JustPearlyThings - July 10, 2023


Pearl EXPOSES The MISOGYNISTIC Nature Of Feminist Policies


Episode Stats

Length

10 minutes

Words per Minute

193.76843

Word Count

2,102

Sentence Count

220

Misogynist Sentences

25

Hate Speech Sentences

23


Summary


Transcript

00:00:00.000 It's a statistically common thing.
00:00:01.620 In Canada, they talked about it.
00:00:02.940 They can't pay women.
00:00:04.460 Jordan Peterson talks about how he would coach women to get more money.
00:00:07.780 They could not pay female lawyers to stay because they would hit 30.
00:00:12.220 They'd be on track to be partner.
00:00:13.940 And they would say, you know what?
00:00:15.160 I want to go home.
00:00:16.340 So it's like, why are we forcing women and encouraging women to do things that are not good for us?
00:00:22.360 We know it's not good for us to work the same way men do.
00:00:25.580 So it's like, if anything, I actually think it's really unkind to women to push us into these fields that we will, one, it's going to affect our relationships because we become too masculine.
00:00:36.120 And two, and two, we don't like those jobs.
00:00:40.240 So we go into the jobs because the society is pushing us into a job we don't even want.
00:00:44.960 We do it.
00:00:46.000 And just like the girl that went through the engineering degree, what'd she do?
00:00:49.440 She dropped out or she quit later, whatever.
00:00:52.880 So my favorite thing is devil's advocate, if you guys can tell, right?
00:00:56.220 So my rebuttal to that, because I love a good rebuttal, is it came and it went that fast.
00:01:02.820 It came and it went that fast.
00:01:03.880 It must not have been that good then.
00:01:05.320 No, it was a good rebuttal.
00:01:06.000 I think we're just getting tired.
00:01:07.460 No, it was a good rebuttal.
00:01:09.340 I promise you, it was a really good rebuttal about women going in.
00:01:13.740 You can bring it up in the comments section.
00:01:15.900 It'll come back.
00:01:16.900 It'll come back.
00:01:20.040 One second.
00:01:21.160 Okay.
00:01:22.880 So 48% of women in the U.S. were unmarried as of 2021.
00:01:28.760 Only 39% of women without children say they want to be married.
00:01:33.100 That number jumps to 51% for women with children.
00:01:37.120 63% of women polled in 2022 say they don't want children.
00:01:42.020 What essential things do women bring to society as a whole that don't have to do with kids
00:01:46.920 and child rearing?
00:01:47.800 Okay.
00:01:49.380 I love this little book by Roger Scruton.
00:01:53.600 It's called A Short Introduction to Beauty.
00:01:55.660 And he says that there are three ultimate virtues.
00:01:59.880 Truth and goodness are the first two.
00:02:03.540 And, you know, I think personally, based on the canon of, you know, literature and psychology
00:02:11.980 and all of this kind of stuff that men are absolutely excelling at truth and goodness, to be honest.
00:02:21.320 Um, but the third virtue is beauty.
00:02:26.320 And, uh, what Roger does, he points out that, you know, even when we were living in these societies where we had issues with scarcity,
00:02:35.280 you know, we would still plough all of these resources into building these monuments, our churches, these beautiful buildings, the Colosseum, um, because we, it's, it's human nature to, we need beauty.
00:02:51.580 It makes the world better.
00:02:53.020 And, you know, that is how men do it.
00:02:56.020 They make these enormous, awesome structures.
00:02:59.500 But the way women generally tend to do it is in little modest ways.
00:03:04.280 We're tending our gardens.
00:03:05.360 We're making our homes attractive.
00:03:08.120 We are making ourselves attractive.
00:03:10.180 We're doing little handicrafts, which are kind of modest and they're not going to last a hundred thousand years, whatever, but they make everyday life for everyone who is in contact with them a little bit more beautiful.
00:03:23.180 And I think that that's meaningful.
00:03:24.820 Do you think that the average woman today is doing that?
00:03:30.600 Who is the average woman?
00:03:32.440 I don't know.
00:03:32.960 I mean, that's 170 pounds.
00:03:34.960 I'll give you some number.
00:03:36.300 The average woman's 170 pounds.
00:03:38.360 Um, she's about five, four, 90% of us have been on birth control.
00:03:42.800 One out of three is an STD.
00:03:44.280 Uh, one out of three has had an abortion.
00:03:46.480 Um, 50% will have zero children.
00:03:49.360 Um, it makes about, I'm just giving you numbers here.
00:03:51.780 So I'm not, I'm not even trying to add a moral thing.
00:03:54.020 Um, and makes roughly like 25 to 30.
00:03:57.160 Yeah.
00:03:57.260 I mean, you know what, you know what, I, my, in my experience, when I was at school, what I was getting were all these messages about like, you should be like, you could be an astronaut.
00:04:07.080 You could be the prime minister.
00:04:08.480 You should like really concentrate on all this stuff.
00:04:11.360 And I think that, I think that women are pushed into being mediocre men.
00:04:18.020 Whereas, you know, we're not given the space and opportunity to actually just express our own femininity.
00:04:23.860 Yeah.
00:04:24.380 No, I, I agree with you.
00:04:25.440 I agree and disagree again.
00:04:26.780 So I'm going to, I'm going to read the, I'm going to read the, I'm going to read the question just one more time.
00:04:31.900 What essential things do women bring to society as a whole that don't have to do with kids and child rearing?
00:04:37.720 Uh, smart.
00:04:40.400 It's actually, it's very interesting.
00:04:41.780 It makes me think.
00:04:43.040 Essential.
00:04:43.500 And it's, it's essential to think.
00:04:45.620 Yes.
00:04:45.960 I would agree.
00:04:46.460 No, no.
00:04:46.780 I'm saying essential is the key word.
00:04:48.580 Essential things.
00:04:48.820 I have two children, but if I didn't have any by now, I wouldn't have any, but not because I'm a bad woman or I'm a bad person or a bad female is because society is going to shit and look at around the world.
00:05:04.400 What is happening?
00:05:05.180 The force of us financial forcing us into jobs.
00:05:09.400 We don't want to do, whether it's be too male for me or whether it's just something I'm not good at.
00:05:14.840 So I don't know.
00:05:16.460 It's really hard to answer, but, uh, it's, it's not just women's choice.
00:05:20.800 It's a society and the world where it's going, the wars, the pressures, the fake news, the, all the lies we're told on the media and like, you know, the bigger, the more beautiful, which is not true.
00:05:32.560 If we're going to heart, if you're going to die from a heart attack, the biggest, not beautiful.
00:05:36.520 You're just killing yourself and you're telling young girls who are looking at you to kill yourself too.
00:05:41.040 The biggest thing that women bring is love is love.
00:05:44.680 I know it sounds so simple, but think about it, right?
00:05:47.840 You're having a bad day.
00:05:49.200 You get a man, you get hit in the face, you get punched, you get jumped, you get whatever.
00:05:53.360 Who's the first person you go to?
00:05:54.680 Your mother, a woman, right?
00:05:56.200 For love, for reassurance, for smarts.
00:05:59.040 If there's a situation where two men are about to fight, right?
00:06:02.100 Sometimes you'll get a woman, a woman to be like, hey, babe, don't do that.
00:06:05.120 Let me calm you down.
00:06:06.080 So the wisdom and the love that women bring to society, just in general, is very much needed.
00:06:13.040 I'm sorry.
00:06:13.840 I don't want a whole bunch of men going around like just in a work field, not doing anything
00:06:19.560 because everything would be so cutthroat.
00:06:21.320 Sometimes you need a woman to be like, hey, should we really fire him?
00:06:24.920 Let's think about it.
00:06:26.180 Not let's fire him because he pissed me off.
00:06:28.220 Like there's certain things that you need women for.
00:06:30.640 You need that balance.
00:06:31.420 Okay, let's, you know damn well that women, no, no, you know damn well women fire people
00:06:39.280 for no reason.
00:06:40.820 Men want to make money.
00:06:42.740 Women, men are logical.
00:06:44.640 Women go based on how they feel.
00:06:46.600 So this idea that women are going to come into the workforce and police men and how to behave.
00:06:53.140 When men built the world for us, they built the world.
00:06:57.620 We could not do shit.
00:06:58.760 Any of the jobs that we have are all because of men and that we need women's wisdom to
00:07:05.420 run society.
00:07:07.300 Yes.
00:07:07.860 Is the dumbest shit I've ever heard in my life.
00:07:10.300 No.
00:07:10.480 Not just wisdom.
00:07:11.400 Sensitivity.
00:07:11.780 No.
00:07:12.260 Exactly.
00:07:12.880 It's not.
00:07:13.260 It's all the elements.
00:07:14.340 Why?
00:07:14.900 The last hundred, before the last hundred years, they did not need women as a rule in the
00:07:20.840 workforce.
00:07:21.560 Why do they need us now?
00:07:23.100 They must have needed women or else we wouldn't be in the workforce.
00:07:25.440 No.
00:07:25.500 We wouldn't be there if they didn't need us.
00:07:28.160 If you look at, like, government regulations, as soon as women entered the workforce, it's
00:07:33.520 like, phew, it's through the roof.
00:07:34.920 If you look at government spending as soon as women got to vote, it's like, phew, it's
00:07:39.460 through the roof.
00:07:40.360 So would you rather be like how workforces were back in the day?
00:07:43.880 I would rather we repeal the 19th.
00:07:46.100 I really believe that.
00:07:47.180 I think the world would be a better place if women didn't vote.
00:07:49.920 And most men.
00:07:50.980 I think that should be just like a property owner type thing.
00:07:54.160 Or net taxpayers.
00:07:56.360 I don't know how exactly I do it.
00:07:58.460 But yeah, I think we should take away the vote for most people.
00:08:01.320 Listen, when we let the majority of men vote, they voted Trump into office.
00:08:06.080 And thank you, God.
00:08:07.020 And I like Trump.
00:08:07.960 And thank you.
00:08:08.500 I like Trump.
00:08:09.160 I like him.
00:08:09.740 I like him as the president.
00:08:10.540 I think he's funny.
00:08:11.160 Horrible president.
00:08:11.820 But I like him as an individual.
00:08:13.960 He was a good president.
00:08:15.360 The economy was way better under Trump.
00:08:17.220 The economy was better.
00:08:18.260 The economy was better.
00:08:19.680 But he also caused...
00:08:21.080 No, no, no.
00:08:21.520 The economy was better.
00:08:22.560 But that doesn't mean he's a good president.
00:08:23.980 Because under him, there was so much racial divide and tension and this going on, that going
00:08:29.300 on.
00:08:29.740 So yes, for economy, it was good.
00:08:31.580 But you divided a whole country.
00:08:32.760 People had jobs.
00:08:34.680 And they hated each other.
00:08:35.620 But this is what I mean.
00:08:36.500 But that's wrong with the back of Obama.
00:08:38.080 I actually want to explain this to the camera.
00:08:40.560 Like how women think.
00:08:41.580 No offense.
00:08:42.420 But do you see how she's like, well, it was the tension.
00:08:45.040 We didn't like the tension or the feelings.
00:08:47.280 And the men, it's like, well, are there jobs?
00:08:49.720 But that rolled off of Obama's laws.
00:08:51.600 No, no, no.
00:08:51.920 He came in.
00:08:52.660 This is after Obama cleaned it up.
00:08:54.300 No, no, it wasn't.
00:08:54.920 Obama cleaned it up.
00:08:56.060 No, it wasn't.
00:08:56.640 It rolled into when Trump got into office.
00:08:59.460 No, it wasn't.
00:08:59.560 It rolled into when Trump got into office.
00:09:01.620 And Trump got the credit for it.
00:09:03.260 No, it wasn't.
00:09:04.240 That's just how the liberals try to like...
00:09:06.180 Trump got the credit for it.
00:09:07.320 Yeah, they'll try to like, like somehow go through these like logic loops where they're
00:09:12.180 like, well, it was good under Trump's presidency, but it was another president's fault.
00:09:16.940 Like, it's like, come on.
00:09:18.220 But it's the truth.
00:09:19.100 It's not...
00:09:19.320 You realize I had an economics degree.
00:09:22.320 And so what, specifically, what policies from Obama specifically?
00:09:25.920 There is...
00:09:26.920 Specifically right now, I can't think of it off the top of my head.
00:09:30.160 But they're like, literally...
00:09:31.920 But I'm telling you, we studied this when I was in school.
00:09:35.000 I have a degree in this stuff.
00:09:36.040 He had eight years in office, but it is during Trump's time that you felt the effect of his
00:09:40.260 role.
00:09:40.880 Yes, because when he first got in...
00:09:42.160 Wow.
00:09:42.260 When he first got in...
00:09:43.040 No, no.
00:09:43.520 When he first got in office, they kept denying everything he tried to put in.
00:09:47.080 What did they try...
00:09:48.100 What did they...
00:09:48.400 Every type of bill he tried...
00:09:49.860 What bill?
00:09:50.220 What bill?
00:09:50.280 The different bills that he was trying to pass, they kept on denying the bills.
00:09:53.880 What bill?
00:09:54.580 What bill?
00:09:54.900 I believe the first one was one of the health care bills before they finally got that
00:09:57.940 passed.
00:09:58.200 What did it do?
00:09:58.760 I would even say Trump had a harder time in office than Obama.
00:10:02.740 Yeah, because no one liked him.
00:10:03.980 Exactly.
00:10:04.500 But he still got things done.
00:10:06.280 What done?
00:10:07.300 What do you mean what done?
00:10:08.260 Unemployment is through the roof.
00:10:10.360 America's economy was the best in the longest time.
00:10:13.220 Unemployment is through the roof right now.
00:10:15.500 Under Biden.
00:10:16.520 Exactly.
00:10:16.800 It's under Biden, which rolls off of what happened with Trump.
00:10:20.080 I'm telling you, everything is an effect.
00:10:22.140 You can go ahead and try to put a bill into office.
00:10:24.780 If it does not get into office and it keeps going through the house, keeps going, keeps
00:10:28.120 going.
00:10:28.440 No, you start to see the effects of policies fairly quickly.
00:10:32.820 We went over this when I was in school.
00:10:34.480 I have a degree in economics.
00:10:36.580 You start to see the effects of policies fairly quickly, within a couple months.
00:10:42.860 Everything is a rollover.
00:10:44.360 Everything is a rollover.
00:10:46.500 Everything is a rollover.
00:10:46.680 Everything is a rollover.
00:10:48.440 Okay.
00:10:49.540 That's not true.
00:10:50.560 That's not true.