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“One is uh school is not where you go to learn things. Uh school isn't ne public school is not so great for smart people for the most part.”

“She never applied them to anything. She never really got anywhere or did anything. She had big dreams of what she thought she should have and and never really got there because she was so like emotionally unregulated and kind of chaotic.”

“There's also a thing that if you're locked up in something like Marxism, you if that's your ideology, you're in this constant struggle with the rest of the world all the time where you want to bend it to your ideology. You want to change it. And so even if you're a very intelligent person, your daily mindset is struggle.”

“It is very weird that we're convinced that the only way to get educated is by an official institution with all the information that's available now. The information is available for everyone if you chase it down. It's not like the only people that get any information are the ones who go to these colleges.”

“He said, 'Education is something that allows you to get along without intelligence, and intelligence is something that allows you to get along without education.'”

“And I looked around and thought, this is insane. Like, who came up with this system? Because I am going to go drop her off at 2 weeks old and let some lady who doesn't know or care about or love my baby the way that I do, take care of her all day long.”

“I think it's bad advice. I think we give women backwards advice. I think we tell them spend all your fertile years, all your youth building a career... Then by the time you're like 30, 35... you better find somebody quick and get on it because you got a handful of years left.”

“Women's access to higher education is the number one correlate around the world, regardless of economics, race, culture, status, anything to falling birth rates. So, it turns out that when you push young women that it's education, career, education, career, because why?”

“The one big thing that we changed is we pushed women into college and into the workforce. And by the 1980s, they were on par with men in work force participation. So in the span of about 20 years, we almost doubled the labor force by pushing all the women in. And men's wages have never recovered.”

“It's because the same people who pushed the 19th amendment and pushed progressivism and feminism were the same people who drafted the Federal Reserve legislation... And especially on the Marxist side, they they pushed feminism because they said if we can push mothers and women into the workforce... we can kind of propagandize the young women to be socialists.”

“It's because the same people who pushed, you know, the 19th amendment and pushed progressivism and feminism were the same people who drafted the Federal Reserve legislation, came up with the income tax, came up with the compulsory education system.”

“And especially on the Marxist side, they they pushed feminism because they said if we can push mothers and women into the workforce and we double the workforce, workers of the world unite... because then we can politicize them. we can motivate them into becoming revolutionaries.”

“The reason they don't know the real history is because when they invented gender studies and women's studies, which were created by the Ford Foundation with some help from the Rockefellers and the Carnegies, uh, in the late 60s, they literally rewrote the history of how women's suffrage happened.”

“Women did not want women's liberation... Most women in the United States and England, if they were a member of either, they far outnumbered by joining the anti-suffrage groups. They were very much against it. It was only a small minority of women who were pro-suffrage.”

“What happens, what feminists do, they rely on framing. So, they'll say because there weren't co-ed universities, because it was women's universities and then men had separate ones, it was mostly um segregated. They'll say women didn't have equal access to education.”

“So, for example, in the state of New York in the 1800s, as a woman entering a marriage, if you had money, if you had an inheritance that came with you when you got married, if your husband cheated on you or left or divorced you, um you he couldn't take any of that. Your inheritance was protected from, you know, your husband leaving and taking it.”

“They said, um, we're going to lose a lot of the protection and provision that we currently enjoy... Anti-suffragists themselves argued we kind of have everything we want... If you make us equal we're going to lose those.”

“It was the women's temperance union. It was like a Christian uh movement to ban alcohol. and women didn't have the right to vote, but they got prohibition passed, which was huge. And the reason that it worked is because they could go to Congress or they could go to the Senate and say, 'We're not a political voting block. We have a moral high ground.'”

“I always thought Marxism was, you know, faking gay and stupid. I just never bought into it at all. I already had seen that, you know, we're not all born equal with equal things and some people work much harder.”

“One is uh school is not where you go to learn things. Uh school isn't public school is not so great for smart people for the most part.”

“I just kind of saw that no, there's not this like thing where you can just even the playing field and make it all equal for everyone. That's not how it works.”

“>> those are the people that are really into socialism people that halfass stuff.”

“There's also a thing that if you're locked up in something like Marxism, you you if that's your ideology, you're in this constant struggle with the rest of the world all the time where you want to bend it to your ideology. You want to change it. And so even if you're a very intelligent person, your daily mindset is struggle.”

“It's one of the biggest lies that education like we can just educate everyone. The problem is we're not educated enough and if everyone had enough access to education, everyone would be intelligent, everyone would be thriving. It's like the internet's kind of proved this.”

“Women's access to higher education is the number one correlate around the world, regardless of economics, race, culture, status, anything to falling birth rates. So, it turns out that when you push young women that it's education, career.”

“And I get to pay half of what I make to this other random person to raise my child. Who came up with this? This is stupid. And I have to pay taxes, you know, and I have to have a second vehicle and insurance and a work wardrobe. And I just thought, this is the most inefficient, stupid system.”

“I think we tell them spend all your fertile years, all your youth building a career, going to school and building a career. Then by the time you're like 30, 35 and you've got all that established, then you can think about getting married and having kids. You know, and you might need IVF and all these other things.”

“Women's access to higher education is the number one correlate around the world, regardless of economics, race, culture, status, anything to falling birth rates. So, it turns out that when you push young women that it's education, career, education, career, because why? Why do we tell them that?”

“So in the span of about 20 years, we almost doubled the labor force by pushing all the women in. And men's wages have never recovered. So now you are stuck in a two-income trap.”

“It's because the same people who pushed the 19th amendment and pushed progressivism and feminism were the same people who drafted the Federal Reserve legislation... they pushed feminism because they said if we can push mothers and women into the workforce and we double the workforce, workers of the world unite.”

“I realized feminism is far and away like it's not even close. It's the biggest social revolution in all of human history and it happened in one century. We took the whole social order that was in every culture around the world for all of the rest of time that's recorded and we flipped it upside down and completely changed it in one century.”

“The reason they don't know the real history is because when they invented gender studies and women's studies, which were created by the Ford Foundation with some help from the Rockefellers and the Carnegies, uh, in the late 60s, they literally rewrote the history of how women's suffrage happened.”

“We had this big fight in the late 1800s between pro-suffrage groups and anti-suffrage groups. Most women in the United States and England, if they were a member of either, they far outnumbered by joining the anti-suffrage groups.”

“So, for example, in the state of New York in the 1800s, as a woman entering a marriage, if you had money, if you had an inheritance that came with you when you got married, if your husband cheated on you or left or divorced you, um you he couldn't take any of that. Your inheritance was protected from, you know, your husband leaving and taking it.”

“Yeah. So, I'll tell you what their reasoning was. They said, um, we're going to lose a lot of the protection and provision that we currently enjoy. We have a lot of protections and if you make us equal we're going to lose those.”

“You guys remember prohibition? That was primarily women who pushed for prohibition. It was the women's temperance union. It was like a Christian uh movement to ban alcohol. and women didn't have the right to vote, but they got prohibition passed, which was huge.”