In 1993, Warren Farrell, Ph.D. exposed us to many
poignant truths about the reality of being male in America at the
time. Among them are:
- 94
percent of occupational deaths occur to men.
- Every
workday hour, one construction worker in the US loses his life
- Men
have been the overwhelming majority of the cannon fodder in every major
war ever waged.
- Most
successful suicides are male, and unemployed males commit suicide at twice
the rate of their employed brethren.
- 96%
of the adult homeless in San Francisco are male. The national median
at the time of writing was 85%.
And more besides. Things have not improved either.
Not for most men anyway. Eighty
percent of job losses in the 2007 to 2009 time span were male. This
led to the coining of the term "mancession", which did not end until
2015, according
to some sources. Except for black males, which must doubtlessly be
the fault of white privilege.
Some
men have done quite well through it all, however. Which ones?
Probably not the ones reading this, despite what the feminists are no
doubt telling them about their male privilege. Which all men have,
regardless of race, sexual orientation or physical ability. Or, you know,
anything else that might impact social inequality. If you're still
confused, go and take a cl ... I mean course on it. The important thing
is that men as a cl ... as a group supposedly have all the power and women have
none.
And the statistics bear that out, as any woman will tell
you. Women still suffer from a very
real wage and wealth gap compared to men. Which can only be
explained by men, all men, hording all the money to themselves. But not
evenly. White
men, quite naturally, have the most. Even the homeless white men
referenced above? Well, yes I suppose. The historical reality,
after all, is that blacks were slaves and were discriminated against in the Jim
Crow era while whites were not. That's the only real explanation open to
us, since race and gender are the only social axes upon which wealth and power
are distributed. So all white males benefited,
and benefited equally. Or so the best social commentators of our
time will tell us. The ones who graduated at the top of their cl ... I
mean, got the best marks while in college.
The Myth of Male Power was a book not lacking in
power. It quite effectively takes a wrecking ball to notions popular
at the time of its writing, and still popular today, that men have gone and
made everything wonderful for themselves at the expense of all women.
Which needed to be said. It apparently still does need to be said,
and even
I've said it. But not nearly as well as Dr. Farrell said it. In
some respects, The Myth of Male Power is in a cl ... a
category by itself.
Men continue to be the disposable sex, and growing numbers
of men continue to be mad about it. And so they should be. Though
the mancession is over, most men are finding job prospects limited and wages
stagnant. If you take the "red pill" and go into the online
"manosphere", you will find that feminism has been responsible for
most of men's woes over the years. We can only guess that all of those
military and workplace fatalities and the economic struggles that working cl
... I mean just men face are due to feminism also. Even though feminism
is scarcely more than two hundred years old and men have been dying in wars and
working in drudgery for a lot longer than that.
And I don't blame the manosphere types. They do have
legitimate gripes with feminism. No, really. They do. Because
many feminists have been blaming all men, at least collectively, for their own
struggles, which are sometimes different but quite frequently look the same as
well. Lagging wages, declining opportunities, all too frequently outright
poverty. Whose fault could all of this be? After all, corporate
profits are up again. Who could be making it if not white men and
their centuries of privilege? It's not like there's any other cl ... I
mean category of people who could be benefiting at the expense of women?
Well that's obviously preposterous, and you'll learn that
quite quickly the deeper into the underworld of the internet you go.
You'll find that it goes beyond feminism. The deeper problem is
"cultural
Marxism." Or should I say, (((cultural Marxism))). You
see, this "Marxism" has to do with this guy in the 19th century who
must have figured that white western civilization was a bad, BAD thing because
it oppressed and colonized women and people of color. And what's funny
about it is that if you go to college and take a cl ... course on critical theory, for
example, or women's or black studies, they will indeed teach you that those
terrible things did happen. And the only reason they happened was because
racism and sexism. For the benefit of white males, just for being white
males! After all, it's not like there's any other way that any other cl
... group of people could have benefited from the dispossession of indigenous
people and African slavery.
Or so the cultural Marxist colleges will teach you.
But it's all a lie, don't you know? A (((lie!))) Any fool
worth his salt knows that white males are struggling to get by these days.
Well, most white males, anyway. The real blame lies with the Jews,
or so I've read, because I can't imagine any other cl ... category of people
who might benefit from stagnant wages and unemployment among the white male
working cl ...
One other thing that I've run into with all of this study of
the politics of race, gender, culture and oppression. And that's this
idea of linguistic
reclaimation - a once dirty, derogatory or forbidden word being
brought back into acceptable use by the communities that experienced oppression
under that word, or perhaps by the absence of that word.
Right off hand, I'd say there's one word that people of all
races, genders and sexual orientations have been far too afraid to say for far
too long now, and our racial and sexual politics have been distorted almost
beyond reason and recognition as a result. The first task of the Alt-Left
should be to reclaim that word.
A good place to start might be to take a look at what that
Marx guy (Karl, not Groucho, in case you were wondering) really had to say.
Many thanks for these posts!
ReplyDeleteI would like to mention that there is a particular class of identity politics that has been used to displace class dialectics: independentism. I know this is not the case in most countries, but wherever it is present (Scotland, Catalonia, Basque Country), the independentist discourse is very much the leading force in the "declassification" of the workers.