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As much as I wish I could say The Red Pill screening tour has consisted of me being interviewed about how we can help men and boys in these dire situations, that has not been the case. Almost every interview I've done I'm asked to defend myself against malicious, slanderous, libelous, defamatory statements, that have been made against me, and my four minutes on air is stolen by these erroneous claims. It's no secret now that after making The Red Pill movie I no longer call myself a feminist, but it wasn't learning about men's issues that made me part with feminism, it was actually learning about feminism that made me leave feminism. And I know that sounds harsh, especially when you wear that label as your identity... but how could I be a part of a movement that was not willing to listen, that didn't want me to listen, and doesn't want others to listen. You may be thinking "well that's not my movement" but I say that because there was a calculated smear campaign against me and my film has been censored and pulled from multiple theaters, all because I listened and allowed other people the opportunity to listen.
I was a blue eyed, chubby cheeked five year old when I first joined my family on the picket line for the first time, my mom made me leave my dolls in the mini-van. I'd stand on the street corner in the heavy Kansas humidity, surrounded by a few dozen relatives, with my tiny fists clutching a sign that I couldn't read yet: "gays are worthy of death"... this was the beginning. Our protests soon became a daily occurrence and an international phenomenon, and as a member of Westboro Baptist Church, I became a fixture on picket lines across the country.
--- skipping forward ---
I can't help but see in our public discourse so many of the same destructive impulses that ruled my former church. We celebrate tolerance and diversity more than at any other time in memory, and still we grow more and more divided. We want good things; justice, equality, freedom, dignity, prosperity... but the path we've chosen looks so much like the one I walked away from fours years ago. We've broken the world into us and them, only emerging from our bunkers long enough to lob rhetorical grenades at the other camp. We write off half the country as out of touch liberal elites, or racist misogynist bullies. No nuance, no complexity, no humanity. Even when someone does call for empathy and understanding for the other side, the conversation nearly always devolves into a debate about who deserves more empathy. And just as I learned to do, we routinely refuse to acknowledge the flaws in our positions, or the merits in our opponents... compromise is anathema. We even target people on our own side when they dare to question the party line.
It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society.
~Jiddu Krishnamurti
that's why finding a common ground on most issues is almost impossible, because it would mean, for either side, to have to concede that there is something they might be wrong about.
In summary, society is extremely hypocritical when you get down to it because we prefer to just go along with the crowd. This is why the herd mentality is such a dangerous thing, we must be able to question the mainstream and be intellectually honest with ourselves, even if that causes some groups in society to despise us.
In summary, society is extremely hypocritical when you get down to it because we prefer to just go along with the crowd. This is why the herd mentality is such a dangerous thing, we must be able to question the mainstream and be intellectually honest with ourselves, even if that causes some groups in society to despise us. This is what it means to be an individual rather than a cog in a machine. The truth is we are all indoctrinated in one way or another since birth, society is no where near as sane as we'd like to believe. To be a conspiracy theorist is to understand the darkness that exists in society instead of trying to convince ourself it doesn't exist. I could go on listing more examples of the hypocrisy in society, like whistle-blowers getting screwed for revealing corruption, but this thread is already quite long. To wrap up, here's a quote I've always loved but haven't used in a very long time.
It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society.
~Jiddu Krishnamurti
originally posted by: ChaoticOrder
Further, I would argue this type of hypocrisy is not isolated to sub-groups within society, but can be readily found in many aspects of society at large and the laws we live by.
originally posted by: Krazysh0t
a reply to: ChaoticOrder
It's called tribalism and our entire society is built around that dynamic. It's actually hard wired into our evolutionary code.