Reviewing 'Feminists: What Were They Thinking?'
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 5 minutes
Words per Minute
173.34789
Summary
Feminists, What Were They Thinking? is a documentary about the early days of the feminist movement in the 60s and 70s. It's a look into what the women of the time were thinking and what they were doing.
Transcript
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I came across this documentary a couple days ago called Feminists, What Were They Thinking?
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Now, it's not like from our perspective of what feminism, what the hell were they thinking,
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right? No, this is like, oh, let's get into their beautiful minds and see what they were thinking.
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I put it on and then I was like, all right, we're going to have to pull out some choice
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clips and just laugh about it. So Feminists, What Were They Thinking? takes aim at our current
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culture, revealing all too vividly the urgent need for continued change. It's never enough,
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is it? Ever. Anyway, we'll just, I'll let the documentary do the talking to introduce it.
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So let's pull up the first few minutes of this awesome documentary. It's going to blow your mind.
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It was a very important period in my creative life. I really fought to hold my ground at that
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time. I felt, which might have been a delusion, but I felt that I needed to fight to be who I was.
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As I look at this, it brings back the enormous energy of those days, and the gopher broke sense
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How did she convince all these women to take their clothes off?
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This old lesbian doesn't like that they were taking their clothes off, right?
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The rise of the women's movement was just part of that kind of personification.
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We had an opening in history, and we all, like Nora in Ibsen's dollhouse, we all left the
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Now, this is the gallery that's, they'll explain it, that's showing these photos, and they're
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going to interview these ladies who were in these photos years ago, right, to see where
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they're at today and what they're thinking today.
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And they interview, it's these poets, these interpretive dancers, actors, conceptual artists,
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and spiritual experts, and performers, and lesbians.
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This gallery, I went to go look at their website, and right now they have a showing, just to
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Comrade Sisters, Women of the Black Panther Party by Stephen Shames.
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Perfect with the color of white supremacy, or the colored white supremacy as well, because
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you know that this comes from like, no, no, it's us, it's us together, right?
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Comrades, sisters, it's Jews and blacks against the whites.
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All right, anyway, back to the wonderful, fantastic, amazing clip here.
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In the mid-70s, photographer Cynthia McAdams asked if she could take a picture of me for
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She said she thought women looked different because of feminism, and she wanted to see
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She started with the women she knew, artists, writers, activists, and gradually went to
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the streets of New York and L.A., and she found something more complex than political
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She captured these women at a moment when they felt the freedom to be who they are.
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Like, literally, no one is stopping these women from being, like, you're going to go out
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in the woods, and someone's, like, stopping you from being who you are and showing off
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Yeah, and it's a straight to, like, you know, some gross, offensive thing, and I think that's
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So, basically, this is, what was the Jewish feminist that's, like, anti-woke that you
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That was one of her, kind of, takeaways from this.
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It just happens that, you know, which I think is, like, the full, what do you call it, the
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full consequences of what they're doing here is what we are really seeing.
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And, actually, there's a few women who admit that in this documentary, and I pulled those
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Basically, that was the beginning of all these other horrible movements, like the anti-white
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It was Christine Hoff Summers who I interviewed, right?
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And she got angry at me because I had brought up the bombing of Dresden and all the women
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And then you did a show where you basically talked about how, you know, basically, like
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Like, oh, let's have a different review on World War II, you know.
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You need to remove my interview from your website, you know.
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This one hour when women took responsibility for themselves.
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We have all those leaded consciences raising, but women sit around.
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You're telling me all these women didn't take responsibility for themselves somehow because
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You live your own life and make your own choices.
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It becomes evident to me throughout when you watch something like this.
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But it was all like channeled through the lens of like I'm being attacked because my womanhood.
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And it's always blaming someone else for their bad choices.
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Like it's the patriarchy's fault that my life is a mess or whatever.
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So in this next clip, Lily Tomlin, who's gay, she's in her 80s, right?
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The actress, she talks about what got her into feminism.
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And they pull up a Gentleman Prefer Blondes, right?
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When I was 14, I was an usherette at a theater in Detroit, the Avalon.
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We were watching a movie one night and it was Marilyn Monroe and Jane Russell.
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A middle-aged couple were leaving and the wife was way ahead of the husband.
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You know, and he's dragging behind, because they're singing and jiggling.
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And he just kept lagging back watching the screen.
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And she said, oh, come on, they don't have any talent anyway.
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She said, I felt the embryonic kicking of feminism, even though I didn't know I was pregnant.
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Pretty girls don't have to have many other talents because they're good-looking.
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But it's interesting how they bring up, too, like, the idea that Marilyn Monroe is sexualized, right?
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Now, a lot of that was done by Jewish Hollywood.
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But nowadays, that is, like, a lot of these feminists, they think that is female empowerment, right?
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So that's kind of changed with this third wave of, like, you know, they want to use men now.
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Women of the Wall Claiming Sacred Ground at Judaism's Holy Site.
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And this Phyllis Chesler, who's going to be talking in here next, she's Jewish, right?
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And I was teaching a full college load and had published two books and was finishing a third.
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I asked to teach at a slightly different hour because I saw when I was getting sleepy.
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And the dean at my university, he said to me, well, look, you have to make up your mind.
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Funny that she mentions that about, what, I can't be this professor and have little kids?
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She doesn't have any kids that I know of, so she obviously chose her career because it was too hard to have her career writing about feminism and anti-Semitism and attacking white society while having small children at the same time.
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When I was in college, I was a philosophy minor and I took all these classes and I would raise my hand to ask a question and the male professors wouldn't call on me.
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You know the professor is like, oh, my God, what is this?
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She raised her hand and didn't get picked by the teacher, so that spurred her whole, like, you're anti-woman, now I'm a feminist, now I hate men, this whole thing.
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But then that same side that at least have aligned themselves to, like, feminism, good crowd, you can't, if you have bad experiences with, like, immigrants or something, then you're not allowed to form your worldview based off of that because that's just a random one-off, right?
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So she knows in her mind the teacher didn't pick her just because she's a woman and somehow she's just certain of this fact, right?
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She's a feminist artist and art educator, but she was born Judith Sylvia Cohen.
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Definition which refers to women when you come to eunuch.
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It's impossible to castrate a woman at least as far as the definition is concerned in a dictionary.
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It's only impossible to castrate a woman because it's assumed that she has no sex.
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I mean, as a technicality, yeah, you can remove the ovaries, I guess, from a female.
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But when you say castration, it's most commonly referred to as being, like, taken off the testicles.
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That's why, like, the female eunuch, he's like, oh, that doesn't even make sense because that doesn't exist.
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Every time you talk about an issue of feminism, you somehow have to have someone that's saying women are not human beings or wanting to be a human being is not ladylike.
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I mean, I smile a lot just because I smile a lot.
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So they're acting like a lot of these feminists are just, like, so bitter and dried up and hostile that they don't smile.
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So in her mind, she's like, I have to put on the smile to be feminine because I'm just this crusty, horrible woman.
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I thought it was men that were angry all the time.
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You're saying you really want to be angry, right?
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Well, you should be angry when people are trying to destroy your children, right, as a mama bear type thing.
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But generally, most classy people know it's not good to just go around and show anger and bitterness and just hostility all the time.
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And it's like because nature is designed it that way.
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Like if you're a woman, you should, you know, at least when you're in the age where you're like, you know.
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Don't you want to be appealing to have friends?
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Anyway, here's a here's a next good choice clip of the actress Jane Fonda, who's they had to have her in there because she's pretty, right?
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But she's talking about constant revolution on the inside.
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Constant revolution is what she's talking about.
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I mean, any healthy country, like any healthy individual, should be in perpetual revolution.
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Yeah, except if that's now, just as we said before, like if you're now turning against the establishment, then you're now you're you don't believe in democracy.
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If you want revolution from the anti-white commie regime, then you're a terrorist.
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But if it's revolution for this anti-white communism, then it's a great thing.
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Like constant revolution is not what's going to create stability and healthy, happy families and societies.
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They think that perpetual instability is that that is our stability.
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The thing is, you have to have even even as a person, you still know what the core of you and the core values and the what makes you you.
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But in her case, it's interesting, though, how this revolution never touches her house.
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Maybe she'd feel different if it was like, you know, these anti-whites that were coming for her wealth, taking away, you know, her five houses or whatever that she's profited from white supremacy and white privilege.
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But again, I mean, this is like they just want their methods are just approved as long as they are not in charge.
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And then now when they have all the power, then we can't utilize the same mechanisms and tools that they did.
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There were a lot of oak trees on our property and I would climb to the top and I could see myself leading an army up the side of the hill like Joan of Arc.
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Yeah, she's like, yeah, she sees herself as this masculine like warlord or something, you know, leading this army.
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These women, you know, goes along with joining NATO or actually pushing for it.
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Or I was the Lone Ranger, the masked bandit who would come and save people.
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Sometimes I wanted to be Tonto, too, but always active and masculine.
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For me, being a girl, being a woman was the end.
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If you wanted to live and you wanted to have power and you wanted to succeed, you were a boy.
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She is rich and famous and succeeded because she was an attractive woman.
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Imagine my shock at power hungry woman who wants to lead armies.
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And remember, she was like, I mean, the Vietnam era and stuff, like vehemently anti-American.
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I forget what the controversy was, but it was basically like, you know, shitting on military men who would like say, you know what I mean?
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They also think, and I think this might come up later, so I might be beating to the punchline here, but they don't understand that, like, the reason they have had a small period of security and, again, stability, which they don't want.
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But, and peace is basically because you have men that have, like, gone to war, right?
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Ensure that, like, non-wartime has it been achieved by war, right?
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Billy wanted an electric train set for a family.
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And thinking back, maybe it was because I was a girl.
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I remember inviting a boy from my class, Billy Young, to my house.
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And my mother said, you have to let him win all the games that you play.
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And I remember thinking, that is so really strange, and I don't think it's fair at all.
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Like, her mom would say, that's implying that she always won against boys, which I don't buy that for a second, too.
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And then her mom, right away, is like, let the boys win.
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And she's probably just trying to, like, she's probably telling her it's not, like, very ladylike if you try to compete with boys on that.
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Like, that's not what you do, you know, kind of thing.
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She's probably worried that she's a tomboy, right?
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Let's see if we can, like, rein this in a little bit.
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But notice it's always like some, oh, this one little thing that happened when they were six years old or something.
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Her dad, yeah, her dad didn't buy her a train set, and she assumes it's because she's a girl.
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Now, here's another good one from a left-wing secular Jewish lady telling her story of what spurred her into feminism.
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I was raised in a politically active left-wing secular Jewish household.
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Ah, ding, ding, ding, ding, all the checkboxes.
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I wonder if she was somewhat wealthy, probably upper middle class as well.
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But, yeah, imagine our collective shock here at that.
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For a woman of my generation, I had a very unusual experience, which is I was really fathered.
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No, like, whatever you do, you can't believe, right?
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But right here she's just implying that, like, it's her awesome, commie Jewish father here.
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He taught her good values and he fathered her and he was a good dad.
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As if, you know, all of us women, we don't have fathers that teach us values and how to think because they just want us to be these dumb women, right?
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It's funny because usually it's like if you look at the majority of, you know, the early feminists are, of course, like 90% are Jewish, right?
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And then you realize much of it just stems from their own personal experience of their Jewish fathers, things they do.
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But in this case, I guess you just mean, no, everything was perfect.
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And so, therefore, I came to these conclusions and are now where I'm at because, like, everything was great.
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But his passion was change, making a better world.
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That's like saying, if I can make an analogy, like my interest is like, I don't know, like water or like electricity or something.
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And he was a victim of McCarthy, which was always in the 50s.
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And then you look him up and it's like, oh, he comes from this long line of rabbis.
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So he was, like, involved in subversive activities.
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It was a lot of concerned people in America at that time.
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The Red Scare, which was completely legitimate, by the way.
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He might or he might not have been, like, genuinely concerned and legitimate or whatever.
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But, again, there was enough people around him to basically turn it into a charade, essentially.
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And, you know, they got a few people, like, you know, that they went after or whatever.
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But look at how the media and historically they try to treat this like, oh, my God.
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One very strong epiphany moment was in grade school.
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Clutching your dog tag, hiding under your desk, hands over your head with these, you know, sirens going.
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There was some tremendous fear, but also an idea, this does not make sense.
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I often feel that was a point where I went to poetry.
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I mean, I'm not even going to repeat myself, but, like, there's, like, oh, if women only were in charge.
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I mean, there's so many in the EU that are just like, war now, you know?
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It's not, the implication is not that it is women's fault, but it's the fault of the liberals that are telling us that if only more women were in charge, this wouldn't happen or it would be much better.
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For the most part, they put these women in charge because they're either easily manipulable, they're controllable.
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You know, there's all these reasons why they love it.
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They can have their tokens all in there, but at the end of the day, if they don't play ball with the global elite, they're not going to be in that position.
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You know, we look at how they treat, like, and she's not that great, but Giorgia Meloni in Italy, for example, or Le Pen in France, right?
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I mean, if there's a woman that actually goes against the grain and popular...
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They're fascists, and we get a deal with these women.
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Like, I can't believe they're putting this in there.
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They're like, they're lefty art scenes that are just, they're so full of themselves and just so, you know, so stinky and pretentious and stuck up.
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So was there some kind of vocoder here back in, like, 1980?
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I'm sure that I'm aggressive in some situations.
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Here, I think she's probably a man-hating dyke.
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Essentially, and really deeply non-aggressive about women.
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If you look around and see who's picking up the guns, for the most part, it's not us.
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But it's not about, okay, this is what's so retarded, too.
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This is like blaming the worker for the direction of the factory, or you use some common analogy here.
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Like, it's the people that are taking us to war or the media that perpetually is lying about shit that's, like, causing millions of people to lose their lives.
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And if they don't do that, they'll be arrested and thrown in jail.
00:26:04.100
Yeah, and forever, too, we've been hearing, too, that violence isn't just guns and, like, actually punching people in the face and shooting them in the face.
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Violence is now words, and only we're guilty of that violence, right?
00:26:15.460
But these women are definitely capable of violent sentiments and violent words and aggressive behavior.
00:26:26.160
These third-wave feminists and second-wave, they're not peacemakers.
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There's an inevitable, like, this is where it's going to end up, and look at it now kind of thing, right?
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And, I mean, that whole act had been violent, and it's caused more misery.
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And now that they have everything, they're still kvetching that it's not enough because they want total female domination, as we'll see and continue.
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In my own experience and in my own life, women tend to be the peacemakers.
00:27:11.420
Once you're going, you guys, you brothers, don't kill each other, okay?
00:27:15.840
You know, they have to, like, maintain some stuff in the very basic family level.
00:27:19.040
From that to, again, the total inability in understanding war, why it happens, the necessity of war, or defending yourself, or going, you know.
00:27:28.940
Now, you wouldn't even be here if it wasn't for men that had been at war.
00:27:34.680
I, and I have a feeling that she would like armies that go after, like, homophobic, racist, you know, anti-Semite peoples.
00:27:44.000
Other models of peacekeeping, I think you can, big statement, look to women to be the ones who are very skilled at that.
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Very, very skilled at understanding networks and how things work.
00:28:00.760
Just look at Merkel, the wonderful things that she accomplished as a woman in Germany.
00:28:05.960
Look at, and it's such a peaceful place now, right?
00:28:15.300
And it's like this, with that particular woman, it's just like women can do no wrong.
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Because she's a lesbian and she loves women sexually, now they can do no wrong.
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And if they had power, everything would be perfect.
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If you criticize them, then you're a misogynist.
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It's the same thing as saying, like, oh, this person who's Jewish is doing something bad.
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So this is the blanket protection of the category.
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And therefore, you can never, you know, criticize them, which, of course, is very dangerous, right?
00:28:48.960
Now, this one was just kind of funny, like her opening.
00:28:51.480
This is some, like, spiritual guru expert lady or something.
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I think she's Hungarian, but she just has to say one line to kind of put in perspective.
00:29:09.880
And from these two sources, my father was the one who recognized me.
00:29:15.400
When I was three months old already, I was not yet christened.
00:29:19.300
And on my mother's side, my grandma and my mother's older sister wanted to do that because
00:29:32.220
And that religion became feminism and liberalism, right?
00:29:42.160
They love to, like, let's trigger all the right people here.
00:29:45.980
I mean, I'm sure they genuinely also believe it, you know, kind of thing.
00:29:51.700
It's just so cringe, though, you know, and the way she has a scarf and she thinks she's
00:29:58.960
And just they're just also full of themselves and pretentious.
00:30:17.200
And just, like, open a portal to get help from the devil.
00:30:25.360
I felt that the oppression of women is rooted in religion.
00:30:37.000
That part, I would agree that there's some junk there, right?
00:30:48.420
But we didn't have that in even pre-Christian Europe.
00:30:51.120
Like, there weren't these divisions between the sexes and issues.
00:30:54.440
And fighting over, you know, gender roles and all this crap, right?
00:31:01.180
I mean, they usually bring it up because they're seeing that there's, like, oh, that's Western civilization, right?
00:31:10.880
They're not going to blame the brown religions.
00:31:11.560
It's man and patriarchy and Christianity or religion, you know, kind of thing.
00:31:16.320
But then it's like, well, which kind of, you know, what kind of religion?
00:31:21.040
They have to make sure that they check all the boxes to trigger the right people that they're going after.
00:31:25.820
Little boys think that they're going to grow up to be God.
00:31:29.780
We say, hey, church, if you really, really think of all human beings, you better start changing that image of, you see, that thing?
00:31:42.840
They have definitely, the leftists have been very successful and in some cases maybe accurately even.
00:31:49.840
But to take religion and all the morals that the leftists have, pointing to it and say, well, according to Scripture, you have to A, B, Z, D, E.
00:32:09.020
Take shit from religion and they say, you have to now therefore obey us.
00:32:13.000
That's why in some cases, we'll have a story on that later too, by the way, a lot of these trannies now are like going into the church.
00:32:19.200
And it's kind of just like, it's just bloomed into this thing, which they have over time managed to successfully manipulate all the Christians into believing that, yeah, that's really what we, we should be open-minded.
00:32:34.460
A homemaker the rest of my life, I want to know what I'm doing.
00:32:37.020
They love making fun of these clips, don't they?
00:32:39.640
The 1950s, the home economics, women learning how to do things around the house.
00:32:44.400
And granted, there was like newer technologies in the kitchen and they had, you know, vacuums and all these cool things.
00:32:50.200
It was like changing society was making it actually easier for households.
00:32:54.820
I mean, the 1950s was a good time for women because it also, they didn't have to go to work until this whole feminist movement and getting women in the workplace, right?
00:33:05.880
Yeah, I mean, it was, I can agree to the extent that it's a little bit packaged.
00:33:11.460
And, and, but it's also because of the times that you're like, you just had a massive world war.
00:33:16.860
Like people just wanted it like simple, you know what I mean?
00:33:22.520
Let's not have a bunch of commie bullshit in here.
00:33:25.480
Here's a man, here's a woman, you have your damn house, here's the dog, here's your, you know, one car and you go to work and you come home and dinner is ready.
00:33:34.640
Like it was, it was simple and it's like, okay, it might not be the most amazing, you know, thing, but, but it was.
00:33:52.120
There's always like, there's always a bunch of people that are born in the wrong time, you know, for the wrong thing.
00:33:58.640
And the other thing is, as we'll see, like some women liked that.
00:34:01.100
Not every woman wanted to go lead armies and have their feminist vagina, vagina art, as we'll see later.
00:34:08.060
This is a, a, a vocal minority that are kvetching at the rooftops.
00:34:14.020
What can they teach you in home ec classes that you can't learn right here at home to pick up after you get married?
00:34:20.260
We had to bring a demonstration into homemaking because I had a brother who was 15 years younger.
00:34:27.020
I brought in a demonstration of how to diaper a baby and I got an A.
00:34:34.320
One of the things they taught us in home ec was how to cook.
00:34:59.380
Things that every, every day, things that you're going to need to know to do.
00:35:04.020
I mean, I wish we had that for like basic gardening skills or animal husbandry or something, you know, classes like that.
00:35:10.920
Like life skills, things that kids actually need to know.
00:35:13.700
Actually hands-on stuff that you're like, okay, this is stuff I can use, you know what I mean?
00:35:17.700
But these people will never, it's always a constant rebellion.
00:35:22.160
And you realize most of it is just against nature, right?
00:35:25.780
They refuse to accept their nature, what they are.
00:35:28.320
These people, they, I think I made the comparison, but like if they have to go to the bathroom once a day or multiple times a day, obviously.
00:35:38.820
That's a form of oppression that's tied to your biology.
00:35:42.620
And it needs, we need to liberate us from that oppression.
00:35:45.100
And again, I don't want to be long-winded about it, but that's why these people will gobble up virtual reality and transhumanism and all this.
00:35:52.640
They will begin to edit everything you can imagine just to liberate themselves from the oppression of nature and the slavery.
00:36:06.880
I was in a male-dominated academic environment.
00:36:25.400
I had a boyfriend from high school that I followed through college.
00:36:30.220
So I was following a guy that I thought I would be spending my life with.
00:36:42.580
Oh, I don't want to hear an old lady talking about her clitoris.
00:36:45.860
And so it was about, like, being run by her vices, right?
00:36:53.900
So basically she's going to tell the story of because she had this one boyfriend who didn't satisfy her.
00:37:04.680
It wasn't until she met this lefty, liberal, feminist professor, questionable pedophile, that she became a liberated woman.
00:37:16.080
Like, just because you had one guy who was bad at sex doesn't mean, like, every single man is, like, horrible and I need to become a feminist.
00:37:24.160
I didn't ever experience gratification until I met someone who was, like, 26 or whatever in college.
00:37:35.240
Uh, is that against, isn't that against school policy?
00:37:40.400
This professor is, like, finding the clitorises of his female students?
00:37:45.940
Uh, and now you know why there weren't a bunch of men in your field, or a bunch of women, but it was all men, right?
00:37:58.060
There's something to complain on, and it's the weirdest thing.
00:38:07.040
It's just, like, no bigger picture of anything.
00:38:11.560
You saw her earlier, and she's a far left-wing, Zionist, Jewish, feminist icon leader.
00:38:19.560
And she's telling her story of what made her become a radical feminist leader.
00:38:24.000
When I met Abdul Karim, and that's not his real name, we talked about Dostoevsky and Proust, and we were film buffs and opera buffs.
00:38:34.360
He promised a life of adventure and travel, and I was lusting for that.
00:39:32.880
For one family to merge with another, which happens when there's marriage and kids are going
00:39:37.080
to come out of it, one family approves the other.
00:39:40.420
And by the way, her racist family here, well, you know, they were vindicated, though, for being
00:39:47.300
Well, of course, yeah, because they knew, like, no one knew his family, meaning we don't know
00:39:51.340
what they, what's their history, what have they done, is there mental illness in the
00:39:55.060
family, is there some disease, I mean, all kinds of things, right?
00:40:10.140
He never told me that his father had three wives and 21 children.
00:40:19.640
He didn't tell me I would be living with my mother-in-law.
00:40:29.380
Can you apply that to today, then, what's happening in Europe and things like that,
00:40:36.700
No, there's continued to be anti-white and real against, you know, straight white male
00:40:43.400
So the one time they kind of approved this, like, anti-Muslim, I guess that's what it is
00:40:51.260
You see, the Jewish woman who complains on the Muslim, that's totally legitimate.
00:40:54.740
Who very smoothly says, Madam, we need your passport.
00:41:09.940
I instantly became the property of a large, wealthy, polygamous Afghan family and a citizen
00:41:21.660
Yeah, so she wrote that book, a National Jewish Book Awards winner there.
00:41:27.440
And then when I saw this, I'm like, is that what the U.S. is in Kabul?
00:41:32.060
I mean, the fight against Taliban, not because of this book, but I'm saying global homo always
00:41:37.380
have to, like, destroy things that they don't, like, they can't pervert like this, right?
00:41:50.040
Yeah, so this next one, just to give you an insight into the character, the minds of
00:41:53.460
some of these women that are influential in the feminist movement, this woman's talking
00:41:57.380
about her breakdowns that she had before finding feminism.
00:42:01.680
I had several breakdowns and actually was in hospital for periods of time, and what they
00:42:20.740
would do in these hospitals really would be to retrain you to go back to what you were
00:42:26.580
doing before, you know, to be a good girl, to be a housewife.
00:42:37.160
They were instructing her in other ways, too, but because she had mental problems, she wasn't
00:42:42.260
hearing things fully, you know, but they were probably telling her, just chill out, just
00:42:58.880
And I remember my father saying, oh, she's just going to get married anyway.
00:43:07.140
I felt that I had something else to do other than just get married and be Mrs. Somebody.
00:43:15.380
Okay, they act like life is over because you're getting married, that you can't do anything
00:43:24.200
And you'll find that she ends up with a blanket over her head.
00:43:27.640
She says, well, obviously, you married the wrong guy.
00:43:32.940
And then this spurs her feminism and her, you know, anti-male sentiments because she married
00:43:38.740
See, it's like any time you get into their stories, it's one bad experience or one bad
00:43:48.540
Someone said something to you, and then, oh, my gosh.
00:43:52.600
There should be no consequences for my bad decisions.
00:43:57.040
But I ended up putting a husband through medical school.
00:44:05.220
How does she do that if she wasn't a liberated woman and couldn't go work?
00:44:12.020
Unless she was wealthy from before or something?
00:44:41.300
And she became like some big, you know, composer, violinist, you know, in the Hollywood Bowl
00:44:58.720
And later on, I couldn't verify this, but later on, she was talking about lesbians.
00:45:13.260
I mean, ultimately, this is a vengeance, like, ideology, right?
00:45:16.040
Like, it's men's fault or patriarchy and we need to destroy it.
00:45:19.880
And it's like, because, you know, my dad didn't give me the train set or, you know...
00:45:29.600
I'm not hearing real oppression here, is what I'm saying.
00:45:34.380
And it's fascinating that they include all this stuff.
00:45:42.740
And so when I was off on my own, after I got away from that first husband, literally,
00:45:53.880
I got two abortions in Mexico, one here, where I almost died.
00:46:11.340
Didn't she learn after the first abortion that maybe you need to use condoms or something?
00:46:22.140
If you think one thing, what this movement would be about them would just be to, like,
00:46:25.800
educate women about the basics, like, function, like here.
00:46:29.140
Avoid this, we know, if you don't want to have kids or something.
00:46:42.400
Again, I'm surprised they're including some of this stuff here.
00:47:00.260
She's going to come on and talk about her amazing feminist art here in just a second.
00:47:41.420
She was the producer of that lovely feminist art piece there called Womanhood.
00:47:46.200
And then she's going to talk about her feminist art wasn't selling, and so therefore, you know, men are oppressive because they didn't want to buy her shitty art.
00:48:02.900
Of professional practice in Southern California, I got sick to death of trying to act like a man.
00:48:21.860
Some of the radical feminist literature is coming out of New York.
00:48:26.260
And, of course, it's speaking to everything I'm feeling.
00:48:28.800
You know, like I was getting really pissed off by being told that I couldn't be a woman and artist, too.
00:48:42.640
They just lie to justify their positions politically.
00:48:47.180
Or some of them, like these types of women, I think they know it's a corrosive force on society and the West, and they're using it as a weapon.
00:48:58.040
There are plenty of female artists and authors.
00:49:12.480
Get, like, moved along on the choo-choo train of success and everything, every single...
00:49:36.320
So because people didn't buy her art, it's because they're anti-woman.
00:49:40.520
Well, maybe they just didn't like your shitty, ugly art.
00:49:43.140
You don't want to have cocks and pajamas in their living room.
00:50:02.940
This is Meredith Monk, who's also some kind of performance artist or writes performance art.
00:50:13.120
We're going to play a little bit of her education of the girl child.
00:50:17.640
This is a hilarious, pretentious performance or whatever.
00:50:24.600
I just had this incredible sense of relief that what I had suffered and struggled with alone...
00:50:32.480
Somehow I realized that it was not my problem, that it was just more a social problem.
00:50:39.460
Because I never have slept very well, but I get a lot of ideas when I'm tossing a turning.
00:50:47.500
If the education of the girl child was the kind of education that told us that we have
00:50:53.520
all possibilities, that there are no limits to our possibilities...
00:51:04.840
But nowadays they tell a woman, you could be anything you want to be.
00:51:09.280
And that's not making the world a better place.
00:51:13.520
And now they're going to be disappointed perpetually instead.
00:51:19.700
Especially white women, but the SSRIs, the happy pills, right?
00:51:48.280
I think that if there's an advance in half of the human race, then that also helps the
00:51:55.540
There's an advance in one half of the human race also helps the other.
00:51:59.080
Okay, white male advancing helps the white female advance, or all females.
00:52:05.400
Everything that the white men have done has helped the world advance.
00:52:17.820
The aha movement was discovering that I was a lesbian.
00:52:56.160
I don't really identify with being aware of being gay so early in life, but I was always
00:53:02.200
aware that there was something different about me.
00:53:04.820
I had relationships with men, and they did very little for me.
00:53:09.520
And this is a woman I really liked and was really close to.
00:53:12.300
Once I had been with a woman, it all came clear to me.
00:53:16.960
But I never felt that something was wrong with me for it.
00:53:34.660
Closer to my girlfriends than they felt towards me.
00:53:41.500
And I remember one night, I got a hold of a free press, and in the back of the free press
00:54:06.980
I remember going to that consciousness raising group.
00:54:12.780
Sitting cross-legged on a couch, looking at everybody, and trying to figure out, what does
00:54:26.980
So the reason why she was standing with a blanket over her head in this marriage was unhappy.
00:54:35.080
All same terminology, which shows you that the cultish mentality works, right?
00:54:44.340
Women, and to make them think they're lucky to be slaves.
00:54:54.480
Do you not clean for yourself and cook for yourself?
00:55:01.660
We all do things to help take care of our family.
00:55:03.960
Like, a lot of these women didn't have children.
00:55:09.860
This is really peak individualism, though, when you think about it.
00:55:12.040
Because it means, like, yeah, they might complain that they're doing it for themselves,
00:55:19.000
Like, they have to do it for themselves, right?
00:55:20.400
But as soon as you have to cooperate with other human beings,
00:55:23.760
not about you create, like, the unit of a family, right?
00:55:31.280
I mean, it's obviously mostly bitter women or gay women.
00:55:38.120
But then it's funny because a lot of these gays,
00:55:39.800
they just kind of fall into the stereotypical, like,
00:55:42.440
oh, you're the guy and I'm the girl role anyway.
00:55:47.160
One of my best friends was organizing female office workers.
00:55:51.420
Over the years, she had told me stories about what happened
00:55:54.260
and how women were treated in large, especially institutional offices,
00:55:59.760
So out of the home and into the office, but then there's problems there, too, right?
00:56:03.220
It's never good enough until they're, like, running every single corporation.
00:56:06.580
And, again, the idea that this, of course, they fought for,
00:56:10.040
and now you're working for a man or a bank or a capitalist system
00:56:15.000
versus being at home with your, you know, working.
00:56:21.180
You have a family, and you're doing it together, right?
00:56:26.200
We went to Cleveland to meet with all these secretaries
00:56:28.880
and went around, and the women all told their stories,
00:56:33.740
Do any of you ever fantasize what you'd like to do to your boss?
00:56:53.080
See this trajectory of how it's never good enough
00:56:55.760
until it's just, like, total female domination.
00:56:59.220
but when they have more than that, which they do today,
00:57:42.020
while, you know, we, the neoliberal economic order
00:57:52.060
Have two people now working instead of just one.
00:57:55.100
It's all very, like, none of this solves anything.
00:57:59.640
Now they can, like, dream over slapping their boss
00:58:01.660
across the face as opposed to, like, rebelling against their husband.
00:58:12.080
And then they can exploit them or whatever they say.
00:58:15.780
But, yeah, two-income households is what it takes now
00:58:19.300
for most people to be able to keep their family afloat.
00:58:22.600
So women who didn't want to go work now have to
00:58:34.260
And they did, in fact, make, have some successes
00:58:48.160
And it's basically different to women in Western history.
00:58:53.660
I'm surprised, Western civilization, as it says here.
00:58:58.700
It's like, yeah, it's flowers and things like that.
00:59:20.160
Let's go look at these flowers that look like vaginas.
00:59:46.400
Yeah, it's always like just something dirty and creepy about it.
00:59:51.400
and they always have a way of just making it just seem,
01:00:07.120
that this is like degenerate commie bullshit, right?
01:00:40.860
They start telling what the end goal is, right?