Tuesday, September 29, 2020

Are women unhappier since the rise of feminism?

Equal pay for equal work everyone agrees with, but feminism, and especially radical feminism, is contrary to the reality of real human nature. I haven't seen any empirical studies comparing the happiness level of women since the rise of feminism---it's probably politically incorrect to even try such a study---but my non-empirical observation is that women are unhappier since the rise of feminism.

I watched the first episode of new Netflix series “The Duchess” created by Katherine Ryan, about a single mother trying to raise her daughter in London while wondering if she should have another kid. Ryan plays a super-bitch hostile to everyone in her life except, supposedly, her daughter. Ryan creates what used to be called a slut who insists on sleeping with anyone she chooses on her own obscene bitchy terms, which might have been more believable and more charming with a younger woman, but Ryan looks like a woman near the age of menopause.

Sociobiology needs to be taught in our schools because feminism has no idea what real human nature actually is. Feminism demands biologically unnatural roles for women. Modern technology has not changed the basic biology of gender differences which remain as they have been for tens of thousands of years. There are obvious genetic and hormonal differences between men and women which certainly influence both gender and cultural behavior.

The founders of radical feminism were mostly cultural Marxists which biased them toward the genetically-derived differences between men and women. Real human nature contains not only big gender differences, but is kin-centered, gender defined, age-graded, heterosexual, marriage-making, hierarchical, ethnocentric, even xenophobic, among other things, with group-selection as the primary unit of successful selection, followed by individual selection.

Will we ever return to real human nature? I quote sociobiologist Edward O. Wilson "The genes hold culture on a leash. The leash is very long, but inevitably values will be constrained in accordance with their effects on the human gene pool...”

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