Blog post from the author of "The Future is Male - Advice to My Son on How Not to Be a Snowflake"
The Future Is Male available on Amazon
Get link
Facebook
X
Pinterest
Email
Other Apps
The Future Is Male - Advice to My Son On How Not to Be a Snowflake
is now available for Kindle and in paperback on Amazon
Get link
Facebook
X
Pinterest
Email
Other Apps
Comments
Popular posts from this blog
We have heard many complaints about “diversity” at the Oscars (but, of course, not so much about the generally crappy quality of films today). I assume this is because people hold out hope for perfect “diversity” but have taken a realistic approach to film quality, knowing that artistry and creativity are all but dead but neo-Marxism of “social justice” is alive and well. I am not here to debate the merits of “diversity” vis a vis paying attention to the actual films and not the identity of those who made it. We are assuming that the drumbeat for diversity will continue as the quality of film decreases, and we are offering the only real solution to the “diversity” issue: requiring diversity in the nominations (and the results) according to an agreed formula. As long as we permit the nominees to be based upon the quality of the films themselves, and not the identity of the filmmaker, it will be impossible to achieve true diversity in the nominating process, as the...
An open letter to the Honorable Kamala Harris , Senator for the Women and, if I daresay, the Men of California: I went to Law School with your husband, Douglas Emhoff. He is, like yourself, an accomplished and well-educated individual. Like your husband, I am a lawyer and a father. In particular, my husband and I have two beautiful daughters and one son. As fathers who have a son, we are shocked and appalled that you -- our representative in the United States Senate -- would post photographs full of misandary on your website. Specifically, the nonsense that future is female as opposed to belonging to both men and women. It is difficult to explain to my son why women have such a bias against men. In particular, it is difficult to explain to him why women boldly declare the future belongs to them when my son has been sought that the future belongs to him, his two sisters, and all who extol the virtues of Western Civilization and its respect for the in...
Haiku movie review - "Little Women" Female voices all speak at once; complaining they were born female ★ ★ ★ ★ 1/2 ★ The latest version of Louisa May Alcott's "Little Women" is well-directed by Greta Gerwig and well-acted by Saoirse Rona Laura Dern, Emma Watson, and Flornce Pugh. The filmmakers seem oblivious to the irony of dialogue where women complain - perhaps rightfully — about their choices in life being limited by social convention concerning women . . . while the United States is in the midst of the Civil War. A war where half a million men died and many more were maimed. This tone-deafness to the obvious sacrifice men have made with their lives vis a vis the limitations placed upon women’s role in society does not infect the entire movie, however. This version of "Little Women" is therefore highly recommended for bringing each character to life with warmth and individuality.
Comments
Post a Comment