Endangered Male
68 subscribers
8.27K photos
189 videos
1 file
45.8K links
Download Telegram
It never happened for centuries.

I'll be blunt, women were never oppressed for centuries. To believe that women were collectively oppressed for hundreds of years is absurd. In ancient times, things were dangerous. Humanity didn't have the sanitized lives it has now. And who dealt with these dangers? Mostly men. Women were kept in the home because they simply would not be able to do the brute labor or dangerous things the men could do.


In fact they weren't really kept in the home. That would tell me the many generations of tailors, seamstresses, midwives and even some duchesses never existed. Point is, I do not believe the "women were oppressed for centuries" narrative is true.


Did abuse exist? Yes, but it absolutely was not universal. Yes, one can argue convincingly that women were abused, so were men, arguably worse at some points in time.


But abuse isn't the core of this post. To assume a whole or partial collective of an entire gender was oppressed for centuries, is absurd.

https://redd.it/1qlf2uo
@manpill
The response to an innocent man's death just sickens me.

Ok, so the story takes place in India where a woman, who is competing for elections, boarded the same bus as a man called Deepak. Now, she began to record him without his consent, alleging he molested her when never in the video he did that. So of course, police didn't do anything but social media went on an active witch hunt for that man. Deepak, happily married and has a kid, is a very respectable fella. He couldn't take this and took his own life. What is very disturbing is how the women, especially on Subreddits, reacted.

They ​​justified him offing himself. The level of justification goes to a level where they citing natural selection or comparing him with N-Germany's leader claiming that suicide doesn't means innocence. There were many more responses and it was so disgusting I couldn't write all of it. Some were like a few good men is a sacrifice for all the wronged women. Excuse, me what the hell? And people say women are the empathetic gender. ​

https://redd.it/1qlfar4
@manpill
Elizabeth Banks Excuse

Recently, an Indian film Girlfriend tanked at the Box Office. It was an okayish movie but not enough to capture attention thanks to poor marketing. So those who cherish the movie, predominantly women, began blaming men and society for not watching. Hurling abuses at us like society opts for toxic portrayal of men or whatever BS they could cook up. This is not an isolated incident. It is an addition to the trend popularized by Banks. Blame the audience, especially men when things dondon't go as planned . I called EBE Or Elizabeth Banks Excuse

https://redd.it/1qleu7l
@manpill
Let's be honest about men expressing their feelings.

I'll be blunt about it, men do not express feelings the way women do. Society has paraded a very feminine method of expressing negative feelings or emotions in general. Telling men it's okay to cry, is not okay. That's not how a man deals with his pain. I don't say this to be harsh. I say this, because I've experienced it first hand. If a man is sad or unhappy, he'd rather do something physical, productive and active. Rather than shed tears.


Now obviously a man can cry if a breaking point is reached, or he can lash out. But more often than not, men would best deal with their internal pain by being productive or physical. The general point I am making here. Is men are very different from women, even when it comes to emotional expression. Women will cry and share feelings. Men will seek activity or productivity.


So men, if you don't want to cry, don't cry. If you want to cry, cry. The point is, you don't need to express your feelings the way other's tell you to do. You can handle your turmoil how you think is right.

https://redd.it/1qlv407
@manpill
The "Women And Children" Phrase

I've ranted before how much I hate this phrase for obvious reasons, with how it's clearly misandrist and exclusionary against men, and infantalizes women. And it's even worse when it's "women and girls" as it's morphed into in recent times. Earlier at work I was reminded how much I hate this when I was at my bookstore job going about my usual duties, and there was a teacher with her class on a special trip to the store and they were in the cafe area discussing history and they were talking about the holocaust and the lives claimed by Hitler, Stalin, etc. and one of the assistant teachers said something to the effect of the "women and children" killed by the Nazis and Russians. I wanted to shout at the top of my lungs to this idiot and say in her face "Just as many men were killed, you ignorant misandrist." I mean WTF. Always making it out that it doesn't matter when men (and boys) suffer and are affected by something. It pisses me off so much, it's like it's perfectly fine for men/boys to be victims and it's no big loss or tragedy. Especially during something like an invasion, terrorist attack, bombing, natural disaster, etc. always hearing about the "women and children" but the men treated as if their deaths are worthless

I'm sure many here agree "women and children" is a terribly misandrist phrase and one long overdue to be stricken from the public lexicon. It's an example of how misandry is seen as acceptable and not a major problem. How is it not a blatantly sexist, exclusionary term?

https://redd.it/1qqpm8q
@manpill
James L. Nuzzo, PhD
@JamesLNuzzo
UN Women collecting, but then not reporting, male victimization data is consistent with my 2025 analysis of UN Women's propaganda techniques. In my analysis, I termed this: "Suppression of Male Victimization Data." I found evidence of it in 12.2% of UN Women's tweets
https://x.com/JamesLNuzzo/status/2016808719896760386?s=20

https://redd.it/1qquawv
@manpill
The concept of "Weaponized incompetence" being weaponized against men

I often see this in my feeds, women attacking men over perceived "weaponized incompetence". Usually in situations where you have a man saying "you do X or Y better than I can, so it's best if you're in charge of X or Y". This might not always be a fair situation but generally it seems like a logical position. The one that knows more can always take the time to teach the other, as long as they're both willing to. It's just as often the case that women refuse to teach, because they expect men to know.

What bothers me, however, is how much work women effectively absolve themselves from as a result of "weaponized incompetence" but which never really gets called out for. The inability or unwillingness to teach, for example, could certainly be argued to be a form of weaponized incompetence too. The inability or unwillingness to pursue men, take initiatives or lead in dating could also be argued to be a form of incompetence. Common physical tasks like shoveling, moving furniture/appliances, fixing things, staying fit, learning to protect yourself(and your family) or just being capable in any other financial, social, sexual, emotional or mental tasks, are often neglected or passed on to men by women but this is almost never actually viewed as a form of weaponized incompetence.

In fact, men who fail to do those tasks for men are typically viewed as deadbeats or not "real men". So not only are men needlessly and aggressively attacked/shamed for "weaponized incompetence" over menial tasks, they are also shamed, gaslit and manipulated into accepting women's "weaponized incompetence" too and arguably on a much larger scale. All of which is effectively invisible or ignored, because people only really care or see what affects women(whether that's because of feminist influence, asymmetrical sympathy for women or society being gynocentric).

https://redd.it/1qqb92s
@manpill
Emasculation examples?

Hi all,
I got into a discussion the other day and I mentioned that I feel that men have been so emasculated in the last 20 or so years to the point that there would be less capable men defending the country if it was ever invaded than in the 1980's (as an example). I was asked to give examples of emasculation and for the life of me, I am having a hard doing it. Real concrete examples. Can anyone help?

https://redd.it/1qr5sfy
@manpill
The IT-women sub shows how damaging victim mentality is to women, and doubly so to their male coworkers

There is this sub for women working in IT - that I won't name for obvious reasons.

Three-quarters of the sub could be summarized as this:

1. My job is stressful - my colleague/boss is a jerk - I was made redundant / was not promoted.
2. I am a woman.
3. The only possible explanation is misogyny.

I've been working in IT my whole life, and let me tell you ladies: I have experienced all of that and more. And considering that I am a male, misogyny was probably not the reason. Stress, injustice, and bad bosses are an integral part of the breadwinner's experience. Welcome to the equal workplace!

But there are things that I have experienced that you have not:

* Promotions and positions reserved for one gender in the name of equality.
* Backroom channels between your female bosses and your female colleagues and reports, where all your outputs as an IT professional are scrutinized through the gender lens.
* Frivolous reports to HR motivated by personal profit.

At this point in my career, I learned to fear my female colleagues because of the combination of oversized power they wield and the toxic victim mentality they are indoctrinated with.

https://redd.it/1qrb18t
@manpill