Thursday, December 28, 2017

Sexual Misconduct: The next phase of feminism

If you've been watching the news lately, you'll see that a lot of voices in Hollywood and plenty other outlets in celebrity circles have come out and exposed the dark secrets that lie within, all starting with Harvey Weinstein's scandal. The sudden influx of women coming out after he was exposed made sense, with Weinstein being the forefront of the misconduct and harassment no longer able to compress the dirty laundry. Paul Mooney warned us about Hollywood and its hidden layers.

Now ignoring the biblical/spiritual nonsense, with the recent secrets exposed about Weinstein and his conclave of individuals who were in on it, it all comes to circle. Now then, with the other women coming out on other people in Hollywood with sexual misconduct, it was a slow start to exposing the nasty truth on fame and success and the means to obtain it.

But as of late, it seems that so many other women are 'coming out' and making claims of sexual misconduct. Sounds familiar. Almost like...

Nah.
I'm wondering if these recent claims of misconduct are actual misconduct or if it's just women who may have fooled around with these men with consent and no drugs looking for a piece of money. Even if they don't get it from their supposed rapists, they'll get some spotlight on a television show hosted by a sickly wo-man with fake tits and a blonde wig. The attention alone is enough for them.

Now, what does that say about the normal, everyday man that works with women? Will simply saying something like "You look nice today." or "I like your hair." counts as sexual misconduct? I didn't know a compliment was considered harassment. At my first job, I had my share of encounters with my female coworkers, nothing sexual, just the usual conversation and I admit to trying to get with a few of them, but now in this age of hurt feminists who are still bitter over Hillary's loss, will those advancements come back to bite me in the ass? What about the men who got further than the first date? You don't date your coworkers, that's a fact. Perhaps I dodged a bullet by not being able to go further than a simple cup of coffee or slice of pizza. I don't regret what I tried. Any guy will try to get a date or a pretty girl's attention. It's normal.

However, what Charlemagne tha God said on The Breakfast Club said in this particular Donkey of the Day triggered me to make this post and also re-examine these claims of sexual misconduct.

Are you kidding me? Men were raised on rape culture? Women dressing seductively and putting themselves out there is promoting rape culture? How about the women dressing like that NOT dress like that? You dress sexy and complain that men are looking at you in a sexy way? You're dressing sexy and provocative for yourself? Never. Women want the attention, but from a particular elite group of men, the ones they pick. The ones that actually reject them and they simply suck it up, still in awe over him. You on the other hand, will be looked at funny if you so much reject the so-called top-class women.

It's easier than it looks, just walk away. Maybe that's why the accusations are pouring out: The groupies and alpha bitches of yesterday are being phased out and ignored today. I reiterate: While there are some legitimate claims, I feel a chunk of them are in this for the money. One look at Cosby, and I believe it. The women need something to gossip about.

"I fucked X at a party, really!"

"I'm gonna be on "The Y Show as a cast member!"

"I'm going to be a singer!"

And the second and third examples are legitimate. Having to suck off some ugly executive to get a bite of fame isn't worth it, and you really don't need to do it. So it goes both ways. You could have backed down and kept your diginity, but the taste for success was damning it seems. You were okay with it as long as you won an Academy Award in the long run, right? Now, the first example is not a legitimate complaint. Consensual sex is not rape. You were likely taking drugs anyway to loosen up and if you weren't, you should have backed off and said something the very moment it happened instead of waiting twenty plus years to come out. Cosby would have been busted and arrested in a heartbeat. Instead, you're mad your good looks have faded and your womb is inert, unable to produce eggs. I don't have any sympathy for most of these women. The wave of feminism in the last few years have made it near impossible for some guys to get attention from women or even date. Even the ugly slobs have been emboldened by this push for sloppy freebleeders, but that is another can of worms.

I'm all for equality, and equality doesn't stop at pay, positions and respect. You wanna work this job, you better do the same work I do. You wanna be represented more in the video game/comic/etc. industry? Get to work. No one's stopping you from doing these things, you have to be able to do it. Here's a big one, one I don't think most women will be able to do.

You wanna work in a warehouse? Pull this load with a pallet jack. No forklift, grab that jack and get to work. You never see any woman trying to get into a position where she needs to work her body and if she tries to infiltrate, it's as the boss, not the associate. Always at a position where she can control or have some control. And for the record, catcalling isn't sexual misconduct. If it is a problem, you grabbing that musclehead's ass and running away like a schoolgirl is a problem, too. I remember a co-worker grabbing our asses in the past. Let one of us do that to them. I'd love to see a woman get charged with sexual misconduct.

Matter of fact, that's a means of getting even. Fight fire with fire.