Tramp96 said:
There is a reason our Founding Fathers didn't want women or non-land owners to vote.
Age also. Alot easier to be a liberal when your parents are paying the bills.
Tramp96 said:
There is a reason our Founding Fathers didn't want women or non-land owners to vote.
Heineken-Ashi said:
When a single economy (and in this case, an intermingled world economy), gets to a certain point in the long-term debt cycle, the first signs of the cycle ending are..
1. Rise in extreme populism
2. Decay of shared moral values
This has been trickling for decades, jumped with end of Bush, exploded with Obama, and has been going parabolic with 2016 with the steepest part of the curve 2020-present.
Very few ways out of this that don't lead to global war. One of the main ones is a local crisis (think 9/11) that unites a country temporarily and resets sentiment before it resumes its uptrend.
History is not kind to where we are in the cycle.
Agthatbuilds said:
Export of american progressivism and sub culture to the world
Social media
As women have gained more power with out having done the physical labor (either the building or the fighting) and essentially rode the coattails of the men before them, they've been able to force their worldview more broadly. Men are choosing a natural response of going in the opposite direction in their belief system
There's an interview that Jordan Peterson did with a British lady a couple years ago that is relevant to this convo. He just destroyed her worldview.
Read it again. Using US anecdotes to highlight what's happening locally does not make it merely a US explanation, as there are anecdotes across the world.Nanomachines son said:Heineken-Ashi said:
When a single economy (and in this case, an intermingled world economy), gets to a certain point in the long-term debt cycle, the first signs of the cycle ending are..
1. Rise in extreme populism
2. Decay of shared moral values
This has been trickling for decades, jumped with end of Bush, exploded with Obama, and has been going parabolic with 2016 with the steepest part of the curve 2020-present.
Very few ways out of this that don't lead to global war. One of the main ones is a local crisis (think 9/11) that unites a country temporarily and resets sentiment before it resumes its uptrend.
History is not kind to where we are in the cycle.
This is a US explanation, how would this apply to Nigeria, South Korea, or Brazil? South Korea is a near alien culture and Nigeria and Brazil have hilariously volatile nations from an economic standpoint.
Heineken-Ashi said:Read it again. Using US anecdotes to highlight what's happening locally does not make it merely a US explanation, as there are anecdotes across the world.Nanomachines son said:Heineken-Ashi said:
When a single economy (and in this case, an intermingled world economy), gets to a certain point in the long-term debt cycle, the first signs of the cycle ending are..
1. Rise in extreme populism
2. Decay of shared moral values
This has been trickling for decades, jumped with end of Bush, exploded with Obama, and has been going parabolic with 2016 with the steepest part of the curve 2020-present.
Very few ways out of this that don't lead to global war. One of the main ones is a local crisis (think 9/11) that unites a country temporarily and resets sentiment before it resumes its uptrend.
History is not kind to where we are in the cycle.
This is a US explanation, how would this apply to Nigeria, South Korea, or Brazil? South Korea is a near alien culture and Nigeria and Brazil have hilariously volatile nations from an economic standpoint.
You are wondering about weeds under the trees a hundred yards away while not understanding the whole forest is on fire.
Technology with the younger generation is a HUGE problem. We were not prepared for the consequences nor do we care enough to right things at the moment.TommyBrady said:
Thank God I found a woman who is conservative af and hates libs.
Also whats up with every single girl 18-24 on anti anxiety and whatever else drugs? Are they all getting more mentally ill?
Again missing the point, and likely because I wasn't clear with my attempt at the forest analogy.Nanomachines son said:Heineken-Ashi said:Read it again. Using US anecdotes to highlight what's happening locally does not make it merely a US explanation, as there are anecdotes across the world.Nanomachines son said:Heineken-Ashi said:
When a single economy (and in this case, an intermingled world economy), gets to a certain point in the long-term debt cycle, the first signs of the cycle ending are..
1. Rise in extreme populism
2. Decay of shared moral values
This has been trickling for decades, jumped with end of Bush, exploded with Obama, and has been going parabolic with 2016 with the steepest part of the curve 2020-present.
Very few ways out of this that don't lead to global war. One of the main ones is a local crisis (think 9/11) that unites a country temporarily and resets sentiment before it resumes its uptrend.
History is not kind to where we are in the cycle.
This is a US explanation, how would this apply to Nigeria, South Korea, or Brazil? South Korea is a near alien culture and Nigeria and Brazil have hilariously volatile nations from an economic standpoint.
You are wondering about weeds under the trees a hundred yards away while not understanding the whole forest is on fire.
I know the whole forest in on fire. My point is that it's a far bigger issue than you're indicating. You're seeing a forest on fire when the reality is the planet is being bombarded by asteroids.
This is yet another example of how the internet and social media when combined with women's liberation is effectively an Outside Context Problem (OCP) for humanity. This is likely the major reason for the massive decline in birth rates we are seeing everywhere in all cultures and nations.
Either humanity overcomes this and developes a resistance to it or humanity goes extinct during a global civilizational collapse.
fixer said:
My take: Women are the greater consumers of college education. This is a trend decades in the making and looks to be increasing.
It is that simple.
Heineken-Ashi said:Again missing the point, and likely because I wasn't clear with my attempt at the forest analogy.Nanomachines son said:Heineken-Ashi said:Read it again. Using US anecdotes to highlight what's happening locally does not make it merely a US explanation, as there are anecdotes across the world.Nanomachines son said:Heineken-Ashi said:
When a single economy (and in this case, an intermingled world economy), gets to a certain point in the long-term debt cycle, the first signs of the cycle ending are..
1. Rise in extreme populism
2. Decay of shared moral values
This has been trickling for decades, jumped with end of Bush, exploded with Obama, and has been going parabolic with 2016 with the steepest part of the curve 2020-present.
Very few ways out of this that don't lead to global war. One of the main ones is a local crisis (think 9/11) that unites a country temporarily and resets sentiment before it resumes its uptrend.
History is not kind to where we are in the cycle.
This is a US explanation, how would this apply to Nigeria, South Korea, or Brazil? South Korea is a near alien culture and Nigeria and Brazil have hilariously volatile nations from an economic standpoint.
You are wondering about weeds under the trees a hundred yards away while not understanding the whole forest is on fire.
I know the whole forest in on fire. My point is that it's a far bigger issue than you're indicating. You're seeing a forest on fire when the reality is the planet is being bombarded by asteroids.
This is yet another example of how the internet and social media when combined with women's liberation is effectively an Outside Context Problem (OCP) for humanity. This is likely the major reason for the massive decline in birth rates we are seeing everywhere in all cultures and nations.
Either humanity overcomes this and developes a resistance to it or humanity goes extinct during a global civilizational collapse.
You are focused on social sentiment (the weeds) looking for specific examples in other countries (the trees a hundred yards away), and while you think you know the forest is on fire, you don't even know what the forest is, which is a US financed world hundred year debt cycle coming to an end (the forest). Trying to figure out what the weeds are doing is meaningless at this point. Human nature rhymes over history. And we are approaching something far worse than political sentiment between men and women. That's merely a symptom.
Liberal white women are trying their best to destroy Western Civilization.El Gallo Blanco said:
Women will destroy Western Civilization. Feels pretty crazy to actually say, but change my mind.
Did women just start voting in America or sumpn? We love constant war...it's kind of our thing.JDL 96 said:
I'll point out male dominated societies seem more likely to go to war. Women voting and having political rights seems to decrease the chance a nation goes to war. My hunch. No data to cite.
El Gallo Blanco said:
A female dominated society sounds horrible...I would argue that we decline politically and culturally as men get less manly and feminism grows in strength and influence.
Gigem314 said:
I think it's disingenuous to assume most men are simply blindly taking the "opposite position" because women are assumed to be more progressive. But not surprising that some want to portray most men as stupid and simplistic.
I think men are more likely to place the economic priorities of their vote as the primary motivation compared to women. Hence why they aren't drawn into Marxist ideas as much as women.
I mostly think it's because women are targeted significantly more than men from left-leaning movements that minimize economics and real-world results to focus on emotional issues and topics designed to persuade women into feeling oppressed or sympathetic to socialist "shared" ideas.
An L of an Ag said:
Saw some surly dude in HEB last weekend wearing a t-shirt that said "Women Shouldn't Vote"
Heineken-Ashi said:
It's absolutely a financial problem. The financial problem created the social problem. Every single cycle has the same patterns throughout history.
Aggie Apotheosis said:
My guess is that women have watched what we men have done with pretty much unchecked power for the last millenium or so and said "screw that, we can do much better." I don't blame them.
Old Army Metal said:
Conservatives, whose primary driver is fear, saying that women are too emotional to be allowed to vote is irony on a scale I'm not sure I've seen before.
🧵 Assemblywomen by Aristophanes might be my favorite play. It predicts with surgical precision the degradation we see in our own time, of power being in the hands of geriatrics and women when the men degrade to such a degree that the exchange becomes interchangeable: pic.twitter.com/mGzrllIc5F
— Abdullah (@AvdullahYousef) February 20, 2023