Anonymous wrote:
"Family life"? What does that mean? You mean how happy men were with their families? Or how happy everyone was to be taken care of by someone who didn't have a choice because that was the only role that person had in society?
I can guarantee you I'm a whole lot happier now than I would have been living in 1915. Women couldn't even vote then.
Anonymous wrote:
I think we all need to take a step back and get some perspective. Recent generations have been through unthinkable, enormous, comprehensive changes. There are huge differences in every generation to the one before it. My grandparents lived wildly different lives than my parents, mine is different to both, my childrens' different to each preceding. And these culture and environment changes are not small, and we can't rely on previous experience to negotiate them, nor can we be sure we can find people we see eye to eye with to form new relationships.
It's tough. It's challenging on everybody in various ways at different milestones in the life cycle.
Some perspective on this will help us move forward cooperatively and compassionately.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[W]e expect and demand more from men, more than a roof over our heads and a steady income. We expect men to have good self esteem, integrity, emotional health and maturity, a good work ethic, and good parenting and partner skills. As the playing field has leveled, men have had to up their game. And the antifeminists are the ones who can't or don't want to. They are the ones who can't adapt.
. . .
Anonymous wrote:I don't get it. Why don't men pick up the devotion to children and hearth and home aspects of "femininity"?
I think Ironwood's partial response to that is, "Sure, Masculinity ain't what it used to be either, and we own that. We allowed ourselves to be talked out of our better masculine nature in the false hope that it would lead to a better domestic life, social harmony, and more sex. What we got was more demands, more requirements, and less sex."
Some do take up hearth and home, but the manospherians will tell you that these men generally aren't as attractive to women. Anecdotally, I've certainly seen around here that a lot of women want a "man's man," and/or "a provider." So, if a young man's options are to make himself less attractive by taking care of hearth & home or to remain attractive in exchange for more demands, more requirements, and less sex, he's likely to just check out, sleep around where he can (play video games and watch porn where he can't), but not commit to marriage.
Well then, luckily loser dude won't be passing on his genes or personality to any future generations. So this generation of failure men -- ones who can't help out at home and also can't live up to higher expectations -- will die out. Fingers crossed all the FWB women they are hooking up with are feminist enough to use BC.
Do you think family life is, as a whole, happier, less happy, or about the same as it was 100 years ago? Do you think feminism had an impact one way or the other?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[W]e expect and demand more from men, more than a roof over our heads and a steady income. We expect men to have good self esteem, integrity, emotional health and maturity, a good work ethic, and good parenting and partner skills. As the playing field has leveled, men have had to up their game. And the antifeminists are the ones who can't or don't want to. They are the ones who can't adapt.
. . .
Anonymous wrote:I don't get it. Why don't men pick up the devotion to children and hearth and home aspects of "femininity"?
I think Ironwood's partial response to that is, "Sure, Masculinity ain't what it used to be either, and we own that. We allowed ourselves to be talked out of our better masculine nature in the false hope that it would lead to a better domestic life, social harmony, and more sex. What we got was more demands, more requirements, and less sex."
Some do take up hearth and home, but the manospherians will tell you that these men generally aren't as attractive to women. Anecdotally, I've certainly seen around here that a lot of women want a "man's man," and/or "a provider." So, if a young man's options are to make himself less attractive by taking care of hearth & home or to remain attractive in exchange for more demands, more requirements, and less sex, he's likely to just check out, sleep around where he can (play video games and watch porn where he can't), but not commit to marriage.
Well then, luckily loser dude won't be passing on his genes or personality to any future generations. So this generation of failure men -- ones who can't help out at home and also can't live up to higher expectations -- will die out. Fingers crossed all the FWB women they are hooking up with are feminist enough to use BC.
Anonymous wrote:If they want a woman to stay home with the kids and cook, there are plenty of women who enjoy that out there, who have made the choice to do that instead of a career (but the choice is thanks to feminism).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[W]e expect and demand more from men, more than a roof over our heads and a steady income. We expect men to have good self esteem, integrity, emotional health and maturity, a good work ethic, and good parenting and partner skills. As the playing field has leveled, men have had to up their game. And the antifeminists are the ones who can't or don't want to. They are the ones who can't adapt.
. . .
Anonymous wrote:I don't get it. Why don't men pick up the devotion to children and hearth and home aspects of "femininity"?
I think Ironwood's partial response to that is, "Sure, Masculinity ain't what it used to be either, and we own that. We allowed ourselves to be talked out of our better masculine nature in the false hope that it would lead to a better domestic life, social harmony, and more sex. What we got was more demands, more requirements, and less sex."
Some do take up hearth and home, but the manospherians will tell you that these men generally aren't as attractive to women. Anecdotally, I've certainly seen around here that a lot of women want a "man's man," and/or "a provider." So, if a young man's options are to make himself less attractive by taking care of hearth & home or to remain attractive in exchange for more demands, more requirements, and less sex, he's likely to just check out, sleep around where he can (play video games and watch porn where he can't), but not commit to marriage.
Anonymous wrote:[W]e expect and demand more from men, more than a roof over our heads and a steady income. We expect men to have good self esteem, integrity, emotional health and maturity, a good work ethic, and good parenting and partner skills. As the playing field has leveled, men have had to up their game. And the antifeminists are the ones who can't or don't want to. They are the ones who can't adapt.
Anonymous wrote:I don't get it. Why don't men pick up the devotion to children and hearth and home aspects of "femininity"?
By that point feminism's odd ideas about sex had progressed to where sex within marriage was the absolute most boring, patriarchal, non-feminist sex you could have. They denigrated husbands and men in general in popular culture and made the term itself one of cultural disrespect. With that kind of painful humiliation to look forward to in the institution formerly known as marriage, the young men had a decision to make. So the dudes shrugged, went back to porn and video games and women went crazy, a little.
Anonymous wrote:I'm 47, so I've been around awhile. Watched the culture change a lot. My mom's generation was the first one thrown out there where not everything was set in stone. She thought she'd get married, be a housewife, and a mom. That's what everyone did. At least, they used to. Her generation was tossed into the air with divorce and careers. And that's scary. Many people like to know what lies ahead for them, what's expected of them. They want that safety net. But they adapted. Some found success with ease. But most stumbled through awkwardly until they figured it out.
Enter my generation. I can't relate at all to anything these manosphere people write. Women have power now and are no longer dependent on a man. So we expect and demand more from men, more than a roof over our heads and a steady income. We expect men to have good self esteem, integrity, emotional health and maturity, a good work ethic, and good parenting and partner skills. As the playing field has leveled, men have had to up their game. And the antifeminists are the ones who can't or don't want to. They are the ones who can't adapt.
Anonymous wrote:I don't get it. Why don't men pick up the devotion to children and hearth and home aspects of "femininity"?