postyX - May 13, 2026


Feminism has destroyed the West


Episode Stats


Length

1 hour and 57 minutes

Words per minute

168.39122

Word count

19,762

Sentence count

530

Harmful content

Misogyny

184

sentences flagged

Toxicity

112

sentences flagged

Hate speech

107

sentences flagged


Summary

Summaries generated with gmurro/bart-large-finetuned-filtered-spotify-podcast-summ .

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
Misogyny classifications generated with MilaNLProc/bert-base-uncased-ear-misogyny .
Toxicity classifications generated with s-nlp/roberta_toxicity_classifier .
Hate speech classifications generated with facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target .
00:00:00.000 that we are on conquered land, settled for and by the crown as an extension of Western
00:00:05.920 European identity and culture. We recognize that this is the ancestral territory to the societal
00:00:12.920 and governing architectures of the founders of this great Anglo-Franco union we call Canada.
00:00:30.000 Oh, my God.
00:01:00.000 guitar solo
00:01:30.000 They found a way to kill me yet 1.00
00:01:34.760 You son of a bitch! 1.00
00:01:37.440 As burned with stinging sweat 1.00
00:01:41.320 Seems every path leads me to nowhere 0.99
00:01:50.500 You are born onto this earth as an alien man.
00:02:20.500 You were made in the image of God, to conquer it, to rule it, to have dominion over it. 0.98
00:02:27.000 This country is hell!
00:02:32.900 Are you not entertained? Are you not entertained?
00:02:50.500 No, no, no
00:03:00.080 You know we ain't gonna die 0.51
00:03:20.500 do you accept that it's a neo-nazi group yes right so you've joined a neo-nazi group
00:03:35.820 why is that because i'm a neo-nazi obviously
00:03:38.900 sometimes in life you have to fight immigration so we can create a nation we don't have a nation
00:03:48.700 in the moment. We've got a halfway house to the world. 0.83
00:03:50.660 We need to be a nation. Our people,
00:03:52.720 Australians, we're a nation. We're a fault. 0.96
00:03:54.740 And we need to keep it that way.
00:03:56.200 Can our nation
00:03:57.240 survive any more betrayal?
00:04:00.360 We're off the floor with
00:04:01.900 government, not by those
00:04:03.740 who were supposed to be our protectors.
00:04:06.320 We were told that our choice
00:04:08.040 matters, that we vote
00:04:09.900 for what we want.
00:04:11.420 We, Christ of all,
00:04:13.680 may give our nation nothing,
00:04:15.620 and we, in return, must
00:04:17.600 It means there was nothing, let us go without our money, without our crime, without our books, and let us see an immediate indication to the title, and there is no good. Go on, Brian.
00:04:31.920 I see you, thousands of cavemen, hearts ablaze, and I know we are unbreakable.
00:04:40.040 We are the blood of warriors, the spirit of rebels, and we will hold the line for our Britain.
00:04:47.880 This country was built by our ancestors.
00:04:51.360 It was bled for by our ancestors. 0.89
00:04:53.920 On the beaches of Gumpley, in the bushes of Dakota, they bled for a white Australia. 0.60
00:05:01.100 And we will fight for a wide Australia. 0.96
00:05:18.140 This is a message from White Canada. 1.00
00:05:31.100 No, no, no 0.91
00:05:37.860 You know he ain't gonna die
00:05:42.500 Walking tall machine gun man
00:05:53.060 They spit on me in my homeland
00:06:01.100 Gloria, send me pictures of my boy
00:06:07.940 Got my pills, gets the sheets of death
00:06:19.580 My body's breathing, it's dying breath
00:06:26.160 Oh, God, please, won't you help me make it through?
00:06:40.580 Yeah, they come to snuff the rooster
00:06:44.320 Oh, yeah, yeah
00:06:50.400 Yeah, here come the rooster
00:06:57.260 Yeah
00:06:59.660 You know he ain't gonna die
00:07:08.400 No, no, no
00:07:16.400 You know he ain't gonna die
00:07:40.600 I don't care if he's here 1.00
00:07:43.020 Legally or illegally 0.92
00:07:44.820 if he thinks he's here to stay
00:07:46.940 he's wrong
00:07:47.840 because it's not his country and it never will be 1.00
00:07:55.300 it's ours
00:07:56.000 and it's ours
00:08:03.260 hello everybody
00:08:11.900 hold on one second here
00:08:15.260 let this thing finish I keep saying I'm gonna
00:08:19.400 make it shorter but I never do
00:08:23.040 how is everybody happy oh there we go we're back
00:08:31.340 happy what day is it today Wednesday happy Wednesday
00:08:34.880 yeah so I did want to do this stream I am going to do this stream 1.00
00:08:39.340 about how feminism is destroying the West. 1.00
00:08:42.260 But I just wanted to do a couple little deep thoughts at the beginning
00:08:46.480 just because I've been thinking about a few things
00:08:49.220 and I'm like, by the time the next time my stream comes,
00:08:51.620 I'll probably forget them.
00:08:53.860 And I know not a lot of people are sports bros.
00:08:57.600 I understand that.
00:08:58.920 But I am a big hockey fan and I'm not going to lie about it.
00:09:01.980 My kids all play hockey and I follow hockey.
00:09:06.280 And I don't know.
00:09:06.900 i've just been noticing like how much i like to call it the pussification of hockey and i don't
00:09:12.480 know if it's just been over the last 10 years or so but to the point where like you know i mean
00:09:17.660 this is more of a problem i think with particular teams like especially the toronto maple leafs if
00:09:22.240 you're like an ontario um where it's just like everybody's worried like it used to be you'd used
00:09:27.580 to want a player that was you know pretty talented but he could also like kick ass right like he could
00:09:32.060 hold his own and shit like that and now with all this number stuff and analytics stuff it's all like
00:09:38.660 they just want the best player analytically like the one who thinks but like the person's like a 0.99
00:09:43.660 pussy like they don't want to get hurt they don't want to fight and then even the teammates like 0.99
00:09:47.740 now you see you know your star player getting hit and then like everybody's just kind of standing 0.99
00:09:51.740 around and it kind of resembles i guess you could kind of use it as a metaphor maybe or analogy
00:09:56.800 maybe um of what society is like now because i also saw a video today on uh twitter x whatever 0.97
00:10:03.800 of you know i think it was a czechoslovakian girl beating the crap out of an indian like
00:10:08.660 yeah she was holding her own 100 like maybe she didn't need any help but there was just like a
00:10:14.000 few guys that like just kind of walked by and just looked so i don't know the culture like i said i 0.97
00:10:19.400 being told that slabs are very um you know the women are very tough and they can hold their own
00:10:23.780 and they don't need help from the men but i was just kind of like you know it's like that's what
00:10:27.600 it's like everybody just kind of walks by and does nothing you hear about it all the time so
00:10:31.880 anyways uh the other thing was so i have a telegram channel it's a very small telegram
00:10:37.580 channel right which is fine and i guess i must have it wasn't a mistake i did it because i thought
00:10:43.800 you know i could interact with people there was a chat attached to it and uh yesterday i got a
00:10:49.260 chat from somebody who had just joined the channel whatever fine how are you fine and then I wake up
00:10:55.020 this morning and there's like three billion links to I didn't even click it but I'm assuming it's
00:11:00.180 to porn or something um so I had to like delete the whole thing so like if you were part of that
00:11:07.140 group or you're following my telegram chat and you were in there I apologize it's not anything 0.98
00:11:11.120 you did just this fucking weirdo that you know I thought was normal and a lesson learned for me 0.61
00:11:16.900 anyways so i might reopen it again but i mean there wasn't really much going on anyways but 0.99
00:11:21.900 like yeah this weirdo just spammed it with fucking what i can only assume is porn i didn't 0.94
00:11:26.040 want to click it so i have no idea um and then if there's any women out there listening or 0.99
00:11:33.720 men whose wives they're trying to uh red pill i guess you could say um try to get them to come 0.96
00:11:42.360 to either our spaces like you know preferably our spaces on Thursdays if they can come into
00:11:47.160 Twitter I also stream it on on Rumble so if they can't join X or Twitter they can listen to it 0.99
00:11:52.320 there because I feel like we really really need more women in this movement to stand up we need
00:11:57.460 more men too but really it's not you know my job or my role to recruit the men but I feel like
00:12:03.300 in Canada we have and I mean this could apply to other countries as well but what I've observed
00:12:09.580 in Canada is there's just too few men that are willing to kind of stand up and make any difference
00:12:14.400 I mean there's definitely some out there but they're bearing the weight of the country on
00:12:18.120 their shoulders they can't do it themselves it takes a village or whatever so you know I think
00:12:23.880 we need to kind of recruit I don't want to say recruit it's not recruiting I think we need to
00:12:28.420 need to you know get to know and create more of a community with some of these women who might be 0.99
00:12:33.480 you know on the fence fence riders or stuff like that and you know get them more involved and maybe
00:12:37.960 we can come together and do something meaningful uh for the country that you know will make a
00:12:42.360 difference whether that ends up being you know advocacy political whatever but i feel like
00:12:47.440 you know we're getting to the point of no return now and like even myself i'm feeling like you
00:12:52.740 know i'm just not doing clearly enough um i really wish and want to be doing more and i think that
00:12:58.200 there's probably a lot of women out there maybe feel the same way and uh you know again it doesn't
00:13:02.720 have to be you know some kind of uber nazi racist kind of group or anything like that it can just be
00:13:08.660 simply advocating for you know canadian values or whatever you want to call it similar to the
00:13:13.720 dominion society but a little feminine take on it or issues that are most applicable to women like
00:13:19.600 you know the sexual assaults and stuff like that that happen um of people that don't end up going
00:13:24.060 to jail uh they get let out because of their immigration status you know stuff like that
00:13:28.120 hi off milton sorry i did see your comment there and i just didn't see any say anything yet
00:13:31.920 um now i'm gonna another one is the whole dunkin donuts debacle it's not a debacle but it's so 0.65
00:13:39.860 fucking funny so you know i i posted kind of like a tongue-in-cheek you know joke about 0.68
00:13:45.540 if dunkin donuts like comes here i will support it and i'm not lying i will support an american 0.97
00:13:50.160 company if they come here and they hire canadians okay and and when i mean canadians i mean you
00:13:56.180 know what i mean like actual canadians not paper canadians actual canadians so if a company comes
00:14:01.760 here and just because they're an American company but they're employing you know Canadian kids and
00:14:06.040 stuff like that no problem I'll give you my money right so I made a kind of joke like that and then
00:14:10.340 you know I had some people going a little bit crazy talking about how Dunkin Donuts is evil
00:14:15.740 and you know and maybe that's true right but my overall point I guess of the whole tweet and I
00:14:21.700 don't even know why I'm explaining this but I just feel like I have to is that you know that is
00:14:27.280 putting like i i don't care about the not the nation i don't care about the business of canada
00:14:32.820 the government of canada what i care about is the canadian people so if a country is like the u.s
00:14:38.960 which again is or should be our closest ally they always were wants to come in and put a company in
00:14:44.540 and they're going to hire locally and you know all that kind of stuff and our own canadian companies
00:14:49.900 that are supposed to be canadian aren't then i'm going to support them that was my point and i guess
00:14:54.560 So my other point was that maybe this is what it's going to take to overturn the monopoly on coffee that Singh Horton's now has,
00:15:03.620 is to get some more competition in here.
00:15:05.980 And, you know, I'm actually surprised that the government, because they tend to shut down a lot of competition for big restaurants.
00:15:12.820 And I wouldn't be surprised if Singh Horton's will be lobbying to have them not be allowed to come to Canada,
00:15:19.940 unless it's already been decided. 1.00
00:15:21.220 I don't know.
00:15:21.660 But anyways, I thought it was kind of...
00:15:23.980 It was kind of funny because it's just like, you know, whatever.
00:15:27.500 Dunkin' Donuts may be a foreign company too.
00:15:31.320 But how many other foreign companies are there in this country?
00:15:35.320 Yeah, exactly.
00:15:36.080 John, thank you.
00:15:36.820 It's not Canadian anyway, Tim Hortons.
00:15:38.860 And I'm sure Tim Horton, who created the one single coffee shop, you know, is probably rolling in his grave now if he saw what's happened to his legacy, his namesake.
00:15:47.640 But I could be wrong, but I don't think so.
00:15:50.040 um but yeah like if whatever if they're owned by a different you know company like how many other 0.99
00:15:55.400 countries do we have in here that are controlling everything anyways like the chinese have a large
00:16:00.420 you know uh investment in a lot of our different things so like everything's pretty much owned by 0.99
00:16:05.360 anybody else so my thing is is i don't care who they're owned by as long as they're employing
00:16:09.500 and paying fairly the canadian people of this country because that then that benefits them
00:16:14.280 that's all i'm saying about that and then i was going to show you guys something funny so i uh
00:16:19.300 Some of you guys know that I've been off work for a bit, but I'm going back very soon.
00:16:22.220 So I'm getting to the point now that, like I said, I had an orthopedic surgery.
00:16:27.320 So I'm kind of recovered now.
00:16:28.940 So now I'm at the point where I'm just kind of bored, you know, because it's almost time to go back.
00:16:33.760 So I had this idea of making some nationalist trading cards in the style of Garbage Pail Kids. 0.95
00:16:41.040 AI is fucking amazing, right? 0.73
00:16:42.360 So the idea would be is that, you know, I'd have AI turn some pictures or whatever into like the garbage pail style. 0.99
00:16:49.980 And then I would print them and, you know, coat them in that like shiny shit. 0.98
00:16:54.600 Right. 0.83
00:16:55.160 And then give out sets maybe or I don't know what I was thinking about doing and maybe give them away on my podcast or my channel.
00:17:01.000 I don't know.
00:17:01.720 But I just had this idea.
00:17:02.700 So I'm going to show you guys a couple that I came up with and you can, you know, maybe leave a comment or whatever.
00:17:06.860 See what you think.
00:17:07.900 So the first one.
00:17:10.000 Don't sue me.
00:17:10.680 This is just parody.
00:17:11.800 Okay, people.
00:17:12.360 um this one is hold on let's get rid of the banner actually it doesn't matter doesn't
00:17:18.260 doesn't affect anything so this is cuck daddy um canada first this was taken from a picture
00:17:24.360 that he actually had posted so um yeah that looks very canada first to me this guy doesn't look very
00:17:31.320 canadian but hey and the color was not changed of that person either i just want to say they all
00:17:35.860 they did was make it into a cartoony kind of garbage pail style and if you don't know who 0.92
00:17:40.020 garbage pail kids are, I feel sad for you because they were pretty fucking funny when I was a kid. 0.88
00:17:44.720 Anyways, so that's that one. This is, now this one I have to fix. Obviously, you see the eyeballs 0.94
00:17:50.500 are not in the right place, but they're called call me pale kids. We're not calling them garbage 0.96
00:17:55.400 pail kids because that would be a trademark violation, obviously. So they're called call
00:18:00.120 me pale kids. This one, it used to say elbows up carny, but it, like I said, when I re-edited it,
00:18:06.340 it fucked up. So anyways, we'll fix that one, but that's the carny one. It's going to be elbows up 0.86
00:18:09.900 Kearney. We got Cuck Daddy. And for the piece, what is that in French? The piece de resistance?
00:18:17.100 Is that it? We have really shaken Rachel, guys. Rachel was really shaken when some nationalists
00:18:24.260 happened to go to the same, I think, concert as her because, I mean, she's a celebrity and all,
00:18:28.700 and she probably shouldn't have people going to the same places here. Like, how dare they?
00:18:32.920 Greta Thunberg is screaming, how dare you? So anyways, I thought, you know, since she's really 0.99
00:18:38.760 shaken from that we can honor her by making a commie pale kids trading card so i'm gonna make
00:18:44.920 a couple more and maybe i'll make like a set of six or something i don't know eight we'll see how
00:18:49.260 it goes and then we'll figure out what we're gonna do with them if i'm just gonna uh give them away
00:18:54.060 on here or i don't know maybe just give them away in general i'm not sure i just like to do stuff
00:18:59.240 like that because it's kind of funny so anyways so that's it that that was all my um deep thoughts
00:19:06.400 that i had for now so what we're gonna do here is i'm going to present this because i actually
00:19:13.280 made a powerpoint because i'm just that autistic uh let's make it full thing
00:19:18.480 all right so basically um hopefully you know anybody who wants to listen is here but i guess
00:19:25.600 you can listen to it on the replay because i kind of wrote a bit of a essay kind of thing that i can
00:19:30.740 go all there otherwise we're going to be talking about all kinds of crazy shit if i don't stay on 1.00
00:19:34.040 track so now i know against feminists this is obviously going to be a very controversial opinion 1.00
00:19:40.900 but um and it's probably going to trigger some feminists if they're even listening but
00:19:45.140 trigger feminists of both uh sexes genders um but like legit statistics don't lie and i and i spent
00:19:52.500 like probably two days just grabbing statistics and they're really hard to find especially in
00:19:56.720 canada because i've said this before we don't keep very good records of stuff and i was trying 0.99
00:20:02.900 to compare the difference between um pre-feminists like i would say pre-second wave feminism
00:20:08.860 to or pre-third wave maybe feminism the divorce rates compared to prior to that and it's very
00:20:17.420 hard to find statistics prior to 1970 on that stuff so it was a bit difficult but anyways i
00:20:23.540 mean they don't lie right we do have current statistics it you know feminism began and we're
00:20:28.080 going to watch a short video on the brief history of feminism but it began as a movement for basic
00:20:33.940 legal rights and obviously has evolved into something that is far more radical um which it
00:20:40.040 does happen this is similar to what unions like labor unions do um they've basically become like
00:20:46.980 you know i guess kind of like a mafia you know some of these unions like they were initially
00:20:52.040 originally rather created to get workers rights and stuff like that which was good right it's a
00:20:56.700 good thing. Because, you know, there were some workers that were, you know, I don't want to say
00:21:01.440 being abused, but they weren't very treated very fairly or well, and they were in dangerous
00:21:04.960 situations. So, you know, it did, the intentions were good. But like they say, the road to hell
00:21:09.760 is paved with good intentions. But yeah, so feminism was kind of the same idea, but it turned 1.00
00:21:15.120 into an ideological force that has undermined the nuclear family. It's eroded native populations of 1.00
00:21:22.860 Western countries. It's weakened the national cohesion of Western countries, and we're going
00:21:27.160 to get to that in a bit. And it's basically replaced the biological reality with feelings-based
00:21:33.700 social engineering. So today in 2026, we're, you know, living with the consequences of this.
00:21:39.740 And this basically, we're just going to go over how, in my opinion, and many other people,
00:21:46.000 it has destroyed the west so we're going to start with this first this is um a video about it's just
00:21:53.620 short all these little clips that i'm going to show you from youtube are really just short
00:21:58.040 explanations because i just thought it would kind of break it up you know to have someone else talk
00:22:01.480 not just me all the time so uh hold on let's remove this we're going to add this one um so
00:22:08.320 this is just how did feminism start and it's like a nine minute video so we'll flip through this and 1.00
00:22:13.720 you can get a summary. This guy's voice is a little bit annoying, in my opinion. So if you 0.99
00:22:19.580 don't like that, you might want to mute it for a bit. Millions around the world marched to promote
00:22:25.120 legislation and policies supporting women's rights, among other things. The main event was
00:22:31.180 in Washington, D.C., known as the Women's March on Washington. It featured over half a million
00:22:37.060 people and was the largest political demonstration in D.C. since the anti-Vietnam War protests of
00:22:44.340 the 1960s and 1970s. The Women's March is evidence that feminism is alive and well.
00:22:51.020 And just so we're clear, feminism is the belief that men and women should have equal rights and
00:22:56.160 opportunities. Feminists who protest think we're not there yet. But how did feminism begin? 0.97
00:23:02.680 obviously in this video i will tell you and i'm going to have a little bit of help from my new
00:23:09.600 friend sammy from us 101 be sure to check out his youtube channel it is quite amazing why do people
00:23:17.480 have to be so cringe in these videos i don't get it can we just get to the point amazing stuff
00:23:21.200 most historians agree that the modern feminist movement began on july 19th and 20th 1848
00:23:28.760 in Seneca Falls, New York.
00:23:31.480 It became known as the Seneca Falls Convention.
00:23:34.800 Organizers advertised it as, quote,
00:23:37.060 a convention to discuss the social, civil, and religious condition and rights of women.
00:23:42.360 Okay.
00:23:42.680 So that was a bit grammatically incorrect, but you get the idea.
00:23:45.500 The convention's two main organizers were Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott,
00:23:51.000 who became friends eight years prior at the World Anti-Slavery Convention in London in 1840.
00:23:58.300 Stanton had earned a reputation as an influential activist for years,
00:24:02.520 known first as a leading abolitionist and then later as a leading proponent of women's suffrage.
00:24:08.720 Mott was known for the same, but also for being a powerful speaker and a Quaker,
00:24:14.180 a branch of Christianity strongly tied to many of the major reforms of the 1800s,
00:24:19.940 like the Temperance Movement.
00:24:21.540 At that anti-slavery convention, the men forced the women to sit in a separate area.
00:24:28.000 this really upset Stanton and Mott, and the two talked about the possibility of starting a women's
00:24:33.980 rights convention. Flash forward eight years later, and Stanton was now living in Seneca Falls.
00:24:39.660 Meanwhile, Mott was visiting her sister, Martha Coffin Wright, in nearby Waterloo. When Mott and
00:24:47.140 her sister went to hang out with Stanton, along with Mary Ann McClintock and Jane Hunt, the five
00:24:53.940 of them had decided that the time was right. Five days later, the Seneca Falls Convention took place.
00:25:00.280 It was the first women's rights convention in history. There wasn't a lot of people there,
00:25:05.060 mostly because it wasn't really advertised that well. Of the 300 in attendance, 40 were men. While
00:25:12.460 the Seneca Falls Convention featured some lectures and discussions and all the usual convention type
00:25:18.060 stuff. The most famous contribution was the signing of the Declaration of Sentiments.
00:25:23.760 Elizabeth Cady Stanton mostly wrote the document, modeling it after the Declaration of Independence.
00:25:29.520 It summarized the injustices women regularly encountered and offered 11 resolutions to give
00:25:35.960 women equality. Over two days at the convention, the leaders of the convention read and debated
00:25:41.920 these resolutions. For more about what was actually in the Declaration of Sentiments,
00:25:46.900 I'm now going to turn it over to Sammy from US 101, who has been patiently waiting for me to
00:25:53.380 stop my yapping. Thank you much, Mr. Beat. And no, no, you weren't, you weren't talking for too
00:25:58.660 long. You were, seriously, no, you were doing, you were doing great. I won a weekly show about
00:26:05.300 American history and let's dive into this document. So the Declaration of Sentiments,
00:26:10.660 as Mr. Beat said, modeled itself after the Declaration of Independence, but not just in
00:26:16.260 structure the document actually took whole passages from the declaration of independence
00:26:21.140 and reworded them to highlight the importance of women for example jefferson's declaration says
00:26:27.540 quote when in the course of human events it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve 0.64
00:26:32.580 the political bands which have connected them with another and to assume among the powers
00:26:37.460 of the earth the separate and equal station to which the laws of nature and of nature's god
00:26:42.660 entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the
00:26:48.460 causes which impel them to the separation, end quote. Declaration of Sentiments takes that same
00:26:53.800 passage and rewords it to say, quote, when in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for
00:26:59.780 Hello, Frank. Thank you for joining. One portion of the family of man to assume among the people
00:27:05.320 of the earth, a position different from that which they have hitherto occupied, but one to which the
00:27:11.280 laws of nature and of nature's God entitled them. A decent respect to the opinions of mankind
00:27:16.400 requires that they should declare the causes that impel them to such a course. In fact, one of the
00:27:21.680 most famous lines of Jefferson's declaration, we hold these truths to be self-evident that all men
00:27:26.920 are created equal, was changed for the declaration of sentiments. Stanton added the words and women
00:27:32.740 to that phrase. Now in Jefferson's declaration, there's a section of it called the indictment,
00:27:38.040 which essentially is a list of grievances against King George III.
00:27:42.260 Imagine the first version of Festivus, if you will.
00:27:45.100 Stanton does the exact same thing in the Declaration of Sentiments.
00:27:48.220 There's also a section known as the indictment.
00:27:50.260 But instead of going after a king, it goes after the men of America.
00:27:54.780 For example, some of those grievances include the following.
00:27:57.200 He has not ever permitted her to exercise her inalienable right to the elective franchise.
00:28:02.400 He has compelled her to submit to laws in the formation of which she had no voice.
00:28:08.300 He has taken from her all right in property, even to the wages she earns.
00:28:13.160 He has endeavored in every way that he could to destroy her confidence in her own powers,
00:28:18.920 to lessen her self-respect, and to make her willing to lead a dependent and abject life.
00:28:24.420 In total, there are 16 of these sentiments listed, and none of them pull any punches. 1.00
00:28:29.520 To be frank, these ladies were not f*** around.
00:28:33.380 Now finally, Stanton's declaration closes with the following message. 0.82
00:28:37.300 In entering upon the great work before us, we anticipate no small amount of misconception,
00:28:43.520 misrepresentation, and ridicule.
00:28:45.520 But we shall use every instrumentality within our power to affect our object.
00:28:50.660 We shall employ agents, circulate tracts, petition the state and national legislatures,
00:28:56.440 and endeavor to enlist the pulpit and the press in our behalf.
00:29:00.860 We hope this convention will be followed by a series of conventions
00:29:03.980 embracing every part of the country.
00:29:06.740 The Declaration of Sentiments was signed by Elizabeth Cady Stanton,
00:29:10.020 Lucretia Mott, Marianne McClintock, Jane Hunt, Martha Coffin-Wright,
00:29:14.040 and a slew of other women that appeared at the convention.
00:29:16.640 And some men also signed the Declaration of Sentiments,
00:29:19.400 one of which you know very well.
00:29:21.320 Frederick Douglass was also in attendance.
00:29:23.720 and in addition to signing the document claimed that the declaration as well as the convention
00:29:28.740 as a whole was a quote grand movement for attaining the civil social political and
00:29:35.120 religious rights of women and on that note guys i'm gonna send it back over to mr beat to close
00:29:39.800 out the episode but i do hope that you guys check out us 101 and subscribe to the channel
00:29:44.220 okay that's it we don't need that's enough of that we don't need any more of that
00:29:47.260 um so yeah that was there what they're referring to in regards to feminism is more so the first 0.99
00:29:53.440 wave feminism which you know was basically securing voting rights and you know basic legal equality
00:30:01.920 oh here we go so this here this picture actually there's three there but they're
00:30:08.080 my my powerpoint didn't work properly guys i'm sorry um but first it was really the second wave
00:30:14.000 right so from the 19 it was from the early 60s to the early 1980s that really fundamentally
00:30:20.640 shaped or reshaped I should say society. This was the women's liberation movement. Intellectual
00:30:27.680 you know groundwork came from Simone de Beauvoir. I can't pronounce it properly. A book called The
00:30:33.260 Second Sex which framed women as the other and Betty Frieden's The Feminine Mystique which I'm
00:30:39.760 sure a lot of people have heard of especially women which portrayed suburban housewives as
00:30:45.420 being trapped and miserable so this right here these pictures were taken from the second wave
00:30:52.840 the women's liberation movement um i love this one here jewish lesbians against anti-semitism
00:30:58.880 and racism you gotta love it the jokes write themselves sometimes these were the the books
00:31:06.320 so this was the woman that wrote the second sex um and they pushed you know abortion safe legal
00:31:12.060 abortions for all women and the feminine mystique was this book here and you know this is the thing
00:31:17.500 with like abortion which we're going to talk about anyway so i don't want to get too much into it but
00:31:20.780 like they always take it to the extreme right like it's always got to be like they always take that
00:31:25.100 one example of somebody who you know was maybe sexually assaulted or something like that that 0.88
00:31:31.500 needed to get one um and then frame and that's what the left do right everything the marxist
00:31:36.300 ideology is basically paint everybody with the same brush they generalize everything so
00:31:42.060 This woman here is Gloria Steinem, right? So like in 1966, Frieden, that woman we just talked about that wrote that book, she co-founded the National Organization for Women. And this woman here, the blonde one, not the black one, her name is Gloria Steinem.
00:31:59.260 She became the face of the movement through a magazine called Miss Magazine or MS, right?
00:32:06.020 She was actually handpicked from the CIA out of college.
00:32:10.620 And Rachel Wilson, she wrote a book about the history of feminism.
00:32:15.800 And then there's, I can't remember the other lady's name, but it'll come to me.
00:32:19.000 And she's spoken a lot about this and she talks about this as well.
00:32:22.460 But she was handpicked by the CIA out of college.
00:32:24.680 They actually helped her create this magazine, this MS or Miss Magazine.
00:32:29.260 so in my opinion it's likely that they were obviously you know trying to do some kind of
00:32:34.400 social engineering experiment facilitated by the government and that's not really hard to believe
00:32:39.600 because we're finding out now that a lot of um experiments were done on people chemical experiments
00:32:45.340 and stuff like that right so it doesn't surprise me so there it to me it was probably some sort of
00:32:50.180 social fucking you know experiment on the people didn't work out too well um so and then protests 0.81
00:32:57.600 like the 1968 Miss America. Hold on, do I have another slide here? Oh yeah, this is what they 0.96
00:33:05.540 brought us as well, this kind of feminism, like Pussy Riot, that's that band. So the basic 1.00
00:33:11.740 degeneracy of women is what they, you know, brought here. So anyways, the, where am I at? 1.00
00:33:19.720 Oh yeah, the Miss America 1968 demonstration. It challenged traditional femininity. So I have a 1.00
00:33:26.640 little, for fuck's sakes. So this was the, again, it's a one minute video, two minute 0.88
00:33:32.840 video of, let's share this one instead, of the Miss America protests of 1968. Oh, let's
00:33:42.180 add it to the stage. That would help, wouldn't it? Remove, add. There we go. I'm starting
00:33:48.000 to figure it out, guys.
00:33:51.080 It started out in 1921 as an Atlantic City tourist attraction, and at its height was
00:33:56.520 watched by a global audience of 85 million. But did you know that in 1968, the Miss America
00:34:03.460 competition became the focus of a dramatic protest that sparked a feminist revolution? 0.85
00:34:09.540 September 7th, 1968, New Jersey. Inside the Atlantic City Convention Hall, young white 0.99
00:34:15.820 women from across the United States prepare to compete in the ultimate beauty pageant,
00:34:20.480 Miss America. But as the cameras get ready to roll, outside, trouble is brewing. On the
00:34:26.320 boardwalk hundreds of feminists from the new york radical women's group gather in protest against 1.00
00:34:31.680 corporate america's objectification and exploitation of women they toss bras and false eyelashes into a 1.00
00:34:38.920 so-called freedom trash can crown a sheep miss america to symbolize contestants being treated 1.00
00:34:45.040 like livestock and black feminist activist and lawyer florence kennedy changed herself to a 0.98
00:34:51.380 puppet of Miss America to highlight how women. This is when they started to, or at least they 1.00
00:34:56.440 believe, this is when they started to believe that having hairy armpits like men was okay 1.00
00:35:00.100 and got to be the most disgusting thing that feminism has brought. Men are enslaved to beauty 1.00
00:35:04.760 standards. Fake reports of bra burning made headlines around the world, even though no
00:35:10.200 bras were burned. The protest didn't drastically change Miss America in the short term, at least,
00:35:16.200 but it did give the women's liberation movement in the U.S. a much needed boost 0.93
00:35:20.560 and helped kickstart the second wave of feminism
00:35:23.240 as women began to demand equal rights as U.S. citizens.
00:35:27.540 The Miss America pageant is often criticized,
00:35:30.040 but over the decades, a series of firsts have challenged this.
00:35:33.540 Okay, good for you. That's great.
00:35:35.080 Miss America has turned into a woke hellscape. 0.88
00:35:36.920 We understand that already. 1.00
00:35:38.480 So anyways, this was basically,
00:35:41.520 they were protesting this Miss America pageant
00:35:45.040 because they were trying to challenge what would be,
00:35:47.920 I guess, considered traditional femininity.
00:35:50.560 you know, going back to what I said earlier about the armpits, the hairy armpits and, you know, 0.85
00:35:54.660 not wearing bras and stuff. They basically wanted to walk around looking like slobs is what I get 0.98
00:35:59.640 from that whole thing. So I guess, you know, to each their own, but, you know, I don't know how
00:36:06.020 well you're going to find a mate looking like that. But anyways, and then so some of the
00:36:11.040 achievements, the second wave feminism, feminism brought was the Equal Pay Act of 1963 title. And 1.00
00:36:19.580 this is in the u.s okay but like again there wasn't much statistics regarding this in canada
00:36:24.060 and canada basically adopts or at least at that time they adopted whatever the u.s did
00:36:28.520 so you can pretty much apply this to canada as well i would think um so yeah title seven
00:36:35.820 banning sex discrimination title nine for education no fault divorce and roe versus wade
00:36:41.820 which happened in 1973 and there is a little video on that as well about Roe versus Wade if
00:36:50.320 you didn't know I'm sure everybody pretty much knows but let's just be for brevity let's just
00:36:54.360 play it. ...are granular little noticed interpretations of the law and constitution
00:36:59.620 but a few are landmarks. Roe v. Wade was a landmark it effectively legalized abortion
00:37:06.480 across the United States. Here are the facts and players in the case. Jane Roe was actually
00:37:11.500 Norma McCorvey. She was a Texan in her early twenties who wanted to terminate an unwanted 1.00
00:37:16.060 pregnancy in 1969. Abortion was legal in Texas at the time, but only for the purpose of saving 0.77
00:37:22.840 a woman's life. That was not the issue for McCorvey. Her life was not at risk. She tried
00:37:27.820 unsuccessfully to get an illegal abortion and was referred to two attorneys interested in 1.00
00:37:32.480 challenging anti-abortion laws. The Wade in Roe v. Wade was Henry Wade, the district attorney of
00:37:38.200 Dallas County who enforced that Texas abortion law. McCorvey soon filed the case against him.
00:37:43.840 The Supreme Court agreed in 1971 to hear the case and on January 22nd, 1973 struck down the Texas
00:37:51.940 law in a 7-2 decision. Justice Harry Blackman wrote for the majority opinion and declared a
00:37:57.900 woman's right to privacy under the 14th Amendment superseded a state's right to ban abortion. 0.91
00:38:03.180 The court set different rules for each trimester. In the first trimester, the choice to end pregnancy 0.93
00:38:08.740 was entirely up to the mother. In the second trimester, the government could regulate but
00:38:13.580 not ban abortion in order to protect the mother's health. In the third trimester, the state could
00:38:18.880 prohibit abortion to protect a fetus that could survive outside the womb, except when the mother's
00:38:23.840 health is in danger. Justices Byron White and William Rehnquist dissented. They basically held
00:38:28.680 the argument of privacy went far beyond the intentions of the constitutional framers,
00:38:33.100 an argument that could signal the grounds for challenges to Roe. The two justices also stated
00:38:37.440 the court's decision did not stick to the specific facts of this case because Roe was not in her
00:38:42.840 first trimester at the time of the litigation. Public opinion was quickly shifting. In August
00:38:47.680 1972, Americans opposed legalized abortion, 46 to 42 percent. But by April 1973, it was 52 to 41
00:38:57.480 in favor. In the years since, Roe's been modified. So that just goes to show you how strong the
00:39:03.360 propaganda that they pushed was. And again, we're going to talk about that in a little bit where
00:39:07.280 that comes from. But yeah. Not overturned. A notable example was in 1992, a case called
00:39:13.000 Planned Parenthood versus Casey. For all intents and purposes, this is the new standard by which
00:39:18.320 abortion cases are judged. The focus this time wasn't privacy. It was roadblocks, which had
00:39:23.720 been intentionally set up to make it harder to get an abortion. In a 5-4 ruling, the court said
00:39:28.880 restrictions are unconstitutional if they place an undue burden on a woman. Support. See, and for 1.00
00:39:35.520 that, sorry to keep interrupting, but I feel like when they say undue burden, these definitions
00:39:39.960 don't mean the same anymore, right? Like, you know, in the 1800s, early to, you know, I guess
00:39:47.720 even to the late mid 1900s maybe like a burden was like you know like the family was going to
00:39:53.860 starve or uh the woman was you know going to be health like her health was going to be affected
00:39:59.760 or something like that but now a burden is just like well i want to party and drink and all that
00:40:04.440 kind of stuff so like the definitions have changed so much so i feel like by using old um by going
00:40:10.820 by old definitions it's you know what i mean we would probably be better off because they keep
00:40:14.980 changing the definition to you know meet the lowest common denominator i guess you could say
00:40:20.100 for roe v wade remains strong a kaiser family foundation poll in june 2018 found that 67
00:40:26.740 of americans do not want the supreme court to overturn the ruling while 29 do the question now
00:40:33.060 of course is what the supreme court will do with the solid conservative majority so this is old
00:40:38.500 right this was seven years ago they've obviously trump has you know given it back to the states
00:40:42.500 But this was just explaining what Roe versus Wade was.
00:40:45.720 And this basically kind of led into the third wave.
00:40:51.040 Before that, they had a slogan, the personal is political, which basically turned everyday life into like a battlefield against the patriarchy.
00:40:58.160 It started as, you know, and largely was a movement of middle class white women, which, you know, again, I'm ashamed as a white woman.
00:41:08.960 But though later waves would expand the critique, because, of course, when somebody is in a group that, you know, wants to be oppressed or, you know, they it's like any group or NGO or whatever that wants funding right from the government or they want, you know, something.
00:41:25.560 They have to keep making sure that there's a need for it.
00:41:28.840 So once, you know, feminists got what they wanted, then, well, OK, now we want more because then what are we going to fight against if we just got what we wanted? 1.00
00:41:36.400 Right. If we got everything we wanted, what do we fight against now? 1.00
00:41:38.660 That means we're going to have to actually, you know, go home and be moms or whatever, right?
00:41:44.200 Like, you don't get to go out there and protest and do all this stuff and get money from government anymore for that stuff. 1.00
00:41:49.720 So the third wave feminism, that's where this was.
00:41:54.560 I was showing you guys the pictures of that.
00:41:57.540 Where are they? 1.00
00:41:59.400 These women here. 1.00
00:42:00.340 So this is basically, they were part of the third wave feminism.
00:42:03.980 It was triggered by Anita Hill hearings in 1991.
00:42:07.920 And I do briefly remember this. I mean, I was pretty young then, but I do remember hearing about it. It embraced intersectionality, Kimberly Crenshaw's framework, which was intersectionality was Kimberly Crenshaw's framework linking gender with race, class and sexuality.
00:42:24.900 it was more individualistic culturally rebellious and inclusive of women and color and lgbtq plus
00:42:33.180 voices this is riot girl the vagina monologues which sex positivity and judith butler's idea 0.94
00:42:40.720 that gender is performance so speaking of the vagina monologues i don't want to gross you out 0.93
00:42:45.960 too much um but hold on we're first we're going to talk about we're going to i'm going to show 0.71
00:42:52.180 you what third wave feminism a short video about third wave feminism and then we'll talk about the
00:42:57.740 vagina monologues but we're not going to get in too deep into it i don't want to gross anybody
00:43:01.480 out because i don't want to gross myself out either okay so this is just a short explanation 1.00
00:43:05.420 of third wave feminism all the things that kind of kicked it off the most recent phase of the
00:43:12.000 feminist movement which emerged in the 1990s and continues to evolve in the present day
00:43:17.940 It represents a response to perceived shortcomings and unfinished work of second-wave feminism,
00:43:25.020 which focused primarily on gender equality and legal rights. 0.90
00:43:29.540 Third-wave feminism incorporates a broader and more intersectional approach, 0.57
00:43:33.840 addressing issues of race, class, sexuality, and other intersecting identities.
00:43:39.520 Intersectionality, third wave 0.98
00:43:41.260 Feminism emphasizes the importance of recognizing and addressing the intersecting identities and 0.97
00:43:47.160 experiences of individuals. It acknowledges that gender intersects with other aspects of identity, 1.00
00:43:53.260 such as race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, and socioeconomic status. 0.88
00:43:58.720 And we all know that that's wrong, because like I said, your gender is the chromosomes that you 0.99
00:44:03.540 carry. So anyways. Creating unique challenges and forms of oppression. Challenging essentialism, 1.00
00:44:10.540 third wave feminism challenges the notion of a single universal female experience.
00:44:15.960 It recognizes the diversity among women and rejects the idea of essentialism, which assumes that all women share the same characteristics or interests based solely on their gender, embracing individualism.
00:44:29.340 And I feel like, again, right, there was no issue.
00:44:33.400 And this was kind of my point when I was, I wasn't arguing, I guess it was somewhat of a debate with someone who doesn't claim they're a feminist, but they have very feminist ideologies.
00:44:43.360 my point was is that there wasn't really much that a woman couldn't do like you know pre-suffrage
00:44:52.120 and pre-feminism like I understand that maybe they couldn't become you know certain professions and 0.78
00:44:57.760 stuff like that but like they make it seem like women were locked uh to the kitchen and you know 1.00
00:45:02.660 weren't able to like enjoy time with friends weren't able to have a drink once in a while
00:45:06.820 weren't able to you know go to parties and do all like it's it's all generalizations about how
00:45:12.620 men treated women back then yes i'm sure there were definitely cases of women in that situation
00:45:17.840 as there still are feminism hasn't changed that but like i feel like they kind of demonize you
00:45:24.540 know men which again is something we'll get to later but that's what i mean so they use these
00:45:29.320 very small examples to kind of paint a large everybody with the same brush duality third 1.00
00:45:35.320 wave feminism celebrates individuality and personal choice. It recognizes that women should 1.00
00:45:41.120 be free to make their own decisions about their bodies, careers, relationships, and lifestyles
00:45:47.040 without judgment or coercion. This includes advocating for reproductive rights, sexual
00:45:53.140 autism. So again, they threw in the word judgment. Nobody gets through life without judgment,
00:45:57.620 okay? You can't have a life. That's what keeps, you know, a society functioning is judgment
00:46:01.960 on everything right like okay maybe you shouldn't be crucified for your choices anymore but everybody
00:46:09.360 you're going to be judged regardless so like when they throw in the word judgment you're never going
00:46:12.900 to get rid of that so it's futile but it's like one of those things they just want to keep going
00:46:16.580 because it's profitable autonomy and the freedom to express oneself authentically digital activism
00:46:24.660 the rise of the internet and social media has played a significant role in third wave feminism 1.00
00:46:30.300 Online platforms have provided spaces for feminist organizing, activism, and consciousness 1.00
00:46:36.680 raising. Hashtags, online campaigns, and digital storytelling have helped to amplify
00:46:42.240 marginalized voices and connect individuals from diverse backgrounds. 1.00
00:46:47.080 Focus on global feminism. Third wave feminism has a global perspective, acknowledging that 1.00
00:46:53.160 gender oppression is not limited to any specific culture or region. It recognizes the importance 0.87
00:46:58.920 of solidarity among women worldwide and seeks to address the unique challenges faced by women in
00:47:04.920 different parts of the world. But do you see what the arrogance of this attitude is? Is that you're
00:47:10.420 now you're because you think that your ideology is the true and one only ideology that everybody
00:47:18.360 should follow. You're imposing that on other countries that have vastly different customs
00:47:23.420 and expecting them to, you know, be as complacent as the West was to your irrational demands.
00:47:30.180 And to me, that's just arrogance and narcissism, like with your thing.
00:47:33.520 And I think it goes back to wanting to keep the message going and spreading the message far and wide
00:47:38.120 because they get money for it and it makes them feel important.
00:47:42.060 Conclusion. 1.00
00:47:43.240 Third wave feminism represents a significant shift in the feminist movement,
00:47:47.400 expanding its focus to encompass intersectionality, individuality, and digital activism.
00:47:53.420 It strives to create a more inclusive and diverse movement that addresses the complexities of gender, race, class, and other social factors. 1.00
00:48:03.020 Okay, so that's the explanation of third-wave feminism. 1.00
00:48:05.580 Again, totally ridiculous. 1.00
00:48:07.560 A lot of these things that they're claiming that they didn't have, they in fact did have, like, again, the whole choice thing. 0.91
00:48:13.720 Like, it kills me because it's like, what? 0.89
00:48:17.160 Okay, when you ask a feminist, what is the part, like, what choices didn't you have back then? 1.00
00:48:22.780 well to own property to do all this okay so why if you were married with a family why did you need 1.00
00:48:28.720 to own property right you owned it as a couple you owned it as a pair like some of these things
00:48:33.300 are just so ridiculous you know what i mean and you could own property then if you were an unmarried
00:48:37.700 woman and maybe it depended on state by state and again depending on what year we're talking about 0.90
00:48:43.300 there might have been a time but like i feel like these things right now yes things are different in
00:48:48.240 society, right? Unfortunately, we live now in a society that requires two incomes and all this
00:48:53.320 stuff. So women are kind of forced, even if they don't want to, to work. But back then, like, you 1.00
00:48:58.440 didn't need those choices. You know what I mean? Like, we didn't have all the choices we had now.
00:49:02.200 So when this first start came out, like, what were you talking about? What choices didn't these women 1.00
00:49:06.540 have? You know, like, I just, I don't know. There may have been a few, but I mean, they make it seem 0.99
00:49:11.240 like it was literally life destroying. And I guess, you know what, I didn't live during those
00:49:16.360 time. So maybe it's arrogant of me to say that it wasn't. But from all, all evidence, it doesn't
00:49:21.180 seem that it was that bad. I mean, you know, my grandparents, their parents didn't really have
00:49:25.740 that big of an issue. So I don't know. So I just want to share this quickly, just a few seconds of
00:49:29.820 it. But this is the kind of stuff that feminism has brought, which is the vagina monologues. 1.00
00:49:34.640 And these, if you don't remember, I was a teenager, I think, when these came out. 1.00
00:49:39.060 But it's just basically a bunch of, you know, liberal lefty feminists. I guess feminists and 1.00
00:49:45.780 lefty kind of are interchangeable but that you know created this fucking slam poetry or whatever 1.00
00:49:51.880 the fuck you want to call it where they talk about their vaginas which is you know pretty 1.00
00:49:55.760 disgusting like I've never really seen too many male comedians or not even comedians I've never 1.00
00:50:01.780 really seen too many men have shows where they solely talk about their penises or their dicks 0.99
00:50:06.900 like I don't know like maybe that exists but it's not really mainstream and this became like 0.99
00:50:12.560 mainstream and like every woman was like oh yes you know this is great you go girl and it's kind
00:50:16.740 of disgusting like if i if i had taken well again i was young but um if i had taken part in something
00:50:22.340 like this as an adult and then you know prior to having kids and then i decided after to have kids
00:50:26.900 and so like i'd be mortified that this is even on the internet but such is life for these people 0.65
00:50:32.680 fraught the subject being hair you cannot love a vagina unless you love hair many people do not 0.71
00:50:44.480 love hair my first and only husband hated hair he said it was cluttered and dirty he made me shave 0.99
00:50:53.620 my vagina it looked to me again sounds very made up and sounds very overdramatic you know i mean 0.98
00:51:00.900 dramatizing something and airing out something that, you know, 0.99
00:51:04.200 may have been a private conversation.
00:51:05.420 So I just wanted to show you a couple seconds of this is the kind of stuff.
00:51:09.100 If you're really interested in it, it's on the internet,
00:51:11.000 but it's disgusting. Most of it, like, it's just, it's just gross.
00:51:15.320 It's the same thing as I would call it soft core porn. 0.85
00:51:18.560 It's the same thing as people coming out and talking about their sex lives.
00:51:21.300 Like, it's just not, you know, I don't think it's not very,
00:51:26.920 I don't think it's very ladylike and maybe that makes me very, you know,
00:51:29.600 what do you want to call it uh not trad wife what is it stepford wife maybe that makes me 1.00
00:51:34.880 like one of those but anyways so at its root we can you know feminism insists that we can make 1.00
00:51:41.980 women equal to men in um every single way and this third wave feminism obviously has blended 0.99
00:51:48.460 now into what we're kind of entering fourth wave feminism which is via social media like the now 1.00
00:51:53.720 this stuff is you know a lot more it's able to be spread further and and more propaganda because 1.00
00:51:59.880 of social media so feminists insist that women are equal to men in every single way and not just 1.00
00:52:07.460 opportunity but outcome so they insist that this happens which is an impossibility 0.97
00:52:11.200 it this ignores the biology differences of men and women men and women women differ at the genetic
00:52:18.520 hormonal and development levels um xx versus xy chromosomes we know that prenatal testosterone
00:52:24.300 surges in boys or men evolutionary pressures from reproduction um go like they they're in women
00:52:31.980 right so the perfect equality of outcomes would basically i kind of looked this up because i was
00:52:38.820 like is this very possible right because we all know which we're gonna talk about in a sec but
00:52:44.200 that matt walsh did the whole what is a woman thing right so if you were to try to have perfect
00:52:50.620 equality of outcomes it would literally require erasing sexual dimorphism dimorphism that's how
00:52:58.300 you pronounce it something that you can't really it says something that is impossible without
00:53:02.080 massive social coercion and i don't even know if it's like you would have to convince everybody to
00:53:07.840 get sex changes, I guess, or become eunuchs. I don't know how that would even happen,
00:53:15.060 but I guess it's technically possible if we could convince every single person to do it.
00:53:20.440 So as Matt Walsh's documentary, what is a woman, powerfully demonstrates a woman is an adult human
00:53:27.600 female, which for anybody who's watching this that isn't sure, this is what it looks like.
00:53:33.520 this is a woman there's xx chromosomes and this is a man who has xy chromosomes um so that is the
00:53:40.800 most glaring difference of it uh so uh sorry yeah so xx chromosomes with women um we have
00:53:53.860 reproductive anatomy uh centered or sorry yeah centered on a uterus basically
00:53:59.320 uh traditional biology provides clarity modern gender ideology dissolves the meaning of it so
00:54:05.280 it's again the ideology basically dissolves the biological or is trying to dissolve the biological
00:54:10.380 fact that men and women have inherently different physical differences and it's literally impossible
00:54:16.300 to you know be the other sex gender whatever so i wanted to i kind of broke this down in a couple
00:54:22.360 different issues i thought were important as far as um the societal damage that it's been doing 0.99
00:54:28.500 and one of the things I hear a lot or they even mentioned it when in some of the videos that we
00:54:33.480 watched was the wage gap myth now again I'm talking in current times okay like this I don't 1.00
00:54:40.260 doubt that this probably did exist right but this is something that feminists still really focus on 1.00
00:54:46.820 and I don't believe that it exists so they still claim that there's a persistent wage gap and it 0.97
00:54:53.620 proves that there is systemic oppression but when comparing men and women in the exact same jobs
00:54:59.520 with identical titles qualifications experience and hours worked the gap shrinks dramatically
00:55:07.100 it's really negligible pay scale which is a place that gathers all the data they did an analysis 0.86
00:55:14.400 and of millions of records that show women earn it they earn about 99 cents for every dollar that 1.00
00:55:21.720 a man makes in the exact same job now feminists like to use the 18 cent right gap well this 1.00
00:55:33.160 actually comes from uncontrolled data group that doesn't that ignores the occupational 1.00
00:55:37.500 roles the choices and the hours worked than the men men of course if you're a man out there you
00:55:44.360 know this and women should too that men dominate the most dangerous jobs which obviously pay more
00:55:49.080 due to the inherent risk of death or injury the u.s bureau of labor statistics which i grabbed this
00:55:55.140 and i don't know if you're going to be able to see it that well let me just turn the chat off for a
00:55:58.000 sec um this actually shows what the deadliest occupations are and that they are overly well
00:56:06.400 overwhelmingly occupied by men so we're going to go through a few of those different things the top
00:56:13.860 five ones um the logging workers right they have a 73 percent male it's male dominated um and it's
00:56:23.080 also the deadliest uh so let's do i have that one yeah so this is kind of a i don't know if it's
00:56:33.320 meant to be funny or not but um this just shows you what a logging just logging mishaps so some
00:56:42.100 of the things that could possibly happen as a logging worker. So this is why feminists, 1.00
00:56:47.260 that they get paid more than you in your little office job. 1.00
00:57:12.100 i'm not gonna lie i know i couldn't do this job but it looks kind of fun
00:57:39.780 some of those things those racks i'm sure it's not fun for the person that was involved but 0.96
00:57:44.400 like i mean fuck i don't know some of it looks like it could be fun 0.93
00:58:09.780 This is like watching Heavy Rescues, is it? 0.99
00:58:18.060 Or no, Highway Through Hell, Highway Through Hell. 0.99
00:58:20.020 The guys that do the towing and the coquihalla. 1.00
00:58:37.360 Catch the chair. 0.97
00:58:39.780 All right, so you get the idea.
00:58:43.560 Logging is dangerous.
00:58:44.480 Number one dangerous profession in the U.S.
00:58:48.120 Again, I'm pretty sure that it's probably the same in Canada,
00:58:51.320 but statistics are very difficult to find in Canada for stuff like this 0.98
00:58:55.480 because fucking who knows? 0.98
00:58:57.220 I don't know. 0.99
00:58:58.440 And then fishing and hunting is the second deadliest,
00:59:02.480 and obviously that is heavily male-dominated as well.
00:59:06.220 And we're just going to watch a couple clips of this.
00:59:08.300 This is commercial fishing, lobster fishing in Canada.
00:59:12.380 So I would love to see, you know, the majority. 1.00
00:59:15.960 I'm sure there are women out there that do this and that can do this. 1.00
00:59:19.100 But I would like to see some of the feminists come out and do some of this stuff. 1.00
00:59:21.920 Because I guarantee it's not going to be as easy as the job you have now. 1.00
00:59:35.840 Imagine taking those fucking things and they're clawing you. 0.99
00:59:38.300 pinching you 1.00
00:59:40.160 all of those fucking things 1.00
00:59:44.620 I honestly wouldn't even want to touch them 0.99
00:59:59.120 and that's again I think that's a lot of how 1.00
01:00:01.400 a lot of women feel 0.92
01:00:02.460 forget the danger 1.00
01:00:05.380 I don't want to fucking touch them 0.99
01:00:08.300 with the boys 0.99
01:00:19.280 you get the idea if you've ever watched deadly uh deadliest catch or whatever um
01:00:27.820 on discovery can you tell i watch discovery a lot uh you will see that it's extremely dangerous
01:00:35.080 what do we have here oh yeah that's the next one so anyways the third most dangerous
01:00:43.180 job or career you could have in the U.S. is roofers which is 99% male it's dangerous for 0.99
01:00:51.360 the obvious reasons falls and all that kind of stuff you're working at a dangerous height and 0.78
01:00:56.800 you know you fall or whatever you know usually it's falls that happen that cause death or serious
01:01:02.200 injury. The fourth most dangerous would be somebody who works with structural iron or
01:01:07.180 steel workers. Again, that is 96% male-dominated profession. Dangers come from same thing, 1.00
01:01:14.220 you know, falling, burns, like all kinds of different things like that, that you can imagine.
01:01:21.340 And then fifth is people, or men rather, that work as trash collectors, pilots, truck drivers,
01:01:27.840 or construction laborers. And it's 85 to 99% male in those dominant those fields. And they also have
01:01:36.400 a very high death rate compared to any other profession. So this is why obviously, they get
01:01:42.600 paid more. If you were a female, and you were doing the exact same thing in the exact same job 1.00
01:01:48.180 with the same amount of experience, I believe in Canada, anyways, it would be against the law to 0.95
01:01:52.620 pay them different if they were exactly at the same level as a man so I don't understand the
01:01:58.500 argument that they still persist with this wage gap argument and of course these jobs here that
01:02:05.140 I just listed off the five right these are the jobs that build and maintain civilization they 1.00
01:02:10.060 you know are resource extraction infrastructure food waste removal women on average they choose 0.98
01:02:16.300 safer fields right and it's not discrimination it's just biology risk tolerance and preference 1.00
01:02:21.840 Right. Like as a woman, I wouldn't want to work in any of these fields just because, number one, I physically know I probably couldn't do it.
01:02:27.340 And number two is like, ew, it's hard. Right. It looks hard.
01:02:32.620 So forcing parity through DEI policies has really made some roles less safe and productive.
01:02:41.360 An example of this, I believe, is policing is a big example.
01:02:44.560 The military, stuff like this, like I am somebody who used to, well, it comes and goes.
01:02:51.840 But I'll watch a lot of the police body cam videos.
01:02:55.380 And quite a few times when you see women cops, when it's just women cops or it's one woman cop trying to, you know, restrain a suspect or whatever like that.
01:03:05.060 If the person is fighting with them, they have a really hard time managing it.
01:03:08.820 So, you know, that puts society in general and in more danger.
01:03:13.620 It puts them obviously in danger and it puts the people around them in danger.
01:03:18.000 Right. So like it's and with these other jobs as well.
01:03:21.840 if women are not able to if they're physically not strong enough and they can't do it and they 1.00
01:03:24.980 drop things like there's so many different factors that make it less safe and then it goes back to
01:03:30.660 the whole thing same with dei policies and bringing in inexperienced immigrants and stuff like that
01:03:35.720 that are low iq then everybody else has to drop down to their level right and that makes it unsafe
01:03:41.380 for everybody that's just it's just how it is right state standards get lowered look at the 1.00
01:03:45.960 trucking industry in canada right now dominated by indians who are getting fake licenses and all 1.00
01:03:50.560 this kind of stuff. And even if they do have a legitimate license, they don't, I don't know how 1.00
01:03:54.140 they got it a lot of the times, because they're not doing the same safety stuff that the normal
01:03:58.660 Canadian driver would have done. So it applies both across the spectrum. Now, the next thing
01:04:05.920 that I believe is an issue that feminism has really affected is obviously politics. And this 1.00
01:04:11.180 used to have a little background so you could see it, but because I didn't present it as a,
01:04:16.000 or I don't know, PowerPoint doesn't work, the animations don't work, I don't know.
01:04:20.140 But anyways, politics and it's emotion over logic.
01:04:25.560 This here I wanted to show you because it's three different tweets, 1.00
01:04:28.080 but we're going to see feminism rather paved the way for woke ideology 1.00
01:04:33.020 and softer governance. 1.00
01:04:35.220 Women on average decide from a more nurturing emotional perspective, 1.00
01:04:38.180 which is rooted in our biology and our lower testosterone. 1.00
01:04:42.940 Yes, it's a biological difference out there, trannies.
01:04:46.140 we tend to they call it tend and befriend so we tend to instead of fight or flight which is what
01:04:53.680 men normally do women do tend or befriend right that's what we do when we're under stress that's
01:04:59.340 our stress response higher we have higher agreeableness and higher neuroticism this
01:05:05.900 confers strengths and caregiving but challenges in high stakes like national leadership requiring
01:05:11.280 dominance, risk calculation, systemizing, and outlier talent at the extreme of the male
01:05:17.420 variability curve. I'm not saying that every single woman out here. I'm saying as a group,
01:05:24.860 from a macro perspective, this is how women behave, okay? There's always exceptions to the rule, 1.00
01:05:30.920 but this, from a macro lens, in general, is pretty accurate as to how most women behave. 1.00
01:05:37.660 men's higher testosterone drives competitiveness decisive action in zero-sum conflicts the male
01:05:46.860 brain tends towards systemizing analyzing rules or sorry analyzing rules mechanics and large-scale
01:05:53.700 logistics which is crucial for defense economics and infrastructure historical patterns in
01:05:59.820 leadership reflect these averages it's not a conspiracy when policy shifts towards unchecked
01:06:06.760 empathy, open borders, bail reform, reduce sentences for violent crime, the results harm
01:06:11.920 the very societies that they claim to protect. So feminism is actually harming the societies that 0.99
01:06:17.340 they're there to protect. And I put these tweets up here because, you know, again, I was hoping you 1.00
01:06:23.280 could see all of them, but whatever. It was a lot of times it's female judges that are letting these 1.00
01:06:28.140 repeat offenders out. And then this one was Judge Tiffany Baker let a convicted child predator stay 1.00
01:06:34.020 out on bond which led to five-year-old missy mogul's murder um judge richard hirsch a different
01:06:40.900 judge gave bond to a boy who shoved rocks into a girl's mouth as she was raped so that's just
01:06:46.060 one example there's um this one cambridge gunman there was a female judge that uh let him out or
01:06:52.400 only gave him five years or something in prison so there's plenty plenty examples of how women 1.00
01:06:58.440 aren't really you know on on in general they're not really good for roles like this because they 1.00
01:07:04.640 put their emotions over logic and i wanted to show you this video from hermes if you don't know who
01:07:10.620 that is um he does these kind of man on the street videos and i just wanted to show you a couple
01:07:15.440 minutes of that will show you exactly what i mean if you don't already know about the hysterics of
01:07:20.920 women especially when they feel like they're losing an argument or something like that which
01:07:25.220 is obviously not conducive for you know uh warfare or or anything like that so i'll show you a few
01:07:32.000 minutes and you can just see how upset she gets and he's asking very you know normal questions
01:07:37.080 that aren't really too well i guess for a lefty they're kind of inflammatory but they're not really
01:07:41.840 funny well i think that the issue is how how people in power divide us um and pit us against
01:07:50.280 one another whether it's our international neighbors or working people against the folks
01:07:56.280 with all the money and it doesn't matter what party they're in so this march is uh like a day
01:08:01.480 without immigrants right that's what it's called well mayday is historically uh a celebration it
01:08:07.320 was the first labor day okay um but today it is also a day that honors our immigrant communities
01:08:14.360 because i think that some in the united states don't understand the value that immigrants bring
01:08:21.620 to our country yeah so totally misunderstands what she's there for doesn't really even know
01:08:25.720 what she's there for but she knows it feels good to be there so she has no idea what she's again
01:08:31.540 that you're allowing in the very people you're defending the very people that are hurting women
01:08:37.040 and children which feminism was supposed to prevent is this there was one she gets a little 0.99
01:08:44.240 bit uppity later um hold on because they had to account for the fact that they were not 0.56
01:08:49.440 introduced constitutions and made it for 19th century yeah but i mean wouldn't you admit that
01:08:54.960 the the people who founded america made it for white people no i wouldn't you think they wanted
01:08:59.840 to make it for somalians and these africans who are completely different from us when the
01:09:05.360 constitution was written and when they actually had the convention the reason why they introduced
01:09:10.560 the three-fifths of a person clause
01:09:12.560 is because they had to account for the fact
01:09:14.280 that there were non-white people here. 0.93
01:09:17.060 I mean, yeah, they accounted for the slaves
01:09:18.640 that were forcefully brought here,
01:09:20.660 not the people who are going to come here willingly.
01:09:22.800 Do you understand that the slaves,
01:09:24.460 they wanted to deport them back to Liberia?
01:09:26.420 Yes, I understand that.
01:09:27.340 It wasn't Liberia.
01:09:28.420 Liberia wasn't formed yet.
01:09:29.640 Well, it wasn't formed yet,
01:09:30.420 but they were going to call it that
01:09:31.400 after they sent the people there.
01:09:32.440 I love being on your channel, but...
01:09:34.280 See, so typical lefty behavior
01:09:36.360 is losing the argument, 0.95
01:09:37.680 doesn't know what she's talking about.
01:09:38.820 It's getting owned by somebody
01:09:39.900 who's probably half her age and at that point she doesn't want to she gets a little bit uppity and 0.55
01:09:44.860 doesn't want to talk anymore and there's tons of examples of you know women doing that but i just 0.91
01:09:49.420 recently watched this so i thought it would be kind of a good example to show how upset they get 1.00
01:09:54.460 and this is why they can't lead in in large important roles or deal with crises like when
01:10:00.940 you know natural disasters happen for example it's mostly men that that attend to the like the
01:10:07.460 women might be in the caregiving roles like at the centers the dishing out food and doing all
01:10:11.720 the stuff but like the actual physical dealing with the crisis removing the fallen trees you
01:10:16.520 know like saving people in floods it's like that's men men do that stuff so you know and that's why
01:10:21.980 is because women have more of that caregiving thing so that's basically my whole point on um 0.81
01:10:27.560 that now abortion this is my next thing abortion it's demographic suicide and before we 0.69
01:10:36.740 go on i want to show you oh hold on again my dog's barking
01:10:40.920 he'll be back is um this video that came out it was a while ago hold on let's share this one
01:10:52.380 it's from toronto and i remember watching this uh months when it first came out it was months ago
01:10:57.420 oh no well yeah it was in november of last year um talking about the abortions and full-term
01:11:03.260 abortions and the thing is is that you know feminism wants people to believe that you know
01:11:08.120 it's only in extreme circumstances right well that's what they wanted everybody to believe 0.99
01:11:12.520 at first that it's only in extreme circumstances that um you know women need to get abortions but
01:11:19.460 it's now morphed into something that they're using as a form of birth control and as a way to be you 0.88
01:11:24.580 know degenerate and sexually promiscuous um so they like to claim that you know canada well
01:11:31.380 Canada the government likes to complain that they're so virtuous and they care so much about 0.94
01:11:35.580 women's rights but you know and and kids to a certain degree but and but so that's why they
01:11:40.780 don't allow supposedly they don't allow abortions after a certain period of time well this was
01:11:47.380 filmed undercover in Toronto at a clinic the doctor described that she does abortions up to 30 weeks
01:11:54.480 for any reason because Canada doesn't have laws that restrict abortion in any way she even describes
01:12:00.460 how she kills full-term babies spoiler alert if you know you've you're sensitive to this kind of
01:12:07.220 stuff i'm going to give you a warning now uh you might not like what's going to be in here but um 1.00
01:12:12.320 we're going to play it and just because it's really disgusting and this is i want any feminists who 1.00
01:12:18.160 are watching this or people who support feminists to watch this kind of stuff and see this is this 1.00
01:12:22.280 is what feminism has brought us. 1.00
01:12:52.280 I was just told to confirm or else it would be canceled. 1.00
01:12:58.360 Yeah, yeah.
01:13:01.160 Okay, sorry, tenant.
01:13:04.120 Remind me again how much it is.
01:13:22.280 so
01:13:45.960 i'm the counselor
01:13:52.280 I know you're right at our limit. You're very close. You have another week here. Our limit is 24.
01:14:01.060 Cranda doesn't have a limit. Our limit is 24. But there's a hospital that sometimes people come here
01:14:08.380 they're not so sure. They leave more time on their house, our limit. And they end up deciding, yes,
01:14:14.280 I do want you, but we can't do it anymore. I send them to Women's College Hospital. It's a hospital 1.00
01:14:19.320 that's close by it's 10 minutes from here they don't have a limit they sometimes go up with 32
01:14:24.840 i believe okay very different than what we do when you're out for 25 weeks um it's like a mini
01:14:32.040 still work they gave you an epidural when you're putting these out but up to 25 weeks they can put
01:14:37.480 you under this is something that's hard to go through it's multiple days yeah so first of all
01:14:42.920 it's part mentally physically for most people and if you're not sure it's
01:14:49.280 something that can harm you because once we start you can't stop and tomorrow
01:14:55.020 there's a needle that goes into the lower belly area it's a medication called
01:14:59.480 adroxate which will stop your fetal heart at some point and we do this before
01:15:04.460 the day before okay because it makes the procedure safer and as far as science
01:15:11.420 knows there is no consciousness like we have at this point but if there were it's too prevented
01:15:17.160 it's doctor's preference as well for you and we want you to people survive which you are because
01:15:22.620 five percent of women i just have to interrupt to say how like what do you mean they don't have 0.63
01:15:27.440 consciousness they the baby's eating like from the time they are conceived they're consuming like
01:15:34.280 food or whatever it is around them i know they consume whatever the mother eats it goes through
01:15:38.200 umbilical cord so yeah i mean but like i said they're they're moving they're doing like at a
01:15:42.760 very young gestation age they're moving their hands there's been um ultrasounds done of babies
01:15:50.040 at like 20 weeks like sucking their thumb and stuff like that like so what do you mean there
01:15:53.960 there's no conscious like i don't understand and how would you even prove that end up delivering
01:15:59.720 before you think on that the hours yeah they have contractions that are strong like you'll
01:16:05.400 though they came into poo and things come out so we're trying to avoid you being far away stuck in
01:16:10.680 traffic somewhere and anyone equals by if you deliver at your friend's house things can pass
01:16:17.720 the doctor will tell you on the course step by step how to handle that but you're still coming
01:16:22.360 here to finish bringing everything with you she will tell me how but not dispose of that everything
01:16:28.280 and we're finishing this procedure to be sure if you can clean it out okay there is risk of injury
01:16:33.640 to the uterus but that's super low with less than one percent chance okay i don't believe that at
01:16:39.620 all i knew somebody when i was younger when i was a teenager um who unfortunately used abortion as
01:16:47.980 a form of birth control and she wasn't ever able to have kids after having a few abortions so
01:16:52.500 i don't and now okay i'm talking 20 years ago um but you know still i don't believe that there's
01:16:58.600 no harm just like the vaccine there was no harm during the convid vaccine right and we're finding
01:17:02.800 out different now so the risk is an instrument is here then she percorates the accident if this
01:17:09.440 happens there's medication that can stop that most of the time if she can't you send you to
01:17:14.720 hospital if they can very very tiny is he taking out the good days very rare yeah oh sorry i don't
01:17:22.640 Once you get to, I'm going to sit down.
01:17:28.760 You know, I'm Dr.
01:17:30.720 Hi.
01:17:31.840 You can put your jacket and your bag to the side.
01:17:34.600 In terms of when is too far, that's different answers depending on who's answering it.
01:17:41.980 The law in Canada and the U.S. overall doesn't have a too far.
01:17:46.640 Okay. I can tell you that once things reach 35, 36 weeks, it might be impossible to find someone that would do it.
01:17:55.420 Okay. 24, up to 30 weeks, it's very possible. The system certainly doesn't think it's too far.
01:18:02.680 Which is absolutely fucking sick and disgusting. And that doctor doesn't even sound like a Canadian. 1.00
01:18:07.720 Certainly before 24 weeks, when a fetus isn't viable, it's very unlikely for a fetus to survive.
01:18:15.320 And if there is something like that, it will be a 22-weeks-deep pap, so in the earliest, and usually...
01:18:21.520 Again, antidotal, but I know somebody, and this happened 30 years ago, who had a child at 24 weeks and survived, and they grew up and had kids of their own, so...
01:18:31.500 It's not a perfect thing. So there's sequelae, there's issues that those... that has because of how early the birth was.
01:18:41.520 So in that situation, there's very few clinicians that would consider that life, okay?
01:18:49.660 At this stage, I would say that what is inside is something that depends on you for existence,
01:18:56.200 and that's not something that is alive.
01:18:58.580 Part of that is the feticide, the injection to stop the fetal heart.
01:19:04.820 Part of that is because it also tends to be a shorter duration of a procedure,
01:19:10.120 and anything that's shorter is associated with less blood loss.
01:19:13.360 So it's a little bit of a safer thing.
01:19:15.060 And it also ensures that if there is any kind of perception whatsoever,
01:19:21.100 it's not there when we're doing the procedure.
01:19:23.560 When somebody is desperate for the abortion,
01:19:26.600 then all of that is sort of secondary
01:19:29.720 and they can get through the sometimes horrible things that can happen.
01:19:36.420 Expulsion is one of those things.
01:19:37.860 It's rarely dangerous, but it is horrible in terms of the experience.
01:19:42.180 We try to avoid it, of course, as much as we can.
01:19:45.200 And then if you decide that what you want is a hospital referral, do we have the Women's College Council?
01:19:49.380 Oh, yes, that's been asked in case.
01:19:51.060 And for anybody who doesn't know, Women's College Hospital is in Toronto, Ontario.
01:19:57.460 It is, or at least it touts itself as the number one women's hospital.
01:20:01.240 They're supposed to care so much about women and children's rights.
01:20:04.360 And they're the hospital that is willing to do this.
01:20:07.860 so keep that in mind it's like can i just do you because they let us know and we refer okay and
01:20:14.660 do they have like you know sometimes you hear like oh i have it your health has to be in danger
01:20:20.180 the beat is that like you know that's some classic uh abortion care that kind of abortion
01:20:25.700 care hasn't been uh in canada since like the 1960s so they don't ask you anything you don't have to
01:20:30.980 work through like oh i'm at risk or no like that absolutely not they have the ability to take the
01:20:36.980 fetus out and to complete the abortion well beyond 24 weeks they just do it a little bit differently
01:20:42.980 in that case you don't have to speak to a counselor if nobody will ever force you to do that yeah
01:20:48.340 because abortions carry into our future as well as our past they're very very many connections
01:20:54.260 so you want if that you're ever sort of coming back to this point you want to be able to say 0.55
01:20:58.740 to yourself this is what i had to do yeah right and understand that a lot of women do this because
01:21:04.180 they already have two kids and they can't take care of another one and studies have shown that 0.51
01:21:09.620 their actual children thrive better if if they they feel that way that they can't handle that
01:21:18.260 there's also a lot of benefits to society in general so families tend to be able to have
01:21:23.300 a higher socioeconomic status and patients can complete their plans which generally involves 0.71
01:21:29.140 education unemployment so feminist marxist globalist ideology that's what they're they're
01:21:35.060 saying you know why people do this things like that um so um the the reasons to do it are valid
01:21:42.900 reasons um and uh everybody will reflect that too right right
01:21:51.940 there's very few clinicians uh that would consider that life
01:22:00.120 So it looks pretty alive to me, if you, you know, want my honest opinion on it.
01:22:04.140 So that was on X last year.
01:22:09.400 Liz Churchill posted it. 0.82
01:22:10.500 And I remember watching it the first time and I was just absolutely fucking disgusted. 0.92
01:22:14.060 Because like I said, I know somebody who had, yeah, studies have shown exactly the mental gymnastics. 0.95
01:22:20.920 That's exactly what it is.
01:22:22.020 It's mental gymnastics. 0.99
01:22:22.900 Studies have not shown shit like that. 0.98
01:22:25.100 Or they're very, you know, they're not like they're very small sample group. 0.96
01:22:29.960 And the sample group is probably a group of feminists who believe that, you know, children are basically they feel like children is literal suicide to them because, you know, they plan on doing all this stuff. 0.77
01:22:40.620 And then what you what happens is you get these cat ladies in their late 30s, 40s that aren't married or if they're married, they're married to a really weak, soy filled cuck man who is like being married to another woman. 0.70
01:22:53.280 and you know they just decide that traveling and all this other stuff is more important and their
01:22:57.820 cats are more important so it's really gross um the ideology that has been pushed on these kids
01:23:05.580 because or young women I should say because there was obviously you know there are very few valid
01:23:13.620 reasons um to do that and you know again there are so many things to avoid it like not having
01:23:20.440 you know, premarital sex. Okay, fine. This is 2026. People are still doing that. There's tons
01:23:25.160 of ways you can protect yourself if you are, you know, not ready to have a child. And as much as
01:23:32.220 I don't agree with it, there's also the morning after pill. So like doing this kind of this kind
01:23:38.060 of shit is just disgusting. And the fact that they normalize it makes it even more gross and 1.00
01:23:42.300 that our government pays for it. That's just so to explain to me when I see things like this,
01:23:46.720 explain to me how feminism hasn't ruined the um the west and we're gonna get to the next uh thing
01:23:53.840 which is the destruction of the nuclear family oh i wanted to show you guys this too this is the
01:23:57.220 abortion rates as well so this was again canada doesn't keep many statistics on this stuff or at
01:24:02.900 least not that far back um oh this is the other one so abortion rates from 2015 to this obviously
01:24:10.680 they've gone up right and in this report that i pulled this from they obviously were like well
01:24:16.260 it's marginalized communities and all this kind of stuff that are um getting the abortions it's
01:24:21.380 it's not just marginalized communities i mean maybe that's a good thing i guess if you are
01:24:26.100 coming at it from a racist or race point of view but it's regardless like i said it shouldn't be
01:24:31.640 pushed and promoted because that is it's being treated now as just so laissez-faire like just so
01:24:38.080 just like easy just to dispose of and and um like it's a form of birth control like it's something
01:24:44.080 an outfit you just change into like today I'm pregnant tomorrow I'm not like that it's just
01:24:47.980 wild so anyways those are the statistics um there the next thing obviously is the destruction of the 1.00
01:24:55.300 nuclear family this was I don't know why I put this in here but I mean this is the migrants and 0.91
01:25:00.620 I don't know I think I somehow I put this in here for whatever reason it's probably not playing but 1.00
01:25:04.860 you guys have seen this this is showing all the migrants that have come in so we're not having 1.00
01:25:09.220 babies we're aborting all the babies and these are all the people coming this was 2008 but you've 0.97
01:25:14.440 seen the chart on twitter daniel tyree posted it so my goddamn spreadsheet or not spreadsheet i 0.84
01:25:19.100 keep calling it spreadsheet my powerpoint's not working i haven't had to use a powerpoint in a 0.85
01:25:22.320 while um so the destruction of the nuclear family is the other thing and i think this is probably
01:25:27.300 one of the worst legacies of feminism um the demonization and i talked about this a bit
01:25:33.940 earlier of men and obviously the dismantling of marriage no-fault divorce which was heavily 1.00
01:25:38.640 promoted in the 70s. And once again, it was hard to, I was able to get these stats from
01:25:44.180 our world and data, which shows basically the 70s to the 2020s, the divorce rate. So it obviously
01:25:51.440 peaked around the 90s, which was when the third wave feminism kind of really took off. And then 1.00
01:25:56.880 it's, you know, slowly dropping. But I think this is also due to the fact that people aren't even
01:26:01.480 getting married anymore. So, you know, whereas you had it very low, it peaked, it stayed relatively
01:26:06.840 high and this is per 1,000 people too not just in general like this is per 1,000 right 0.88
01:26:12.300 uh women so women also so when this was promoted in the 70s right it removed the need to prove 1.00
01:26:20.820 fault so one of the other arguments that feminists have is that well women had to stay in abusive 1.00
01:26:25.600 marriages no they did not because you were able to get a divorce through the church and all this 1.00
01:26:30.300 stuff or through the legal means however you got married if there was evidence of you know
01:26:36.720 adultery abuse you know neglect all that kind of stuff those things still existed but what happened
01:26:42.740 is when no-fault divorce came in you didn't really have to have a reason at all the biggest thing
01:26:47.160 that people use to get divorced now is um irreconcilable differences which is basically
01:26:51.560 like we've disagreed and we can't come to a you know we can't come to a consensus we just don't
01:26:56.160 like each other anymore right like you know okay granted it happens right but it just gives people
01:27:01.600 a way to kind of not have to work at it and just treat it as disposable similar to pregnancy 0.99
01:27:07.360 and currently women initiate about 70 percent especially after the feminist movement that 0.96
01:27:13.980 really that number really went up so currently they initiate about 70 percent of divorces
01:27:17.760 the divorce rate spiked after no-fault divorce the nuclear family the mother and the father
01:27:23.920 raising the children have now been replaced by single mother households in record numbers
01:27:28.400 40 percent of u.s children are born outside marriage and single mother homes face far higher
01:27:34.920 poverty rates 28 percent um for single mother homes versus 0.5 or no five percent for married
01:27:43.780 couples and they rely heavily on welfare which no shock to anybody right here is the and this is
01:27:49.800 canada as well so this is the distribution of social assistance beneficiaries by family type
01:27:54.940 been selected years. So this 2003 is the first bar, 2007 is the second, 2011 is the gray bar,
01:28:03.840 2015 is the yellow bar, and 2019 is the dark blue bar. So we have one parent family, right? So they're
01:28:11.340 all these years have heavily relied on social assistance. Lone person that has gone up that's
01:28:19.660 required of you know social assistance couples with children and then couples without children 0.98
01:28:25.200 is the lowest right so it's in the welfare state has encouraged it as well right because you 0.98
01:28:29.480 couldn't just easily be dismissive of your marriage or anything like that if you you know
01:28:34.260 didn't have a way to get income from the state the other thing I watched this I don't know what
01:28:46.520 you want to call it I guess it's kind of it was a podcast but it was just basically a video
01:28:49.900 on the women and the rate of personality disorders right and this psychologist had
01:29:00.900 gathered some statistics and said that like well first of all children in fatherless homes they
01:29:05.480 suffer higher dropout rates they suffer high crime rates like committing crimes teen pregnancy mental
01:29:10.780 health issues and substance abuse and what the psychologist or psychiatrist and who had gone
01:29:17.160 through all the data had said that girls from unstable homes are more prone to personality
01:29:22.100 disorders like borderline or histrionic which perpetuates the cycle of chaos so if you see
01:29:28.700 some of these videos and i see them a lot because i watch the police body cam videos um of women 1.00
01:29:34.220 just you know totally fucking acting irrational and losing it and not when they're drunk like 1.00
01:29:38.900 i saw one recently of a woman at the airport that was just like you know pulling another woman's 0.98
01:29:45.100 hair for no reason refused to comply like just this kind of stuff right the um constant like
01:29:51.180 you know going from hot and cold and all this kind of stuff and this is tied to the mother
01:29:56.100 having a good relationship with your mother and also tied to having a strong you know father
01:30:01.340 presence in the home right um and what that does is that prevents that person that child
01:30:06.640 from becoming a good mother and the cycle perpetuates so if that mother you know ends
01:30:11.560 up with borderline personality because she was raised by a single mother then the likelihood
01:30:15.560 of her being a single mother is high and she's also going to pass that on to her kids so it just
01:30:19.640 never ends this whole cycle and borderline personality and histrionic is huge nowadays 0.98
01:30:25.160 like right now gen z like all these people that post shit on tiktok and stuff like that they're
01:30:29.920 proud of it and so it has exploded and it's probably if i'm almost positive it's tied to 0.97
01:30:35.840 the high rate now of single mothers the other thing that they use with you know as an excuse
01:30:42.340 for the destruction of the nuclear family is that domestic violence right and the statistics were 0.99
01:30:47.960 weaponized to justify an easy exit yet pre no-fault divorce abuse already allowed separation so you 0.56
01:30:55.880 hear this a lot too why you know women had to just stay in abusive relationships they did not
01:31:00.500 Like I said earlier, you could get a divorce if there was abuse. And actually today, and Rachel Wilson talks about this, cohabitation and certain demographics, including lesbian relationships, are now elevated, have higher elevated abuse risk than married couples, right?
01:31:21.220 And, you know, I think if there's an increase in abuse in Canada in the last 15 to 20 years, it probably also crosses racial demographics as well. So likely some races won't report it, but I also think that they do. And there's certain cultures, you know, like Muslims, for example, that think it's okay to abuse their daughters and their wives and stuff like that.
01:31:43.600 so that also has a factor but the fact of the matter is is that it is now domestic violence 0.84
01:31:49.520 is even higher and it's not just amongst heterosexual couples married couples it's
01:31:53.880 amongst you know lesbians gays not as much like gay men mostly lesbians and people that cohabitate
01:32:00.500 without being married and one of the feminist slogans that ties into this a little bit is like 0.84
01:32:05.980 a woman needs a fish like or sorry a woman needs a man like a fish needs a bicycle and this kind 0.99
01:32:10.720 of normalize they use this this phrase all through this third wave feminist movement and it 0.85
01:32:16.640 normalized fatherlessness right like it made it seem like it's just totally normal to have and
01:32:21.340 again another anecdotal story when I went to high school I went to a high school that was not in a
01:32:25.680 very good area like demographically and also you know economically right it was it was not a very
01:32:33.680 rich area a lot of you know poor criminal behavior that happened um and when i graduated i want to
01:32:41.620 say i was probably one of maybe a handful of girls that graduated because everybody had gotten
01:32:47.900 pregnant um and dropped out of high school and they were all single mothers so they really
01:32:54.360 normalized that and they made it seem like it's almost like something cool and and you know cute
01:32:59.280 and all this stuff right and because like these girls would come back to the high school with
01:33:02.620 their babies dressed up in these cute little you know outfits and stuff like that like it was a
01:33:06.600 doll that they were playing with right so but the kid never saw their father again and it obviously
01:33:12.080 perpetuates the cycle of crime and all this other stuff mental mental illness so the result anyways
01:33:18.860 of the whole destruction of the nuclear family was you know generational harm like i talked about 0.53
01:33:23.480 with you know passing on mental illnesses and poor personality traits weakened social fabric
01:33:28.640 and society's trading stability for individualism. 0.54
01:33:32.260 And this is the big thing with a lot of our problems
01:33:34.280 is people are trading individualism for societal cohesion
01:33:39.120 or sorry, they're trading the stability of societal cohesion
01:33:42.100 for individualism. 0.99
01:33:43.920 So the next thing, toxic empathy and social engineering. 1.00
01:33:48.080 Now this is where the Marxist kind of shit comes in. 0.99
01:33:51.980 And we have a video. 0.99
01:33:53.500 So Karl Marx, you all know who Karl Marx was.
01:33:55.660 he his philosophies on you know what's now referred to as marxism heavily influenced the
01:34:01.720 feminist movement um and it also is a form i believe marxism is a form of social engineering
01:34:07.940 i guess you could say anything like that is um this was you know some of the things obviously
01:34:13.240 trans people which is uh one of the marxist adjacent i guess you could say ideologies
01:34:18.340 there is a video here uh this is yeah so yeah i have a video of four minute video of uh jordan
01:34:25.360 peterson just talking this is before he went crazy um talking about uh the problem of too
01:34:33.360 much empathy right and this is again a woman feminist problem that leads to the destruction
01:34:39.820 of the rest of society students on political correctness per se because we've been interesting 1.00
01:34:44.680 interested in the personality predictors of political belief it really does turn out that
01:34:48.960 you vote your personality far more than you think because like what you think is that you look at
01:34:53.880 the world and there's a landscape of facts and you view the facts objectively and you derive
01:34:57.540 your conclusions and the thing is it doesn't really work that way because there's just too
01:35:01.380 damn many facts right and so you can't even really get an unbiased sample of them what happens is
01:35:07.020 that your your personality works as a filtering mechanism so that certain things stand out for 0.89
01:35:11.560 more than other things and so some things stand out more for the people on the radical left and
01:35:15.880 some things stand out for people who are liberal and some things stand out for people who are
01:35:19.320 conservative and then everyone says well look i'm looking at the facts and i'm drawing this
01:35:23.560 conclusion it's like yeah but what you don't understand is you're not looking at the same
01:35:27.240 set of facts and you can't even and that's why you have to actually engage in dialogue with other
01:35:31.160 people because they'll expose you to their set of facts i'm not saying that facts don't exist or
01:35:36.440 that they're relativistic or anything like that one of the things we found out about the politically
01:35:40.920 correct types is that they're high in a trait called agreeableness now you might think really 1.00
01:35:45.340 that isn't what i would have guessed but but agreeableness is a maternal trait and women are
01:35:51.700 higher in agreeableness than men that's that's cross-cultural and that difference really seems
01:35:55.420 to start uh manifesting itself primarily at puberty and so agreeableness is likely the trait
01:36:00.820 that stops you from throwing your baby out the window at three in the morning when it's been
01:36:04.840 when it's had colic for three hours and you haven't had any sleep and you're not in very good shape
01:36:08.400 and you just got laid off it's like it's a very very tight bonding mechanism and so what happens
01:36:13.900 it's primarily driven by what you might describe as compassion now compassion is great for dealing
01:36:20.080 with infants and maybe it's great for dealing with hurt people and really elderly people you
01:36:24.820 know it's good for taking care of people who can't take care of themselves but it's not a great
01:36:29.640 doctrine to be building a political system on and so one of the things that happens with the more
01:36:34.600 politically correct types by temperament is that they're they they suffer from an excess of
01:36:39.160 impulsive compassion and they assume that if there's inequitable distribution of anything
01:36:43.680 that the people who are at the bottom are all victims who should be treated like infants and
01:36:48.880 that everyone at the top is a vicious snake-like predator and and and that's hardwired in some
01:36:54.440 sense now it's a very popular story yeah of course of course it's and it's an easy story to sell and
01:37:03.680 there's some truth in it but some truth isn't the same as all the truth and so what you see at least
01:37:09.040 in part is undifferentiated empathy and that is not that's not a virtue it's not a virtue you have
01:37:15.040 to think you can't just feel you have to think you know even when you're taking care of kids
01:37:19.220 part of what you're doing is being compassionate but if you're too compassionate towards your kids
01:37:25.760 then you do everything for them and if you do everything everything for them then they grow up
01:37:31.000 useless and they never leave and they hate you and they hate everything else too it's a bad idea
01:37:35.560 and so you use compassion judiciously you know there's a rule if you're working in a place like
01:37:40.180 a nursing home and the rule is it's a harsh rule do not do anything for the people that you're
01:37:45.080 taking care of that they can do for themselves and so if they have to struggle to feed themselves 0.96
01:37:49.680 you don't bloody well intervene and feed them you let them maintain their damn independence 0.99
01:37:54.360 and you have to be a hard-hearted bastard to do that you know to watch someone struggle like that 0.99
01:37:58.940 But you're furthering their medium to long-term independence and development. 0.98
01:38:02.920 And you do the same thing with your children.
01:38:04.680 Treating your children like they're endless permanent victims is a very bad idea.
01:38:08.980 And I think that's part of what's also being taught.
01:38:12.040 We also know that the kids who are more likely to be rabidly politically correct,
01:38:16.760 one of the reasons that they're more likely to be that way is because they were taught to be that way.
01:38:20.540 we found that even exposure to a single lecture
01:38:24.760 a single lecture that was associated with the politically correct dogmatic structure
01:38:30.640 was enough to tilt people in that direction
01:38:32.900 so there's a temperamental proclivity
01:38:35.100 and then there's failure of education to address that
01:38:38.140 and then there's the exacerbation and exaggeration
01:38:41.060 by the people who are trying to produce like activists by proxy
01:38:46.180 so do you get where like i thought that was actually really good because it kind of
01:38:53.620 it's transist transcends all of society right now and why women really shouldn't be involved
01:39:00.560 in making big decisions for a country or for a nation um somebody else explained this um
01:39:06.340 and i don't know if it was another video or something i read but just basically you know
01:39:11.800 explains this as and it goes back to the whole women there was a question okay that was posed
01:39:17.020 on x or whatever i think and you know they asked women would you rather be locked up with the bear
01:39:22.180 or a man a white man or whatever and they have been so radicalized that they think it would be
01:39:27.700 safer to be with the bear why because they feel like white men are so oppressive and you know
01:39:34.540 the bear or whatever is a victim right so it's it's turning the kind of making the when you talk 0.71
01:39:41.420 about migration for example like bringing in all the immigrants and the violent you know migrants
01:39:45.980 and stuff like that it's because they come from an oppressed society and women are tapping into 0.97
01:39:51.900 their caregiving you know roles but women who have children um and you know conservative husbands 0.96
01:39:58.200 obviously are less likely to vote along those lines this tends to be women who are you know 0.52
01:40:03.360 lefty liberals who unlikely to have children or if they do they might have like one and they
01:40:08.900 obviously have a liberal husband probably and so they don't really have i guess i don't want to say
01:40:15.160 they don't have that mother-child bond but i think it's kind of fucked up the bond they have it's like
01:40:18.940 not normal um so you know i think once women have children they tend to start thinking about they're
01:40:25.480 they're funneling their protectiveness into you know something that's there their child right
01:40:30.360 before that women you know it's whether it's animals whether it's migrants they want to 1.00
01:40:35.200 save the underdog kind of mentality right and you know feminism cult cultivated rather this uh 1.00
01:40:42.960 toxic empathy compassion detached from truth consequences or justice it basically affirms 1.00
01:40:48.540 that biological man which is what i was showing you here in women's spaces um oh god
01:40:55.380 validates you know it's the fact that they allow this to happen it basically validates 0.99
01:41:01.120 self-destructive behaviors, right? It supports open borders that strain the resources. It frames
01:41:05.660 abortion solely around maternal feelings while ignoring the unborn child, you know, and feelings
01:41:12.660 trump facts and their ideology. So it doesn't matter that, you know, facts that you present
01:41:17.060 them with facts because it's how it makes them feel that is more important. And women are 1.00
01:41:23.680 obviously more susceptible to certain marketing and emotional appeals and they, you know, governments 0.75
01:41:29.300 and all these people that have been involved, like the CIA back in the day and all this other stuff,
01:41:34.280 they use that, they harness that as a political weapon, right?
01:41:37.820 And these NGOs and these feminist groups and all this stuff, they harness that as a political weapon.
01:41:43.080 It comes from the Marxist roots, which we saw the picture, I showed you what Marx looks like,
01:41:46.920 I'm sure you guys all do, via angles.
01:41:49.540 They framed the nuclear family as oppressive, calling for its abolition through state intervention,
01:41:55.480 easy divorce and careerism over motherhood.
01:41:57.740 And we're seeing this even now, right? Like, the whole point that, you know, Canada and all these other Western countries, the UK, fucking King Charles, that, you know, dysgenic looking motherfucker, has decided that even though it was unpopular amongst the majority of Britons or, you know, people from the UK to have digital ID, they're going to do it anyway. 0.97
01:42:17.000 so this is where you know the whole woke dei uh bullshit comes from and that is all rooted in 0.98
01:42:25.140 feminism as well um you know they want the state to basically take over their responsibility the 0.99
01:42:30.920 state they want the state to tell them what to do they want the state to tell them how to raise 1.00
01:42:33.760 their kids that you know they don't want if they even want kids right and they need the state to
01:42:38.160 tell them what's uh what they can say what they can't say you know what is mean what is like
01:42:43.440 Because they have no theory of mind.
01:42:47.880 The other thing it did is it rebranded repeatedly to stay relevant.
01:42:53.000 I've talked about that at the beginning.
01:42:54.320 So from equality to equity.
01:42:56.220 So it started with equality, and now it's equity.
01:42:58.860 And then finally they celebrate men and women's sports,
01:43:02.220 which obviously has a danger to the female athletes. 0.99
01:43:05.980 We've seen it happen in this boxing match. 0.93
01:43:08.240 This other picture, nobody got hurt. 0.88
01:43:10.820 but the fact that a man has taken the opportunity to win gold from two female athletes is disgusting 0.99
01:43:18.520 you know they didn't get physically hurt but like you know i mean like go fucking run with the men 1.00
01:43:24.500 then and my my firm belief is men that do this because obviously trans men have mental illness 0.99
01:43:29.900 like there's no doubt about that but they also are very um they have personality issues as well 0.91
01:43:35.020 like i said they have body dysmorphia many different things i believe but it's almost
01:43:39.600 like their hatred for women forces them into this knowing that they're going to beat the women
01:43:43.100 because they're physically stronger there's no like biology will tell you that and the fact that
01:43:47.800 they're low quality males so they can't compete with the high quality males so they can feel
01:43:53.540 important and special with females because men are obviously stronger physically and all this other 0.61
01:43:58.520 stuff faster than the women so it gives them some kind of you know it's a turn-on or something for 1.00
01:44:04.560 them to be able to do that because they're such a low status and low quality man in my opinion 0.99
01:44:08.980 anyways the thing too about this with the letting the women or letting men into women's spaces it's 1.00
01:44:16.800 very anti-woman um you know modern feminism complaint or claims rather to protect women but 1.00
01:44:23.080 yet it enables the predators like we saw earlier it calls children burdens um it erases any sex
01:44:28.940 based rights it demonizes white men uh while excusing other men and it reveals a profound
01:44:35.320 hypocrisy that's uh basically the toxic empathy and social engineering and one of the other things
01:44:42.940 that is maybe not as important depending on where you stand on the religious argument but feminism 1.00
01:44:48.580 does have pagan roots um which is why it's very anti-christian um it draws from deeper you know 1.00
01:44:56.120 it's it draws from deeper currents more marxist subversion of family and property and pagan
01:45:00.340 revival the second wave feminists um really you know focus more i guess on the paganism but even 0.98
01:45:07.380 currently you see a lot of girls out there that claim to be pagan or wiccan or whatever the fuck 0.77
01:45:10.960 they call it um there was groups called like witch it was called which um and wiccan groups 0.92
01:45:18.300 there was one called dianic wicca star hawks reclaiming tradition and goddess goddess
01:45:23.480 worshiping patriarch or rejected the patriarchy obviously and patriarchal uh religions abrahamic
01:45:29.940 religions they rejected um they preferred the matriarchal spirituality uh body autonomy and
01:45:36.640 anti-capitalist activism this goes back pretty far and again i'm going to mention her again
01:45:42.320 rachel wilson talked about this in her book because she wrote extensively about this um that
01:45:47.720 it even goes back to like the egyptians and stuff like that like they had you know pretty radical
01:45:52.960 um views of i guess it was early feminism but it was really tied into pagan paganism
01:45:58.420 hexing the patriarchy it became like a political theater the fusion of neo-paganism marxism and
01:46:05.760 radical individualism it rejects complementary sex roles tradition and the sacredness of life
01:46:11.020 obviously so that's you know and paganism embraces all those things right so they're
01:46:16.400 kind of all copies of each other with slight changes depending on what generation we're living
01:46:22.100 in. That's the end of that. Yeah. So anyways, the conclusion, my conclusion to this whole
01:46:29.740 little podcast that I did and this research that I did is that feminism promised things it didn't
01:46:36.400 deliver on, much like many politicians, you know, and political parties do. They promised liberation 0.94
01:46:43.760 but delivered, you know, demographic decline, family collapse, biological denial, and cultural
01:46:49.500 fragmentation it replaced the protector provider masculinity and nurturing femininity with
01:46:55.500 resentment autonomy at all costs and state dependency the west's vitality was built on
01:47:03.100 strong families native birth rates realistic governance and biological truths this has now
01:47:09.420 been hollowed out restoration requires honesty acknowledging sex differences protect the unborn
01:47:16.780 revive marriage as a permanent covenant,
01:47:19.200 reject toxic empathy for balanced justice,
01:47:21.960 and prioritize the native population renewal
01:47:24.860 through pro-natalist culture and policies.
01:47:30.000 A civilization that aborts its children,
01:47:34.740 it dissolves its families and denies reality, 0.93
01:47:37.500 obviously has no future worth defending.
01:47:39.920 Hey, Shamrock, how's it going?
01:47:41.060 You're just coming in towards the end. 0.95
01:47:42.520 um and yeah and that's basically my take on on the feminists uh and how it's destroyed the west
01:47:49.960 and it continues to destroy the west i don't know if anybody else has any thoughts you want to drop
01:47:54.240 in the comments um i can you know we can kind of go over it or otherwise i'll i'll probably shut it
01:48:00.920 down but yeah it's just going down this rabbit hole was kind of crazy because i and i talked
01:48:06.860 about this before like when i was on rem remparts um podcast or whatever that you know i kind of
01:48:13.420 grew up in the feminist movement to a sense that you know i was that age and and i was basically
01:48:19.380 told that you know if i didn't get a post-secondary education um thanks shamrock um if i didn't get a 0.88
01:48:26.180 post-secondary education that i was basically going to be a nobody um i would have a end up
01:48:31.440 with a man who's going to leave me and then i'd be broke and i'd be on welfare and all this stuff
01:48:36.060 Same thing if I had kids, you know, all this kind of stuff.
01:48:39.760 I, you know, I didn't, I did it anyways.
01:48:42.300 I had kids and I went to post-secondary after my kids were old enough to go into, you know, go to school and where I wasn't, didn't have to be.
01:48:49.700 I never got to be home with them, unfortunately, either.
01:48:51.440 And that's just because of the financial situation that our, you know, current society and government has put us in, a very materialistic society.
01:49:00.960 But, yeah, I was even told that.
01:49:03.360 And this was me in the late 90s.
01:49:06.060 and early 2000s being told this kind of stuff so you know I think we need to definitely change the
01:49:12.020 culture and that was what my hope was when I talked about at the beginning of the podcast
01:49:16.860 about how I really wish more women would kind of come and listen to you know whether it's
01:49:21.920 conservative women right-wing women nationalist women speak you'll be able to watch it on the
01:49:26.740 replay shamrock I apologize I'm gonna pretty soon I'm gonna be going later I'm gonna try going
01:49:32.480 maybe at five because the thing is i don't want to interrupt or i don't want to interfere in any
01:49:37.180 of the other guys streams and not that you would necessarily watch me over them but i just don't
01:49:41.220 want to have to force people to have a choice but i also want to be able people to be able to watch
01:49:44.580 because obviously you're working during the day so uh we'll figure that out and i have to go back
01:49:49.000 to work soon too so i'll be working till five um yeah shamrock you're right i'm gonna put this up
01:49:54.360 here because that's important so the women's support for the underdog is great for raising
01:49:57.300 children and that's why we have that right that's why we have that trait in us um it ensures they're
01:50:03.080 cared for equally it's horrible to apply exactly and this is why historically you know men have
01:50:07.980 done these kinds of things because we're always gonna feel bad for the underdog right which is
01:50:13.300 also brings back our empathy um for pets too right like and and it's definitely a white-coated thing
01:50:19.020 um oh god where are we we've been manipulated into a hellscape compared to the world oh yeah
01:50:25.360 absolutely it when I started reading um the stuff about feminism and like I watched some of Rachel
01:50:32.000 Wilson's stuff I read her some of I read I didn't read the whole thing but I read a lot of the book
01:50:35.560 some other uh anti-feminists out there as well I watched some of their stuff I read some you know 1.00
01:50:40.700 statistics and all this other stuff and it's just crazy because you don't think about it when you're
01:50:46.160 in it right when you've been raised in it and you're kind of living in it you don't think about 0.62
01:50:50.380 I mean, obviously what got me more so, you know, to become a nationalist, what set me over the edge was the COVID scandemic, right?
01:50:58.740 But I was already at the point where I didn't really agree with radical feminism. 0.69
01:51:03.600 I don't even agree with women having to vote because, like, I know a lot about politics, but I've had to teach myself prior to that. 0.99
01:51:09.640 I wouldn't have known who to fucking vote for, for fuck's sakes. 0.99
01:51:12.220 It would have been like, OK, well, who looks like that's just what we think, right? 0.99
01:51:15.040 Well, who's saying the nicest things, right?
01:51:16.540 Like, so, and I also think that even further than, you know, we're never going to take the woman's vote away, right? 1.00
01:51:22.640 But I do think that we should limit it. 1.00
01:51:24.960 Hi, In It For Love.
01:51:26.120 I do think we should limit it to people that have something in the game, have skin in the game.
01:51:30.300 Like, people who, obviously, you have to be a Canadian citizen, but also either own property or something.
01:51:38.020 Or, you know, have a job.
01:51:39.500 Like, you have to be contributing somehow. 1.00
01:51:40.920 I don't believe that, you know, immigrants that are just here, people on welfare, people and all this stuff should get a chance to say what we're going to do with our tax money because you're not paying any taxes. Right. So with with the general. Yeah. Yeah. I don't I don't either. I do think that and I honestly think that a democracy will never really work. 1.00
01:52:02.060 And I've said this before with a multiracial society, because groups are always going to, with the exception of whites, we're the only group that doesn't do this, but they're always going to have that in-group preference, right? 0.90
01:52:14.900 There's always going to be the in-group preference for these other groups.
01:52:17.840 As we saw what happened to Nate Erskine, the liberal in the Toronto riding, who, you know, it's kind of funny. 0.99
01:52:24.100 Like, you got fucking owned, brother. 0.98
01:52:25.720 Like, I'm sorry, but you fucking sold yourself out and now you get what you deserve, right? 1.00
01:52:30.040 But that's what I mean. 0.94
01:52:31.060 like they're not just because you think that these people are nice and you know you're good 1.00
01:52:35.320 friends with them and they're good people and you've been out there fucking sucking dick for 0.99
01:52:38.280 votes for whatever they're always going to vote for their ethnic group like that's just how it is 0.99
01:52:42.940 and we've unfortunately been you know conditioned and and manipulated through marxist ideology and
01:52:49.460 through a lot of this started with university i didn't go too deep into it but a lot of women 0.63
01:52:55.600 were given like these feminist groups that came out during the second wave feminism they funded
01:53:01.300 and they were all you know controlled by like the Rothschilds and stuff like that so Jewish families 0.94
01:53:06.420 they gave a lot of women free rides at university because the university like to take specific 0.95
01:53:13.960 programs right because that they were using the university to indoctrinate the women into becoming 0.99
01:53:20.420 you know have that marxist ideology or feminist ideology um and these women were a lot of these 1.00
01:53:26.660 women were instrumental in getting a lot of these things you know pushed through and passed and the 0.95
01:53:30.500 propaganda pushed on on women and the attitude that women are less valuable if they're at home 1.00
01:53:36.340 with their children or if they decide to have kids before their career or stuff like this
01:53:39.980 yes shamrock we definitely need tribalism and that's what i was saying as well like with with
01:53:45.700 the men like i'm really disappointed that and i and i think it's just kind of society in general
01:53:50.540 we're not the only ones suffering from it but is that men are so demoralized so low in testosterone
01:53:56.520 that like they don't even want to do anything about it like everybody's just waiting for someone
01:54:00.420 to come and save us right and it's sad because like you know canada has produced some of the
01:54:05.980 greatest men in you know ever right and it's like we've kind of fallen so far off that i don't know
01:54:12.400 if it's uh recoverable the founding stock especially exactly the founding stock especially
01:54:16.520 like look at the the the things we've done and and it actually ties into my comment at the very
01:54:22.280 beginning about hockey and how the players have become soft now like this was a sport that you
01:54:28.060 know canadian men played after they did their full-time job and they were you know playing
01:54:33.200 with broken legs and knocked out teeth and like they were still playing and we need that energy
01:54:37.940 back not just for hockey but i mean for like everything for our country we need that kind
01:54:42.620 of energy back that's and if we don't then yeah we're basically going to be taken over whether 0.99
01:54:48.160 it's by the indians or the chinese one or the other in my opinion of it but yeah it's it's
01:54:53.620 really sad you know the whole feminist movement that's i just wanted to share because i want more
01:54:58.040 women to be aware of it and you know you shouldn't feel guilty if you did go and get an education
01:55:01.780 stuff like that but like i do think that we need to i don't want to say we kind of have to use their 0.97
01:55:07.760 tools against them. So we have to indoctrinate young women and men into, you know, getting
01:55:13.720 married before, like having a marriage, having children, all this kind of stuff. We need to
01:55:18.080 kind of indoctrinate them, reverse indoctrinate them, if you will, into valuing family again.
01:55:26.200 And what I do say, I'll just finish on this, because I did say this to the woman that I was
01:55:31.400 having the debate with you can always have a career after you have kids like if it's really
01:55:39.160 your dream to become a doctor or whatever your dream is like you can have kids at a you know
01:55:46.900 get married have kids when you're 20 by the time you're 35 your kids are teenagers you're at that
01:55:53.200 point in time you don't need to be you know watching over them constantly they're pretty
01:55:56.680 much independent and you can go back to school then and become a doctor people are working well
01:56:01.160 into their things but the pro the difference is if you get that career first and you you don't
01:56:06.280 have your kids till you're 35 or 40 the chances are higher that your kid's going to have some
01:56:10.900 sort of you know disability and stuff like that and you've probably gotten to that point where
01:56:15.140 you're just so exhausted from your career that you're not going to even consider having kids
01:56:18.680 so it's always you know good in if you have to make that decision to have the kids first and
01:56:24.240 then go back because kids grow up they become independent and you know if you're relative if
01:56:29.120 you're still young enough. You can always go back to school. That's what I did. You know,
01:56:32.960 I went back to school after having my first child at 19 years old. So I went to post-secondary after
01:56:38.960 my kids were in school and I was able to, you know, spare the time. So it's not the end of the
01:56:43.980 world. That's all I have to say. But anyways, thanks for everybody who joined. And sorry,
01:56:49.240 Shamrock, you didn't catch the whole thing, but you'll be able to catch the replay. And like I
01:56:53.500 said, I will probably be changing the time anyways to later so more people can catch it. And so,
01:56:58.240 you know i'm not doing it during work hours when i go back because they won't appreciate that very 0.99
01:57:02.280 much uh jewish daycare doesn't like that stuff so anyways i will see you guys later thank you
01:57:07.460 so much and i will see you tomorrow um on our canadian nationalist space that i'll be streaming 0.99
01:57:14.240 fucking soft mate dead set fucking soft 0.99