The concept of demolishing the patriarchy is a Marxist concept designed to destroy the family and control the population.

The concept of demolishing the patriarchy is a Marxist concept designed to destroy the family and control the population.

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Patriarchy has been around for centuries, and it's not going anywhere. In fact, recent studies have shown that it may be more beneficial than we thought.

In the last 100 years, psychological and sociological experiments have repeatedly shown that the so-called 'patriarchy' is actually a healthy and beneficial form of social organisation. Studies on gender roles have shown that even young females are attracted to traditional gender roles and that they are also attracted to the alpha male in their age group. Even older women are drawn to the same things. Studies also show that women who try to be men are more depressed, especially as they get older and their biological clock begins to tick.

The concept of demolishing the patriarchy is a Marxist concept designed to destroy the family and control the population. It is based on the false assumption that men and women are exactly the same except for their reproductive organs. This is not only untrue, it is harmful.

Women are attracted to men who are strong and confident, who can protect and provide for them. This is hardwired into their DNA and has been since the days when we were living in caves. It is not a social construct that can be dismantled by ideological platitudes.

The family is the bedrock of any stable society. It is where we learn to love and be loved, to nurture and be nurtured. To try and destroy it in the name of 'progress' is nothing short of insane.

We need to embrace our differences and work together for the good of all. Men and women are not the same, but we are equals. Let's start behaving like it.

For years, psychologists and sociologists have been conducting experiments on gender roles. They've consistently found that even young females are attracted to traditional gender roles. They're also attracted to the alpha male in their age group. Even older women are drawn to the same things.

These studies show that women who try to be men are more depressed, especially as they get older and their biological clock begins to tick. The concept of demolishing the patriarchy is a Marxist concept designed to destroy the family and control the population.

Patriarchy may not be perfect, but it's still the best system we have. It's time to stop trying to tear it down and start working within it to make it better.

Today, the patriarchy is under assault as never before. It is being pushed back by the forces of communism, which have taken over our institutions and are using them to indoctrinate our young people with anti-patriarchal ideology.

This is not new. We were warned about it. In the early 20th century, when the communists took over Russia, they immediately began working to undermine the traditional family and to promote gender equality. They knew that the family was the foundation of the patriarchy and that by destroying it, they could destroy the patriarchy itself.

There have been numerous studies conducted on children and monkeys that show that gender roles are hardwired into the male and female brain. It is not nurture, but nature that dictates how we nurture. The communists, the feminists, the far leftists, the socialists, communists and fascists that push for this idea are wrong.

The scientific evidence is overwhelming that males and females are different not only in their physical makeup but also in the way their brains are wired. These differences show up in the way they think, feel and behave.

Males and females also differ in the way they are motivated. For example, males are more likely to be motivated by competition and power, while females are more likely to be motivated by relationships and cooperation.

The evidence is clear that males and females are different in the way they think, feel and behave. These differences are hardwired into the brain and are not the result of nurture or environment. The idea that gender roles are dictated by nurture or environment is simply not supported by the scientific evidence.

And so they set out on a long march through our institutions, infiltrating them and subverting them to their own ends. This march is now complete. We have two generations of young people who have been indoctrinated with anti-patriarchal ideology. They have been taught that gender is a social construct and that there is no such thing as natural gender roles.

As a result, we now have a society in which men and women are interchangeable. Men are no longer expected to be the breadwinners and providers. Women are no longer expected to be the homemakers and caretakers. Both genders are now expected to pursue careers and to be equally successful.

This is not natural. It is not how human beings are meant to live. And it is having a devastating effect on our society. We now have two generations of young people who are less knowledgeable and skilled than their counterparts of 100 years ago. They are less capable of critical thinking and more likely to do as they are told. In other words, they are easier to control.

This is not to say that there is no place for gender equality. Of course there is. But when it is pushed to the extreme, as it is today, it is destructive. It is time to take a stand against the forces of communism and to reclaim the patriarchy.

References

André, S., André, S., Gesthuizen, M., André, S., Gesthuizen, M., & Scheepers, P. (2013). Support for traditional female roles across 32 countries: Female labour market participation, policy models and gender differences. Comparative Sociology12(4), 447-476. https://doi.org/10.1163/15691330-12341270

Bruan, M. (2006). Gender roles. Equivalence in Comparative Politics, 125-148. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203023723-12

Orgad, S. (2020, February 7). Tradwives: The women looking for a simpler past but grounded in the neoliberal present. The Conversation. https://theconversation.com/tradwives-the-women-looking-for-a-simpler-past-but-grounded-in-the-neoliberal-present-130968

Silva, C., Millán Díaz, B. A., & González Alcántara, K. E. (2017). Gender role and eating attitudes in adolescents from two different socio-cultural contexts: Traditional vs. non-traditional. Revista Mexicana de Trastornos Alimentarios8(1), 40-48. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rmta.2016.12.002

Thijs, P., Te Grotenhuis, M., Scheepers, P., & Van den Brink, M. (2019). The rise in support for gender egalitarianism in The Netherlands, 1979-2006: The roles of educational expansion, secularization, and female labor force participation. Sex Roles81(9-10), 594-609. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11199-019-1015-z


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