We need to be able to tell women right and wrong

Disclaimer: in this post, when I refer to women, I mean young, unmarried women influenced by feminism.

I want to give several cases of women behaving badly and then make a general point about whether we are doing the right thing when we decline to criticize women for fear of offending them, and instead point the finger of blame at men, however ridiculous it is to do that.

First case – wife threatens divorce unless husband agrees to abort Down’s syndrome baby:

“When I walked into the room they all turned to me and said ‘Leo has Down syndrome,” he told ABC News. “I had a few moments of shock.”

[…]”They took me in see him and I looked at this guy and I said, he’s beautiful — he’s perfect and I’m absolutely keeping him.”

Soon Forrest walked into his wife’s hospital room with Leo in his arms.

Her reaction was unlike one he ever expected.

“I got the ultimatum right then,” he said. “She told me if I kept him then we would get a divorce.”

[…]One week after his birth, Leo’s mom filed for divorce.

Second case – woman abandons her 5-month old baby to go on a two-week partying binge:

Alena Itapova, 19, who has been nicknamed ‘Monster Mum’ in Russian media for letting baby Veronika die, tried to blame her parents during appeals but ultimately was found guilty. Russian judges refused her appeal and instead increased her sentence. Itapova claimed the baby’s death was her parents’ fault for not teaching her how to properly raise a baby.

During a trial last year, Itapova admitted to leaving her baby alone in her apartment while she disappeared for two weeks. She found her daughter dead when she returned.

Third case – a woman writing for Think Progress bemoans Republican efforts to ban dismemberment abortions:

“Immediately, when I heard the title of these bills, I had to take a deep breath and calm down,” Dr. Anne Davis, the consulting medical director for Physicians for Reproductive Health and an OB-GYN who provides abortions, told ThinkProgress. “This is a familiar tactic, similar to the other types of bans we’ve seen. It seems the strategy is to take language that provokes emotional responses and then to argue that, because there’s an emotional reaction to something, it should be illegal.”

Fourth case – Cathy Young interviews a man accused of rape and finds evidence that contradicts the accuser’s story:

Sulkowicz has said in interviews that she was too embarrassed and ashamed to talk to anyone about the rape, let alone report it; an account of her mattress protest by New York Times art critic Roberta Smith says that she “suffered in silence” in the aftermath of the assault. Yet Nungesser says that for weeks after that night, he and Sulkowicz maintained a cordial relationship, and says she seemingly never indicated that anything was amiss.

Nungesser provided The Daily Beast with Facebook messages with Sulkowicz from August, September, and October 2012. (In an email to The Daily Beast, Sulkowicz confirmed that these records were authentic and not redacted in any way; while she initially offered to provide “annotations” explaining the context on the messages, she then emailed again to say that she would not be sending them.) On Aug. 29, two days after the alleged rape, Nungesser messaged Sulkowicz on Facebook to say, “Small shindig in our room tonight—bring cool freshmen.”

Despite not being able to present the friendly Facebook messages from two days after the rape at the university trial, he was exonerated. She declined to press criminal charges. Making a false charge to the police is a crime. But she can make a false charge and carry a mattress around on campus, and get her victimhood celebrated by United States senators.

And finally fifth case, false rape accusation investigated by the police, charges dismissed because sex proven consensual.

So what’s the point of all this?

The point of all this is that I think that we are letting women getting away with too much. Instead of standing up to their poor decision-making and outright lying (in the rape cases that have been in the news lately), we coddle them and make them out to be victims, and blame the bad men they freely choose to have relationships with when they mess up their lives. They have to take responsibility for their own poor decisions, and make different decisions going forward. There isn’t enough money in the world to give them to make up for all the mistakes they are making.

When a women makes decisions in her life to drink, move away from parents, shack up with bad men, take drugs, contract STDs, vote for higher taxes and bigger government, run up student loan debts, drop out of school, get pregnant before marriage, have abortions, go on welfare, choose younger unemployed boyfriends, choosing violent boyfriends, move in with men before marriage, get frivolous divorces for “unhappiness”, put kids in non-family daycare when they are under two years old, make fake domestic violence charges, make false rape accusations, deprive children of their father, withhold sex from their husbands all the time for no good reason, disrespecting men, disrespecting masculine traits, etc. then we ought to be confident enough to tell them NO and IT’S WRONG.

We should not let them direct the conversation away from their own mistakes so they can blame others and justify continued irresponsible, selfish behavior because it “feels right” to them. Women are making really bad decisions these days, and it seems like men have lost all confidence to be able to tell them NO and IT’S WRONG. It’s so easy for a woman who is behaving badly to just find people who will agree with her and give her sympathy for her bad decisions. Men and women both seem to love to agree with women who are wrecking their lives and causing problems for everyone else around them.

We need to stop condoning and rationalizing their poor decisions. The harm that women cause is very real, and the costs for “fixing” their mistakes through government programs and charity are ballooning. In the UK, we are now seeing taxpayer-funded breast implants and IVF, in some provinces in Canada, taxpayer-funded IVF, and here at home – free contraceptives and abortion-inducing drugs. We cannot keep paying for lives that are ruined by decision-making dominated by emotions, cultural standards and peer-pressure.

Just because a woman is pretty and sounds nice, that doesn’t make her exempt from the moral law. It’s not even good for a woman, in the long run, to surround herself with people (men and women) who tell her to “follow her heart” – I can guarantee that that her yes-men and yes-women won’t want to deal with the mess she creates by following her heart, when it all blows up in her face. The biggest problem I see is apparently moral Christian men being so desperate for attention and/or sex that they give up the role of being the moral leader so that the woman will prefer them to men who would hold them accountable.

14 thoughts on “We need to be able to tell women right and wrong”

  1. I think what bothers me about this is that it is true, or it would be if we lived in a perfect world. We don’t however, live in a perfect world. We live in a broken, shattered world full of chaos and confusion. Men, not all of them, but many, have abandoned all moral authority by condoning things like abortion, prostitution, homosexuality. Look at our President, he won’t even condemn terrorism, instead comparing it to Christianity. Women have these men as fathers, leaders, even pastors, and they have the pressures of the culture all around.

    To turn around and act as if women have just somehow managed to spontaneously combust is naive and myopic. Sometimes it feels as if the entire world were perched on the edge of collapse, and men, not unlike what happened originally in the garden of Eden, are still far to quick to say, hey, not my fault, this woman you gave me….

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      1. You know what discourages me? Having dozens of Christian men supporting things like abortion, divorce, pornography, and even supporting President Obama’s words the other day. Then we have men who like to turn around and claim, well women just don’t seem to have a moral compass anymore! Well why would that be? Is there any possibility that women may be completely confused and disoriented because their leadership has gone awry?

        No, Christian men should not be afraid to tell women when they are wrong, but you also shouldn’t be surprised if they look at you like you’re completely crazy, because chances are pretty good she’s has hundreds of others telling her the exact opposite, through both deeds and actions.

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        1. I know. Christian men are really stupid these days and they don’t want to say anything is wrong or give any good advice, they just want to be liked and say yes to anything. Like I said, I think it’s because they would rather be liked and be wrong, than be alone and right. I’m obviously the latter kind, and boy, am I happy when a woman likes me to tell her the truth about what I think is right an wrong.

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          1. Sometimes, I meet a woman who isn’t like that, and it is frustrating to see her ignore me and the other wise, accomplished people who tell her no, and instead go after younger men who will give her attention and agree with her. Men who don’t have jobs. Men who are not grown up. Almost as if she could neutralize the threat of bad consequences to her decisions by having enough people tell her that what she is doing is right. Peer-created virtual reality.

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          2. “Almost as if she could neutralize the threat of bad consequences..”

            In a way that is very true. Many women will seek out men more flawed than ourselves, so we can feel better about our own flaws in comparision.

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          3. I think if I were making a list of things that have caused me to feel that I should give up trying to get married, then my personal experience with women doing this would be at the top of the list. I have seen Christian women lose their virginity to drug addicts. Christian women shack up with atheists. Women who were raised Christian choose unemployed atheists studying philosophy and political science as boyfriends. Daughters of pastors shacking up with unemployed, video-game playing atheists.

            I remember in 1996 when I asked one of them why she was doing this, and she said “I don’t want to have a boyfriend who has a job because I want to be able to call him lazy without him having the leverage to tell me that I need to work harder. I don’t want to have a boyfriend who talks about religion or morality because I don’t want him to judge anything I am doing morally or spiritually”. So they deliberately choose these yes-men who will exchange not judging for sex, and then when these losers fail to commit to them, they complain as if they are victims of men.

            Meanwhile, the guys like us are rejected because we would have a plan for them, a plan to achieve something as a team.

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    1. When a blogger tries to point out the faults of modern day American young women, there is always a female critic like insanitybytes22 who shows up to try to shift the blame to men. Like clockwork.

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      1. No, but like it or not men and women exist in symbiosis and there are quite a few men who like to run around pointing out the flaws of women as a way of completely avoiding ever having to take responsibility for their own selves. Not this particular blogger, but many others.

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  2. In about 1972, women and girls were sold a bill of goods called feminism. Many of us women have accepted the “double or triple duty” of career development and achievement along with that of trying to be good wives and good mothers. For many women, this is nearly impossible because these goals force women to work at cross-purposes. Feminism (and its support by certain men as well as by many women) has been an extremely destructive force in our society and it in turn has fed another destructive force; that of relentless and conspicuous consumption of material goods. When the workforce essentially doubles, prices must be raised to pay for the additional 51% of workers’ salaries and benefits. I wonder what the final dispensation will be.

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  3. These examples are horrifying! I can’t leave my kid with a babysitter for two hours without feeling worried. It makes me so heartsick for that little one. I also want to let you know that it wasn’t abortion the mother wanted in the Downs Syndrome case. It was abandonment. It’s still horrible, creating a family and then discarding when “it’s not what I want.”

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