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Good column. He puts Caldecott to shame.
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Caldecott conveniently ignores the fact that her own politics has the use of force as its foundation. It's the feminists who regularly call for the redistribution of wealth and power. Why?
Because "women are victims", of course!
"Women are oppressed!"
"Women face a glass ceiling!"
And just how do these very same feminists plan to bust through that glass ceiling and redistribute the wealth and power of the nation? Through the use of government force. There is no other way.
"Oh no! We believe in democracy!"
Nope. All the votes and all the democracy in the world don't amount to a hill-of-beans without a gun to back them up. If the "will of the people" can't be enforced, then it's not worth the breath it's spoken with. All, read my lips, ALL, government power comes from the barrel of a gun.
So Ms. Caldecott, if you're so opposed to violence, just how do you plan to create your feminist utopia without the threat of force? How do you plan to create your socialist dreamland without your gun?
Don't accuse men of being violent when your feminist ideals can't exist without a gun to back them up.
"Existence exists. A is A." -Ayn Rand
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by Anonymous User on Saturday March 29, @08:20PM EST (#4)
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"Women face a glass ceiling!"
The Easter Bunny
The Tooth Fairy
The Sand Man
The ...
The glass ceiling
Sincerely, Ray
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by Anonymous User on Saturday March 29, @08:21PM EST (#5)
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The O'reilly Factor with John Kasich
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by Anonymous User on Saturday March 29, @08:09PM EST (#3)
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Another brilliant article from Glenn. I have a similar recollection of my Uncle Herman whose now been dead for over 25 years.
As his picture sits on my fire place mantle, his doughboy hat and leggings mark the generation of American soldier he was.
My Uncle Herman died a long time ago, which tells you how old I'm getting these days. He lived in poverty as long as I knew him and did a lot of sitting around most of the time. I was just a kid, when he was already an old man, but I remember some things like my Mom saying once, "He was never right after he came back." I will also never forget the time he showed me his gas mask.
He never said much about it all in front of me, or for that matter in front of others, but I know that he was gassed in the trenches in France and survived, and I also know that he was a traumatized witness to this counties 1st generation of mechanical warfare.
My Mother tells me he was happy enough living his life before he went, and that he would just as soon have not gone, but he was the 2nd generation of our German-American family, and even though he would have to face the same people from the country where his Father was born, he knew he had to go, because he was an American man now.
The one main point that I come away with from Glenn's story is that it is absolutely necessary that we stop the parasitic attack of people like the one he mentions in his article. They take, and take, and take from this country and, then just expect us to give them more, because they feel it is their birthright privilege for having been born female. Instead of having these maggots leaching off of American men their whole lives, it is high time that they began to pay the same dues that men pay. If a few of them get lost in the process, there will be just that much less cruelty and abuse that men are subjected to. The ones left behind may well, as the cave women she mentions, appreciate the tough jobs that men have historically accepted as their lot in this far from perfect world.
Sincerely, Ray
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