Join us this month to discuss the topic of Man vs Bear.
Let's talk about this new trend, "Man or Bear?" debacle. I, personally, had no clue what people were talking about for many weeks until I saw some clip of a woman who was being randomly asked this question. Up until this point I thought it was just another silly bit of nonsense going round, and it turns out I was right.
The first time I heard it was an actual question being asked my first thought was, "This is dumber then the "What is a woman?" question." It is also based on a hypothetical that BEGINS with a fantastical basis; that is, a woman magically a-ports into the forest randomly for no reason without any kind of normal tools or supplies that one might take camping or hiking with.
To me, these types of questions seem to be something that is just thrown out there into the internet to get people all riled up, confused and distracted from all the real stuff that is actually important. I see the parasite class doing their work here. Getting people to stay out of focus with distraction and "triggered" content is the same as distracting a child with a toy at the grocery story so you can shop in peace.
Not only is it a question that is meant to drive fear of the unknown into woman with the villain being a human man (as a purposeful tactic orchestrated by the parasite class) it is also discounting humanity itself, teaching us on subconscious levels that humanity is nothing but an distrusting species all together.
How many times are we going to be distracted in this way, knowing that this is a psychological trap? How long are we going to let the parasite class lead us around like dumb animals?
I was dumbfounded when I finally got a clue as to what the "Man or Bear?" was all about.
The trend, I noticed, was that it seems that the majority of woman who would choose the bear over a man are younger woman who are in the age bracket of 18 - early 30s. This sounds about the right age of woman who also happen to be coming straight out of the indoctrination plant that is conditioning woman to develop inauthentic traits such as modern day feminism (which is not what classical feminism is), woke ideologies and atheistic, materialistic viewpoints. A Satanists dream come true. I see an ocean of what might as well be dead women within our human community.
Let's talk a little bit about the history of feminism.
According to www.britannica.com the definition of "Feminism" is as follows:
"The belief in social, economic, and political equality of the sexes. Although largely originating in the West, feminism is manifested worldwide and is represented by various institutions committed to activity on behalf of women’s rights and interests."
The movement of feminism has mostly been a large issue in the West, however, this is an issue that has popped up in our history from time to time.
"Throughout most of Western history, women were confined to the domestic sphere, while public life was reserved for men. In medieval Europe, women were denied the right to own property, to study, or to participate in public life. At the end of the 19th century in France, they were still compelled to cover their heads in public, and, in parts of Germany, a husband still had the right to sell his wife. Even as late as the early 20th century, women could neither vote nor hold elective office in Europe and in most of the United States (where several territories and states granted women’s suffrage long before the federal government did so). Women were prevented from conducting business without a male representative, be it father, brother, husband, legal agent, or even son. Married women could not exercise control over their own children without the permission of their husbands. Moreover, women had little or no access to education and were barred from most professions. In some parts of the world, such restrictions on women continue today."
While this is all true, this is also taken somewhat out of context. Woman, are naturally inclined to be the main developers within the home while men are naturally inclined to be the security of it. Throughout all history, woman have made their marks in astounding ways. The reason why it is not taught so readily is because the parasite class wants to keep us divided. As well as, because woman tend to be silent workers, the muse behind the voice. We don’t always tend to speak out when it is required. But the truth is woman have accomplished great things in our history even before The Suffrage. Woman have been leaders, inventors, scientists, spiritual advisors, writers and much more.
What does it takes for a woman to stand on her own? Create a balance within the self, have some self-respect for oneself and to defy any oppressor. Despite some of the injustices done to woman, which have been extensive, women are also highly intuitive and creative creatures who have been able to find ways in order to overcome inequality issues. In short, this is not a new concept in the modern day. This movement was a slow-rolling, building snowball down a hillside.
In ancient history there is evidence that many woman have pushed at the agenda and taking a stance against this or that particular issue starting as far back as the 3rd century BCE. In late 14th- and early 15th-century France, the first feminist philosopher, Christine de Pisan, challenged prevailing attitudes toward women with a bold call for female education. This was later taken up again by Laura Cereta, a 15th-century Venetian woman who published Epistolae familiares (1488; “Personal Letters”; Eng. trans. Collected Letters of a Renaissance Feminist), a volume of letters dealing with a panoply of women’s complaints, from denial of education and marital oppression to the frivolity of women’s attire. By the end of the 16th century, when Il merito delle donne (1600; The Worth of Women), a feminist broadside by another Venetian author, Moderata Fonte, was published. In the late 16th century in England the first feminist pamphleteer in England, writing as Jane Anger, responded with Jane Anger, Her Protection for Women (1589). This volley of opinion continued for more than a century, until another English author, Mary Astell, issued a more reasoned rejoinder in A Serious Proposal to the Ladies (1694, 1697).
The feminist voices of the Renaissance never coalesced into a coherent philosophy or movement. This happened only with the Enlightenment, a European intellectual movement of the 17th and 18th centuries in which ideas concerning God, reason, nature, and humanity were synthesized into a worldview that gained wide assent in the West and that instigated revolutionary developments in art, philosophy, and politics. Central to Enlightenment thought were the use and celebration of reason, the power by which humans understand the universe and improve their own condition. The goals of rational humanity were considered to be knowledge, freedom, and happiness. Initially the movement focused on the inequities of social class and caste to the exclusion of gender.
Olympe de Gouges, a noted playwright, published Déclaration des droits de la femme et de la citoyenne (1791; “Declaration of the Rights of Woman and of the [Female] Citizen”), declaring women to be not only man’s equal but his partner. The following year Mary Wollstonecraft’s A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792), the seminal English-language feminist work, was published in England.
The Age of Enlightenment turned into an era of political revolutions in France, Germany, and Italy and the rise of abolitionism. In the United States, feminist activism took root when female abolitionists sought to apply the concepts of freedom and equality to their own social and political situations. By the mid-19th century, issues surrounding feminism started to take root in large ways and stand on its own.
In July 1848 in the small town of Seneca Falls, New York the first meeting was held by a number of women, Lucretia Mott, a Quaker preacher and veteran social activist, Martha Wright (Mott’s sister), Mary Ann McClintock, Jane Hunt, and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, the wife of an abolitionist and the only non-Quaker in the group and it started with them placing a small ad in the local paper.
Stanton drew up the “Declaration of Sentiments” (document, outlining the rights that American women should be entitled to as citizens) for the Seneca Falls Convention and inspired by the Declaration of Independence as her tool to state that “all men and women [had been] created equal,” she drafted 11 resolutions. Along with Frederick Douglass, a former slave, arguing eloquently on their behalf, all 11 resolutions passed, and Mott even won approval of a final declaration “for the overthrowing of the monopoly of the pulpit, and for the securing to woman equal participation with men in the various trades, professions and commerce.”
To read more about this history please refer to this link: https://www.britannica.com/topic/feminism
In our modern history, this is where the education on Feminism begins. From here the movement has become a joke, with the parasite class conditioning women to become toxic within themselves and to automatically hate and fear men. It is a growing sickness that is creating mental illness, perhaps one that may be too late to be reversed.
The only reason I can see for this to be happening at all is to create further division of the sexes and ensure that men and women will forever be enemies on a spiritual level. All I can see here is the same old tactic of Divide and Conquer. This is age old and has been practiced on the citizens on a global scale for as long we have written history … and probably forever.
Now that we have all of that under out mental belt, let's return to this topic of "Man or Bear?" and see if we can investigate this a little further to find out if this is just a silly modern trend that will pass with no evil intentions behind it or if this is the accumulation of woman who have fought for the rights of the female gender that has been infiltrated by the parasite class.
Check out more about our Hosts!
https://linktr.ee/brittanyashby
https://linktr.ee/SaraCrossArt
The Manifestation Map; Unlocking The Magic Of the Cosmos by Bryan Nalinan | eBook | Barnes & Noble®