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BeefyBelisarius on scored.co
4 hours ago3 points(+0/-0/+3Score on mirror)1 child
Rolling feminism back 20 years will just result in men 20 years in the future having to deal with what we're currently stuck with. No, for the sake of the future we need a final solution to end the feminist ideology.
So, to be clear, you want to go back to roughly 1830, where women couldn't own property, go out in public without permission, choose how to dress, choose who to marry, sign legal contracts, just none of that? You're looking for a full "all women are slaves to men from birth" arrangement, Afghanistan-style?
I'm really just asking you a question. Like, not even a rhetorical one. I just found this site. I don't know what qualifies as a radical belief or a normal belief around here. I just want to know if your goal is total slavery for all women, or if your goal falls somewhere short of that, or if you don't really have a defined goal in mind.
Or if, like, nobody gives a shit about goals or questions around here and the whole point is just to say weird shit and blow off steam, like it's all just sort of a play we're putting on or something.
3 hours ago1 point(+0/-0/+1Score on mirror)1 child
I wouldn't call it slavery, but they have thoroughly demonstrated that the vast majority of them can't handle political rights. Nor can large numbers of men, which is why voting in this country was originally limited to White male landowners.
Every time the franchise is expanded, the electorate becomes easier to manipulate, until we reached the current state where democracy is indirect rule by media owners.
>Every time the franchise is expanded, the electorate becomes easier to manipulate, until we reached the current state where democracy is indirect rule by media owners.
If you're looking for the historical period where the electorate was the dumbest and most easiest to manipulate - that's almost certainly 1870-1900. The Gilded Age. That was the period where, at least towards the end, virtually all media was handed straight down to the public by exactly two men: Pulitzer and Hearst. And they didn't give a flying shit about truth - only power. Everything was sensationalism and misinformation, and no rational voice could even carve out a big enough slice of the media market to make itself heard. And the presidents of that age - Grover Cleveland, William McKinley - those pathetic excuses for presidents weren't even really in charge of anything. They were straight-up corporate puppets.
And that's twenty years *before* women's suffrage.
If anything, today's "media owners" are completely losing their grip on the culture. Nobody trusts anything they read, and the media landscape is totally fragmented. Probably the man making more of our cultural decisions for us than anyone else right now is Ryan McInerney - and hardly anyone even knows who he is.
Or if, like, nobody gives a shit about goals or questions around here and the whole point is just to say weird shit and blow off steam, like it's all just sort of a play we're putting on or something.
I guess I just don't fully know where I am, yet.
Every time the franchise is expanded, the electorate becomes easier to manipulate, until we reached the current state where democracy is indirect rule by media owners.
If you're looking for the historical period where the electorate was the dumbest and most easiest to manipulate - that's almost certainly 1870-1900. The Gilded Age. That was the period where, at least towards the end, virtually all media was handed straight down to the public by exactly two men: Pulitzer and Hearst. And they didn't give a flying shit about truth - only power. Everything was sensationalism and misinformation, and no rational voice could even carve out a big enough slice of the media market to make itself heard. And the presidents of that age - Grover Cleveland, William McKinley - those pathetic excuses for presidents weren't even really in charge of anything. They were straight-up corporate puppets.
And that's twenty years *before* women's suffrage.
If anything, today's "media owners" are completely losing their grip on the culture. Nobody trusts anything they read, and the media landscape is totally fragmented. Probably the man making more of our cultural decisions for us than anyone else right now is Ryan McInerney - and hardly anyone even knows who he is.