3
0

Misogynist, Racist, Homophobic Truth Thread


 invite response                
2020 Jan 26, 9:16pm   531 views  4 comments

by MisdemeanorRebel   ➕follow (12)   💰tip   ignore  

Women's happiness declined both relatively and absolutely to Men's happiness since Women's Lib.


1980 was the year that Married Women working crossed 50% Compare to Happiness chart above.


The number of Married, non-working women has halved in the United States in the past half-century. This included part-time work, however.

Comments 1 - 4 of 4        Search these comments

1   MisdemeanorRebel   2020 Jan 26, 9:21pm  

It's not a Gay Disease, Bigot!

In the West, Gay Men are the #1 vector for AIDS/HIV by far.

Prostitution participants are about half of HIV patients; IV Drug Users are a fraction of the number of Gay Transmissions.

Transgenders were not counted.


Prevalence of HIV in Japan, broken down by method of transmission:


Transsexuals, are a massive HIV disease vector.



Small Sample of Sex Workers - nearly 30% for F2M versus low single digits for Female Prostitutes.


25% of US Transgender M2Fs have HIV when lab tested; only 12% when self-reported: Another potential factor - Trannies lie. Avoid Black Trannies at all costs, or you're flipping a coin.
2   MisdemeanorRebel   2020 Jan 26, 9:43pm  

Trannies are much more rare than Official Kultur insists. Note the leftmost study was also based on public searches of German Bureaucracy name changes.



Adolescents in San Fran High Schools from 2013 Survey, ~2000 participants.
3   Shaman   2020 Jan 27, 8:19am  

https://stream.org/yes-childhood-sexual-abuse-often-contribute-homosexuality/
“ What do Anderson Cooper, Don Lemon, George Takei and Milo Yiannopoulos have in common? They are all out and proud gay men, and they were all sexually abused as underage minors. Sadly, this is an extremely common occurrence, as there is frequently a connection between childhood sexual abuse and adult homosexuality.

To say such a thing, of course, is to invite a hailstorm of fierce criticism and ridicule: “You bigoted homophobe! These men were born gay, not made gay, and their sexuality is a gift from God, not the result of sexual abuse. Plus, there are plenty of gay men who were never abused and plenty of straight men who were abused as boys and never turned gay.”

Putting the name-calling aside, there is some truth to these statements.

Numbers Don’t Lie
Not all gay men were molested as boys (since there are multiple causes for homosexuality) and not all boys who are molested turn out gay (probably because they were less predisposed towards homosexuality). Still, it cannot be denied that a disproportionately high number of gay men were abused as boys, and that certainly contributed to their sexual and emotional development.

That’s why it was no surprise when Dr. Robert Epstein, the pro-gay editor-in-chief of Psychology Today, noted that gay readers who were upset with an ad that ran in his publication in 2002 sent him letters asserting “that gays have a right to be rude or abusive because they themselves have been abused” (this obviously included being sexually abused).

And that’s why it was no surprise when a 2009 report prepared for a bisexual health summit revealed that 74 percent of bisexuals had been sexually abused as children. (For other studies focusing specifically on the connection between childhood sexual abuse and homosexuality, see here.)

The environment in which we are raised has a profound effect on our ongoing mental and emotional and social development.
As for the notion that people are born gay, not only would that suggest that infants can relate to the concepts of sexual and romantic attraction (which they obviously cannot), but it would also ignore the fact that our upbringing and environment have profound effects on us. Why deny such an obvious reality?

It is well-known that the children of alcoholics have a much higher chance of becoming alcoholics than the general population, and this cannot be blamed on genetics alone. As stated by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, “Genes are not the only things children inherit from their parents. How parents act and how they treat each other and their children has an influence on children growing up in the family. These aspects of family life also affect the risk for alcoholism.”

In the same way, it is well-known that men who were abused as children are much more likely than the average population to abuse other children as adults. As summarized in a 2001 article in the British Journal of Psychology:”
4   Ceffer   2020 Jan 27, 11:13am  

I remember a YouTube video where a journalist went around gay bars and asked the men about their earliest sexual encounters. It was surprising how many said they were sexually abused or sexualized by adults from childhood. It was most of those interviewed.

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   random   suggestions