Summary: On Saturday thousands of women assembled to march for many, sometimes contradictory goals. Just like Occupy Wall Street and the Tea Party. This is modern America. As these photos show, the March consisted of fun street parties — easily distinguished from serious political action.
Street parties pretending to be political action are in vogue again. Just like Occupy, the Tea Party, and the first Women’s March. The Women’s Marches have even less political content than the OWS and the TP, and hence probably will have even less political impact.
But proles just want to have fun. That’s why they’re proles, not citizens. Activity pretending to be a movement, without programs, organization, or effective leadership. These are all in effect peasants’ protests — spectacular but futile demonstrations blow off the tensions accumulated in the politically passive masses.
Also note the lack of learning from OWS and the TP displayed in these Marches. But that’s what makes modern Americans such ideal subjects for the 1%. We are a gift to them!
Photos do not tell the full story of this weekend’s March, but convey the key point. These photos — and others — are from “I Went to the Women’s March. Here Are 11 Things I Saw.” by Kelsey Harkness at the Daily Signal.
Photo one: women having fun in costume.
Martin Luther King Jr. and his peers probably would have kicked such people to the curb because they would diminish the political focus and seriousness of the Civil Rights Marches.
Photo two: Women fantasizing about being victims.
Also popular is dressing up as a character in Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale
Photo three: a hint about at America’s future.
The display in the following photo is logical, since modern feminism might result in a generation with an unprecedented number of cat ladies — unmarried women, living alone with their cats (details here). Read Abigail Tucker’s The Lion in the Living Room: How House Cats Tamed Us and Took Over the World
The real unheard women’s voices
A generation of women have been raised by feminists. They learned to have a decade of casual sex before searching for a husband, to regard men as disposable (like a fish needs a bicycle), that divorce is easy after a husband helps the children through the first few difficult years — and that independence plus child support are wonderful lifestyles.
Now the vanguard of these women are in their early thirties. Their stories are often sad, even pitiful. See Grace’s tale at Babe (an emotional description, bizarrely treated as almost a videotape by feminists) and the misadventures of Sarah described in Cheap Sex: The Transformation of Men, Marriage, and Monogamy
Many of these women suffer from the growing realization that their lives will be worse than their mothers — who had companionship, marriage, children, and family. In exchange they had lots of sex with uncaring men (partying hard until they hit the wall) and “careers” with uncaring companies (for many, lower incomes as single women than their married mothers).
The only sensible thing to say about the March
Beautiful weather all over our great country, a perfect day for all Women to March. Get out there now to celebrate the historic milestones and unprecedented economic success and wealth creation that has taken place over the last 12 months. Lowest female unemployment in 18 years!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 20, 2018
For more information
If you liked this post, like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter. See all posts about women and gender, about feminism, about romance, about marriage, about ways to reform America, and especially these…
- How to stage effective protests in the 21st century.
- Occupy & Tea Party are alike, both saving America through cosplay.
- How do protests like the TP and OWS differ from effective political action?
- Why don’t political protests work? What are the larger lessons from our repeated failures?
- Will today’s young men marry? America’s future depends which of these answers is right.
- Important: For Father’s Day: revolutionary words that will forever change the American family.
- Mark Regnerus’s essay: Cheap Sex is the Inconvenient Truth in the end of marriage.
- A look at America’s future after marriage becomes rare.
- Misadventures of a young woman in modern America.
Two books by Professor’s Regnerus.
Premarital Sex in America: How Young Americans Meet, Mate, and Think about Marrying
Cheap Sex: The Transformation of Men, Marriage, and Monogamy
