Quite frankly the behavior of some women has gotten out of hand, and
it's because we men have become cowards and wimps. The more men take of
double-standards, ridiculous demands and just plain nonsense, the more
these women are going to give.
You say, "What do you have against the fairer sex, Williams?" I say
nothing. While some of my best friends are women, I'm getting tired of
all the sex-based nonsense. Let's look at it.
On the "Today" show last November, Katie Couric suddenly deviated from
her perkiness and asked a jilted bride, in reference to the groom who
jilted her, "Have you considered castration as an option?" There was no
storm of protest, and perky Katie remains on NBC's payroll. Fred
Hayward, a men's rights organizer, told U.S. News & World Report writer,
John Leo, "Imagine the reaction if Matt Lauer had asked a jilted groom,
'Wouldn't you just like to rip her uterus out?'" Matt Lauer would have
been handed his walking papers.
Leo reports that up until recently the 3M company put out post-it
notes with the printed message: "Men have only two faults: everything
they say and everything they do." Hallmark went further with a greeting
card that said, "Men are scum ... Excuse me. For a second there I was
feeling generous." Then there was the American Greeting Cards ad that
says on the front: "Men are always whining about how we are suffocating
them," with the inside punch line, "Personally, I think if you can hear
them whining, you're not pressing hard enough on the pillow." What do
you think would happen if a company had an ad that joked about killing
women?
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Young boys aren't spared from the feminist attack. At a Boston area
elementary school, nobody objected when girls wore shirts emblazoned
with "Girls Rule" or when they taunted boys with a chant that goes,
"Boys go to Jupiter to get more stupider; girls go to college to get
more knowledge." But when boys donned shirts emblazoned with "Boys Are
Good," there was protest. One of the teachers protesting sported a
button saying, "So many men, so little intelligence."
Women can get away with saying just about anything demeaning, evil
and harassing to men, while men get into trouble for making the most
innocent compliment. That happened to Seth Shaw, a counselor at an
elementary school in Fort Worth, Texas. He said, "Hello, good-looking,"
to a new female employee, was charged with sexual harassment and wound
up suffering a 20-day suspension without pay.
Leo's Aug. 21 U.S. News & World Report article suggests that all of
this can get worse if foreign feminist demands reach our shores. Young
women in Sweden, Germany and Australia have launched a new cause: They
want men to sit down while urinating. Part of their demand is related to
the "splash factor," but more crucially, men standing up to urinate is
deemed by these women as triumphing in their masculinity, "a nasty macho
gesture" and by extension degrading to women. Feminists at Stockholm
University are campaigning to ban campus urinals and one Swedish
elementary school has already removed urinals. I don't know about you,
but, if I don't tell women to stand up to urinate, they're not going to
tell me to sit down to urinate.
The bottom line is that we men had better stand up to these feminist
wackos before our last resort will be well-deserved spankings.