A summary of modern gender-psychoanalysis

Posted under: Gender Issues, Comedy
Posted on: Friday, June 25, 2010 12:34 PM
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  1. Posted by: Nate on 7/2/2010 3:46 PM
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    Would the corollary of that make "well-dressed" females shallow and vapid?
    Beautiful on the outside to compensate for the dregs on the inside?
  2. Posted by: Mark on 7/2/2010 5:31 PM
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    Would the corollary of that make "well-dressed" females shallow and vapid?
    Beautiful on the outside to compensate for the dregs on the inside?


    Something like that. This wouldn't be a good time to admit that I used to own a little red sports car?

    All the feminists reading say "aha! that explains why he is anti-feminism!".
  3. Posted by: Nate on 7/2/2010 7:09 PM
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    I don't know Mark, that sounds like awfully sophisticated reasoning for your average feminist...

    I own a V8 myself. As well as having a devout feminist cousin. Some of the comments she makes about the car... let me just say feminist dogma rots the brain.
    Apparently because I drive a V8; I hate the planet, which is "feminine" as "evidenced" by the metaphorical name of "mother nature" and that it "gives birth" to life, which in turns means I hate women... yes, she actually said this to me with a straight face. As well as driving a car some 20 years old pre-unleaded petrol pre-catalytic converter....

    The biggest problem I have with feminism is the arrogance, the "we are equality, equality by definition is feminism". They are more concerned with maintaining power and status than fighting for equality. They're a women's interest group, who knowingly or not, extend female advantage.

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The umbrella in particular is remembered as the symbol of the nineteenth century’s disturbing obsession with individualism. In Bellamy’s utopia, umbrellas have been replaced with retractable canopies so that everyone is protected from the rain equally.
“In the nineteenth century,” explains a character, “when it rained, the people of Boston put up three hundred thousand umbrellas over as many heads, and in the twentieth century they put up one umbrella over all the heads.”