← Autodidact Archive · Original Dissent · Robbie
Thread ID: 11681 | Posts: 1 | Started: 2004-01-01
2004-01-01 01:07 | User Profile
Son: "Dad, every time I watch a television commercial, it seems as if the man is always being put down by a woman, or looking and acting like an idiot."
Dad: "Glad to see you've spotted that, too."
Son: "Yeah, and I don't like it. It's as if they don't want to show real men on commercials anymore."
Dad: "You're right. And they don't want to."
Son: "Why?"
Dad: "Well, look at it like this. If men on TV commercials were acting like their true selves, as men, it would prevent the women from completely lording over them. In a nutshell, men acting like men prevents women from controlling them."
Son: "Well, that's good."
Dad: "Of course it is, but in society that can't be done. This country allowed feminists to take over every segment of society, and unfortunately, it was the men who gave in to their every whim and did their part to let those women spread their filth. Men have to try real hard to act like good little boys around the broads, especially now that they're in jobs and situations that many, many years ago they were rarely visible in. Of course, when the broads leave the room, men can be themselves. When I think about it now, it shows how low this country really is. Men can't even be themselves in public."
Son: "But the women can."
Dad: "Of course they can, because nobody will criticize them."
Son: "So women have a free ride in America."
Dad: "Absolutely."
Son: "I also noticed that the men in the commercials who are doing stupid things are always White. You never see black guys being like that, or Orientals or all the other kinds."
Dad: "Well, it's different for them because we have double standards in our society. Yeah, you'll see some black guys on TV commercials acting a little funny, but when he's around a woman, the woman is for the most part, very tolerant of him. When it's with Whites, well, since you've seen enough of those commercials, you get the idea."
Son: "Right."
Dad: "I'm really impressed with you, noting things like that for a kid you're age. Damn; most college-age kids wouldn't even stop to think about things like that."
Son: "You had me for a son, right?"
Dad: "Right."