feminists complain when men choose to play video games and avoid being ruined by marriage to a whore.

Query: How much more will we put up with?






UPDATE: This is not to say this is all womyn's fault, sometimes (i.e. more often than not) guys fall into the trap of thinking women are too stupid to get in out of the rain.

We now live in a society where a girl can walk outside, in the pouring rain, without a coat or umbrella and is no one offers their own coat or umbrella. Oh but surely that wouldn’t happen! Yes it would.

Chivalry is nice and all, but this guy seems to believe all that bullshit Male Privledge he's been spoon-fed.  Here's a tip: chivalry only works from a position of strength, otherwise it's slavery.  If I'm required by society to care for someone stronger than me, what else would you call it?

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