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At some point while you're reading this book, a light will switch on and you'll instantly understand. Things that have been a mystery to you for years will suddenly make sense because you'll see the inner logic of it all. The world will be a new place for you.
Most of the things you think you know about men and women are wrong, according to the author of this book. Krehbiel disassembles modern myths about how and why men and women relate to one another the way they do, then he offers a very politically incorrect agenda for how things ought to be.
"This book is a stiff slap of Skin Bracer on each cheek after a close shave," says one commenter. "Laugh-out-loud funny," says another.
"This book challenges current assumptions that are guided by feminism and victimhood and asserts without apology that 'men and women are different'; that gender roles are not the result of a worldwide conspiracy to disempower women."
These 50 politically incorrect thoughts call young men to abandon the modern approach and look at love, marriage and sex from a different point of view. It's a radical call for men to embrace the fact that, whether they like it or not, it really is "women and children first," and in order for society to survive, we have to get back to that attitude.
Please note: this is not a scholarly work. If you're looking for studies and footnotes, look elsewhere.
94 pages, Kindle Edition
First published May 13, 2014
History is not a story of men oppressing women. Yes, of course some men oppressed some women. But as a general rule, the man’s part has been to sacrifice himself to protect and save women and children.
The survival of the species requires that women have a safe place to have and raise these helpless little tikes. Somebody — not the woman — has to go out into the world and tame the wilderness. How that came to be called “oppression” is one of the mysteries that sociologists will be studying for centuries. There has been enormous effort expended to minimize and disrespect the role of house wives and stay-at-home moms and to push women into careers. There’s pressure to make women feel guilty if they don’t want to be just like men. Despite all this, many women still want to be mothers and many prefer to spend time at home with the kids. Could it be that patriarchy isn’t the right explanation for this? Could it be that women feel the way they do because that’s the way they are?
A healthy society recognizes male and female differences and encourages men and women in those roles. The result of the modern silliness is that we don’t even believe in sex roles anymore, so very few people are willing to tell men how to be men and women how to be women. That’s sexist. Let me be quite clear about this. It is sexist, and that’s a very good thing, because it’s sexist in the right way — that is, it recognizes the differences between the sexes. Sexism is not a problem. Sexism is a virtue.
Some people want you to believe that everything comes down to “boys are privileged because of patriarchy.” Well, if by “patriarchy” you mean an obligation to protect and provide, then yes. Boys are “privileged” precisely because they have the corresponding obligations.
This modern delusion that men and women are interchangeable can’t be enforced consistently because it runs straight up against reality. The species didn’t develop under the microscope of a feminist legal system, but under the reality of nature
If you want the men in your society to be anything more than lazy bums, you need a system where sex is rare, and where women are choosy about the right things.
When you consider marriage from this perspective, do you think it’s reasonable to say that men were “privileged”? We’re constantly told that all these ancient laws were designed for men’s benefit. That is exactly backwards. The rules were designed to restrain men — to break them — to bend their desires to the service of women and children, and thereby to the culture. If men had designed the rules they would have come up with something where they got easy access to sex without any strenuous effort. The modern, libertine world is far more a man’s creation than the traditional world
Part of the modern delusion is to think that any exception destroys the general principle.
One of the essential stupidities of modern life is the idea that men and women are interchangeable and can start acting like one another
My brother very helpfully defines “culture” as “what a man needs to do to get laid.” I think that’s a pretty useful way to look at things.
When women set the kind of high barrier to sex that I have been recommending — that is, only inside marriage — then it’s in all women’s best interest to shame the sluts, because when the sluts lower the market value of sex it hurts every woman and every marriage. Just because humans have sex in private doesn’t mean that sex is entirely a private affair between consenting adults. That is part of the modern delusion. We have sex in private, but sex is everybody’s business. The modern approach to sex doesn’t build a culture. It doesn’t harness the energy of the young man’s sex drive to make young men into responsible, useful members of society. It also fails to maximize women’s potential as wives and mothers. It is, in short, destroying civilized society.