When will feminists stop laying into men?
By Winterishere
@thedevilinme (5216)
Northampton, England
January 26, 2018 5:25pm CST
I think it’s fair to say important men are under attack by feminist right now. The Trump and Hollywood sexual abuse stuff is not a fair representation of guys and 95% of us treat women with respect and a lot shyer than made out, especially in the United Kingdom. Women in the west are crying out for alpha males it’s got that soft.
Well those angry middle class women in the media are screaming at men again this week when a female broadsheet journalist went undercover at a men only charity fundraiser at a place called the Presidents Club in London where the waitresses and bar staff were mostly female, provocatively dressed and the smell of sex was in the air. It was an important event with lots of powerful men and famous male celebrities in attendance and big bucks were raised. The female journo claimed the waitresses were groped and fondled against their will by beery and perverted men. Women groups were up in arms and men resigned and others were fired and the club closed down this week after running the charity events for 30-years and raising twenty million Stirling over those 3 decades. But there’s a problem. None of the women working there came forward and backed up the journalist story. A very different version of events emerged in the next few days. The journo had gone in there with the story already written in her with that anti male bias.
It turns out most of the girls were booked through a VIP escort agency and many were sitting on the rich guy’s laps offering their business cards, some offering ‘further’ services up stairs in the hotel. They were paid $190 for the night to ‘entertain’ the guests, look sexy and serve drinks. A lot of the girls came to work there in previous years in the same tiny black dresses. It appeared they quite liked being there. This sort of thing happens a lot in places like Japan and no one is remotely bothered. Why shouldn’t it happen in England? They were all grown adults. I’m sure some of the younger girls were students and there just to work and sell drinks to lubricate men so they gave more to the charities. The contract for the girls to work there was clear on the dress code though. Tight black dresses, short hemlines and black panties. Yes, black panties. Would you take a job like that and claim not to know the score, and at $40 an hour? Of course you wouldn’t. These girls new the score and if feminist want emancipation they have to accept women make choices like this for money and they are not all feeble and defenseless.
We blokes are seeing this attack on men across the board and we are fed up. If anything at all happens to women its men’s fault, is always the feminist attitude. The BBC were overpaying most of their presenters and journalists over the years and men were getting paid a lot more than women in similar jobs right at the top. The BBC is funded by taxpayers and so all the top salaries were printed online to expose them.
Today six of the top paid men at the BBC had to agree to take a big cut in their salaries to begin the process of leveling up male and female stars salaries in similar jobs. What they haven’t done is put down the overpaid female stars salaries. The end of the day TV people are paid on the ability to pull an audience on their looks, talent and likability. I don’t see female catwalk models being prepared to be paid the same as male catwalk models, the guys often on the ten times less money for the same fashion shows. The male models don’t complain and accept the girls are the stars. And if you want to see groping and drunken behavior out of control then just go to a female stag night with male strippers. The men really are pieces of meat there. Women WANT men to be exactly like they claim they don't want them to be.
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1 response
@toniganzon (77156)
• Philippines
27 Jan 18
All my life, I've never seen a woman here being deprived of their rights nor did I see women complaining too much or saying the world is unfair. Not to the extreme. I was born in this country where it was my mom who worked and provided for us and dad was just at home or helping my mom in her business. I was already 9 years old when dad started his own company. My mom was a strong woman but he never disrespected my dad in anyway. I think I was 7 when the first woman to become president was elected.



