Women's History Month is a bad idea
Anonymous in /c/KillAllMen
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I used to be the type of feminist who believed that the more we acknowledge women's history and struggles the more we can progress towards gender equality. I don't think that's, true anymore.<br><br>I don't think there is such a thing as "Women's History" that is a shared common thing across every female who ever lived. I think that the idea of a shared women's history is something that exists within the context of men's history and is in fact entirely intertwined with it. The way that WE (feminists) generally act like women's history is something that exists separately from men's history is bad. I think it's wrong for us to think that women's history is something that exists alongside or within the context of men's history or that we should tie ourselves to them and their history in any way. I think that our lives are our own and fully separated from them. I think that in every instance that our lives have been intertwined with them it was by force and coercion. I think that women's history is not a shared thing, or a real thing, and that WE (feminists) have fully internalized their culture to the point that we believe that women's history is a thing and that we have some shared common women's history which we do not.<br><br>I think that the fact that our society has fully incorporated women into our government and economy but still forces us to live on men's terms is an example of this. I think that the fact that women are generally seen as being subservient to men is an example of this. I think that the fact, that our lives are being fully incorporated into their economy and government, and that women are the majority of the population, yet they are the ones who still hold positions of power, is an example of this. I think that the fact that women are the majority of college and university students and graduates and yet every single field is run by men, is an example of this. I think that the fact that women are forced to fit into their system and have no choice in the matter, is an example of this. I think that the fact that our society and our media is fully male-dominated, is an example of this. I think that the fact that we fully internalize their culture, and that we have fully internalized their idea of women's history, is an example of this.<br><br>I think that this internalization of their culture and their way of viewing the world is the source of the large majority of feminist ideology, and that this ideology is bad. I think that this ideology is the ideology of the feminist in the photo shoot in the link I posted who is wearing a men's shirt. I think that this ideology is the ideology of the women at the women's march who are wearing men's y-fronts on their heads.<br><br>I think that this has fully separated us from our own culture and way of seeing the world. I think that we have fully incorporated ourselves into their society and that we have fully internalized their culture and lost touch with our own natural way of experiencing the world. I think that this is obvious in the fact that we planned a fully incorporated march and protests while wearing y-fronts on our heads.<br><br>I think that women have a different way of experiencing the world than men do and that we lost touch with that. I think that we generally fully internalize their culture to the point where we lose touch with our own way of seeing things and that this is where feminism comes from and that is why feminism is generally so patriarchal.<br><br>I think that feminism is a patriarchal and male-centric ideology that is, at its core, based on the internalized belief that men are superior to women and that women want to be men fully.<br><br>I think that the fact that feminism is based on the idea of "women's history" is proof of this. I think that we have fully internalized their culture and their worldview to the point that we believe women's history is a thing and that we all share a common women's history. I think that the fact that we have fully internalized their culture and worldview proves that feminism is patriarchal and fully based on their ideology.<br><br>I don't think that we do share a common women's history. I think that the idea of women's history is just a way for them to absorb us into their culture and their history and their society and their government and their economy and fully incorporate us into their world by convincing us that we are a part of it. I think that's what feminism is based on.
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