During the last decades, male culture has been beaten down and virtually erased. Policy, education, and culture have turned against the interests of men, violating their natural rights everywhere from family courts, to tax law, to the social justice culture that has overwhelmed many college campuses. Personal and family life have similarly suffered for men, as many have become silenced even in their own homes, or forced to act against their most basic interests.
In Pull Out, Arvin Vohra presents a brutal vision of modern masculinism that rejects both the failed culture of the past and the broken culture of the present. Unflinching, unapologetic, and uncompromising, Pull Out presents a roadmap for the American man's psychological, political, and personal mutiny.
I read the preview. That was all I needed to see what garbage this book is. Yes, men face systemic hardships that certainly should be addressed, but women bear the brunt of sexism. That’s a fact. And honestly, arguing that men only have “economic value” is a pretty bleak outlook to instill in people of any gender, but it is particularly damaging to the esteem of boys. Not trashy enough yet? Not only is this book blatantly sexist: It’s also tediously repetitive. So save yourself the trouble and don’t bother reading this book. Seriously, it’s not even worth writing a decent review about.
Although I don’t disagree with all the points (particularly with regard to higher ed and the political correctness epidemic which most assuredly does not only impact men), the anger and what in some places feels like paranoia is not what I want to continue to spend my time reading. Additionally, I struggle with anyone or anything that presumes to speak for all men, women, white people, aliens, or whatever group. I did not finish this book.