Sunday 26 January 2014

Baby, you can drive my car

Who Are These Clowns? | Clarissa's Blog



I used to wonder how people could be so stupid, but the truth is their ideology, which is Christian metaphysics, holds that women are ethereal and insubstantial.  That is what they mean, in their code, when they pronounce that something a woman has said is "just emotional".  It also explains how criticisms of the system from women can be routinely ignored.   I can make all sorts of points -- and pretty clearly, too -- but it will be as if I had not said anything.  I'm just waiting for a male to come on the scene to tell me what is real and what isn't.   But the male doesn't engage with anything I've said -- he merely takes it as a springboard to make his own points.   Women, (predominantly from America) too, will reflexively reduce abstract theorizing and observation to the level of personal opinion, which enables them to advise me not to take things too seriously.

Naturally, money or healthcare or attention to psychological health are not important for ethereal beings, as in some sense they do not exist at all.  They seem to, but actually they don't.   A true Christian with real insight will be able to see through their vain protests about existing.   He (or she) can dismiss almost any form of communication with a wave of the hand:  "Why can't you just adapt and get along?"

In fact you are not a woman if you do not sacrifice your sense of self for the greater good.  You are pretending to be a man -- that is, aiming to be substantive.   This is bound to fail.

If God wanted you to have a Mirena device would would appear in the realm of insubstantive reality, and you would have it.  But it's not appearing because reality is real, and we have cars and garages and other real things.   Learn to live with it!

And as I said before, a Mirena device at the moment costs $28 in Australia, and insertion is free.  That is because Australian women, for the time being, are a bit more real than American women.

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Cultural barriers to objectivity