Chronicling the ongoing intersectional struggle to liberate women — inclusively defined as the legacy kind and the transgenders — from The Patriarchy™, one microaggression at a time.
Zoomer lib doles out sympathy for human tragedy of family friends based on 2024 presidential election vote
Displaying her clear moral superiority over MAGA Deplorables, this future Pink Pussy Hat cat lady explains that her capacity to drum up sympathy for “really tragic” life events affecting individuals close to her family depends entirely on their voting habits and is reserved for those who voted for Kamala Harris.
Let her explain in her valley girl accent— with 11 (I counted) unnecessary insertions of “like” as a filler in just over a minute of monologue:
My family will tell me, like good news about a person we know… but who did they vote for before I decide I’m happy for them?... Or, like, I’ll be told something, like, really tragic about someone, and I’ll be like, didn’t they vote for this person? Why would I feel bad for them?
In another instance, she explains that she recently interrogated a man at a bar about whom he voted for. When he refused to answer and told her it was weird that she was running an inquisition at a social drinking event, she began “screaming at him, telling him he hates women and he should stop speaking to and dating them.”
What a sad existence pic.twitter.com/dNRQHCHtHe
— Clown World ™ 🤡 (@ClownWorld_) April 22, 2025
Related: Physician: Libs Experiencing ‘9/11-Style’ Trauma After MAGA Takeover
Katy Perry regrets feminism-in-space stunt
Upon returning from her harrowing eleven-minute journey floating in space (barely past the Kármán line) in front of a camera to promote her upcoming tour, Perry cranked the dystopian cringe up to eleven by claiming that her ultra-expensive foray with other female celebrities was “about love and belonging.”
This wasn't a ride, it wasn't a destination, it was a journey, and it was a supernatural one, and my journey has always been about love and belonging.
Katy Perry says her fake space adventure united America
— miguelifornia (@miguelifornia) April 16, 2025
Yes... we all despise her pic.twitter.com/1qmb2Te30U
She is reportedly now experiencing second thoughts about the wisdom of her publicity stunt, which accomplished the seemingly nearly impossible feat of uniting all of America’s bitterly divided political factions in universal disdain.
Via Daily Mail (emphasis added):
The 11-minute expedition has received backlash for its jaw-dropping price tag, for its questionable environmental impact, and for the bizarre and dramatic antics of its six-person crew after they touched down on Earth's soil…
Following the backlash, it seems now the Roar singer is experiencing second thoughts about her flight on Blue Origin – the space exploration company founded by Amazon billionaire Jeff Bezos. An inside source has called the criticism unexpected for the former American Idol judge and 'disheartening' for the rest of the all-female crew.
'Katy doesn't regret going to space. It was life changing. What she does regret is making a public spectacle out of it,' the insider exclusively revealed to DailyMail.com…
The source admitted that Perry now regrets 'kissing the ground' after the flight as well as her 'close-up camera moments' inside the capsule – where she held a daisy up to the camera, promoted the setlist to her upcoming tour, and sang the lyrics to 'What a Wonderful World' all while suspended in microgravity.
Related: 'HuffPost Personal' Cancer: A Tragic Tale of One Husband's Total Emasculation
American women’s wildly rigorous dating app standards and their deleterious effects on sex relations
Among the many ways that dating on the internet warps the natural courting process, it enables women — who are, according to evolutionary biology, the natural selector sex — to filter out all but the most conventionally attractive men.
Via Evie Magazine (emphasis added):
Dating apps have surged in popularity in the US, with an estimated 30% of adults having used them at some point. Among women, the usage is substantial, with a Pew Research Center study showing that around 27% of females aged 18-34 have used online dating platforms.
A survey from Bumble found that 60% of women indicate that they are looking for a man over 6 feet tall in their search filters. However, that number drops steeply as the height of men lowers. 30% of women want to date men who are 5'11" and only 15% of women are willing to date men who are 5'8" or shorter. In fact, more women are willing to date extreme heights such as 7 feet tall rather than a man who is 5'11". Anyone who is under 6 feet tall tends to be overlooked generally by the majority of women.
Women are, by nature, notoriously pickier about with whom they sleep than men, who are primarily driven to spread their seed as far and wide as possible. In this way, women act as the catalysts of natural selection, reproducing the most desirable genes and disregarding the worst.
What dating apps facilitate is skewing the distribution of female dating partners wildly and unnaturally in favor of the very apex of the available men, which in turn has gone a long way to birthing the incel (“involuntary celibate”) subculture among young American men while doing nothing to improve women’s mental health either, as they find themselves in much fiercer competition with other women across a vast geographic area for the “pick of the litter” than they would otherwise be without internet dating.