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Adventures in the Patriarchy™: The Face of Radicalization

AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin

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.

Rep. Ilhan Omar: White men "cause most of the deaths within this country"

I would say our country should be more fearful of white men across our country because they are actually causing most of the deaths within this country. We should be profiling, monitoring, and creating policies to fight the radicalization of white men.

*Gigantic asterisk: Citation needed. 

These people very obviously just make things up. 

Related: Hillary Claims ‘Climate Change’ Killed 500,000 Last Year, ‘Particularly Pregnant Women’

Also, what is all of this “our country” talk?

Ilhan Omar is not American; she is a Somali migrant ingrate who took advantage of overly magnanimous American immigration policy to get herself awarded citizenship to a country that she now regularly trashes as part of her political brand. (She is also credibly accused of committing immigration fraud to get her husband, who might also be her brother, into the country as well.)

If “fighting the radicalization of white men” is the objective here, I would humbly propose that corporate state media — which, as it has demonstrated in recent history, obviously takes its civic responsibilities very seriously — stop spotlighting Ilhan Omar as, at least for me, exposure to the emissions from her stupid face-hole is one of the most radicalizing experiences I can imagine.

‘Mankeeping’

The paradox:

When men refuse to talk about their feelings, feminists denounce them for their “toxic masculinity.”

When men cave to the relentless pressure, relinquish their “toxic masculinity,” and let their emotions flow freely, that then becomes a burden that forces their wives to exert “emotional labor” in service of “mankeeping.”

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Via The New York Times (emphasis added):

Justin Lioi is a licensed clinical social worker in Brooklyn who specializes in therapy for men. When he sees a new client, one of the first things he asks is: Who can you talk to about what’s going on in your life?

Much of the time, Mr. Lioi said, his straight male clients tell him that they rarely open up to anyone but their girlfriends or wives. Their partners have become their unofficial therapists, he said, “doing all the emotional labor.”

That particular role now has a name: “mankeeping.”… 

Ms. Tilley-Colson, who lives in Los Angeles, is happy in her relationship with her boyfriend of nearly seven months, and described him as emotionally mature, funny and caring. They make a good team, but Ms. Tilley-Colson finds herself offering him a fair amount of social and emotional scaffolding, she said…

Mankeeping” put a word to her feelings of imbalance. “I feel responsible for bringing the light to the relationship,” she said.

@ebtilley #creatorsearchinsights #dontrelyonpeople #stopdependingonpeople #maleloneliness #mankeeping #emotionalneeds #lonely #societalnorms #gendernorms #lonelinessepidemic #melrobbins #goldenrule ♬ original sound - Eve

So you see, if you engage with these people on their own terms, no matter what you do, you are immoral scum, and the New York Times will excoriate you. There is no course for redemption possible; you are eternally broken.

My wife would never do this, of course, but I can’t imagine the depth of betrayal I would feel if she went to complain about our marriage to some misandrist at the New York Times who is only interested in the drama insofar as she could use the details in her effort to smear and humiliate men at large.

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