Most people worldwide think that feminism is only about equality, but don’t have a clue about feminism’s true history and its dark, seedy side.
They don’t realize that feminism is based on Marxist theory that splits the world into “oppressors” (i.e. men) and “oppressed” (i.e. women); has a stated, provable main goal of the destruction of the family; and was founded by a number of mentally disturbed gender extremists. [Please see footnote below.¹]
It also has a long history of blind hatred of men and masculinity.
Feminism is a hate group.
Those who refuse to believe this ugly fact should take time to read Their Angry Creed: The shocking history of feminism, and how it is destroying our way of life by British author, commentator, and blogger Herbert Purdy.
Purdy says the following about feminism’s history of man-hating:
The real truth is that feminism is the ideology of hate, whipped up into a false struggle by a small cadre of fellow-travelling, politically motivated, greedy-for-power women who want to overturn the status quo ante so they can create a society in which they and their like can dominate. And it doesn’t take much trawling of the reader-responses to feminist news items on the Internet to see the degree to which their demonised version of patriarchy is believed in the febrile imaginations of young women today, who are clearly caught up in the fervour without displaying any understanding of what it is they are actually saying and believing.
After providing some disturbing biographical background of some early feminists like Kate Millett, Purdy summarizes their common hatred of men:
All this tells its own story. These women were no role models for women. They all had issues with men, and some of them hated men and everything that men represent. Theirs was not a righteous anger against perceived injustice, it was hysterical and dangerous, and it betrayed a deep meanness of spirit. These women were caught in a spiral of hatred: of repetitive internal narratives that increasingly laid blame on anyone but themselves and led to an unhealthy sense of victimhood, which has now become the default stance of women today, especially young women who are still sold out to feminism.
While Purdy’s Their Angry Creed makes a damning case that a mean undercurrent of hate has always existed within feminism, readers who still doubt that this undercurrent exists should view an online video by Tom Golden, a men’s rights activist and owner of the Men Are Good website.
Is Feminism a Hate Group? provides a list of criteria that is indicative that an organization or movement is a “hate group”:
Advocates lesser rights in law for the target group
Propagates discrimination against the target group
Teaches that the target group is inherently inferior and immoral
Teaches that the target group is a threat
Uses lies including historical revisionism to spread these views
Tolerates violence towards the target group.
The video then does a comparison for each of these six criteria between a 1950’s southern town², feminism, and men’s rights advocates.
The southern town and feminism got a bright red “YES” check mark for each criterion, MRA’s got NO check marks.
Judge for yourself: Is Feminism a Hate Group?
For other articles about the many lies told by feminists, see my Feminist Lies section.
FOOTNOTES:
Mental illness runs in my family, so I’m empathetic about these feminists’ illness. But this empathy doesn’t extend to any person or group who disparages and hates half the human population.
The video makes clear that the “1950’s southern town” doesn’t deny that racism existed nationwide, only that it was a stereotypical environment that is used for the comparison against feminism.
By Stephen Bond on November 8, 2022.
Exported from Medium on February 28, 2023.