Family: Man and Wo-man - Feminism
Feminism: Origins of Feminism
From Mary Wollstonecraft in the 18th C., through Emmeline Pankhurst, the Rockefeller seizure of control over the media and consequent growth of controlled media and propaganda manipulation during the 19th C., the concurrent rise of female criticism of man on both sides of the Atlantic and growing hatred of men towards the end of that century leading to the terrorism in England very early in the 20th C. with the privileged group of women Suffragettes campaigning for voting rights for women over and above those of men concurrent with the white feather campaigns of women in England aimed at shaming men into laying down their lives in the trenches of WW1, not to mention an apparent multitude of letter bombings, fire bombings of innocent men's family homes in that period ... to C.I.A. promoted promiscuity and social breakdown of the 1960's with 'Women's Liberation' movements simultaneously appearing, again on both sides of the Atlantic, and the transformation of same into the notorious, subversive, often treasonous and criminal Feminist Movement (1st wave), and the demonisation of men across the globe not to mention the near criminalisation of masculinity, the almost total global victimisation of men societally and legally, adding up to little less than a total enslavement of men in a magnitude many orders greater than all of the inequalities claimed by the women's movements added together, we men and women of the world are now forced to collect together as far as possible the evidential facts, relevant views, logical threads of causes and effects, and for the, for the sake of the survival of our race of living men and women, reset the natural relationship of love, respect, loyalty, and ways of life of men and women that ensure procreation and are lawful and which God intended, even for the atheists among us who can only deny the existence of our Creator by also denying their own existence.
Let us, therefore, begin with Mary Wollstonecraft.
'The Vindication of the Rights of Woman' (With Strictures on Political and Moral Subjects), Mary Wollstonecraft
To be continued . . .
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