sus
Moderator
I gave you a very good strategy, the only strategy. If you don't believe me watch Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind.I'm still waiting for someone to provide some sort of strategy or tactics we can use to fight the manosphere....
I gave you a very good strategy, the only strategy. If you don't believe me watch Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind.I'm still waiting for someone to provide some sort of strategy or tactics we can use to fight the manosphere....
I agreed with your strategy earlier, but that's not the only strategy. I mean, I admit that any viable strategy must recognize the other side as worth talking to, but that doesn't exactly tell me how to attack the manosphere. In a way your strategy is more of a pre-condition for any viable strategy. Of course, we have to listen to the other side, the side of hypermasculinity. The question is, what are we going to tell them?I gave you a very good strategy, the only strategy. If you don't believe me watch Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind.
Nausicaa is a diplomat who ends a war by refusing to fight its battles as warrior. Lots of gender splitting in that film too; the men are always the warriors and the women are the peace-makers/bridge-builders. Asbel, then, is a male lesbian with your framework—he's the prince of his tribe, who is essentially won over to Nausicaa's way of seeing/thinking, which is to seek cooperation and mutual understanding, rather than eradicate threats.And I love Nausicaa. I love Miyazaki. My favorite movie of his is Princess Mononoke. Ashitaka is a male lesbian. But why is Nausicaa relevant?
Well, I'm not sure, it's a good question!The question is, what are we going to tell them?
You could do what most others have done and just post a bunch of videos with a brief bit of text under one, though.
Another open question: does anyone on this forum want to represent femininity while remaining a man?
Surely we can all agree that femininity is under-represented in our society, right?
So as far as I can see, the usual "feminist" response (read: not "feminine"—in fact, quite masculine of a response, to use your paradigm) to incel culture is exactly the wrong approach. It's the napalm approach, the flamethrower approach. Burn these disgusting people out, shame them, excommunicate them, call them pathetic worms.
I think the admirable feminine-coded virtues that MaleLesbian cares about are in fact under-represented. There are just plenty of other toxic femine-coded virtues that are endemic to modern society, and seem to have combined with some of the most toxic masculinist values.I don't know. The biggest pop stars are mostly women. The media's focus is currently on women and minorities. Whether I not I feel corporate diversity is sincere, things certainly feel more balanced in terms of it not just being straight white guys all over the TV, cinema, music and magazines.
Some of it is, some of it isn't. Lotta people, big range. You get the same variety of expression with nearly every ideology.You can't blame them too much. The incel stuff is fucking horrible.
I think the admirable feminine-coded virtues that MaleLesbian cares about are in fact under-represented. There are just plenty of other toxic femine-coded virtues that are endemic to modern society, and seem to have combined with some of the most toxic masculinist values.
a marriage of the hermeneutics of suspicion and might is right.
You can't blame them too much. The incel stuff is fucking horrible.
Oh right. Well it obviously made a huge impression on me.I did. Shiels was asking if I ever put them all in a playlist after the fact.
No, I just watch joshi.@malelesbian do you fetishise fighting women in the octagon while moist?