Skip to main content

Bumper Stickers

Ahead of us in the McD's drive through on a rather nice car...

Feminists for Life

and

Equal Rights for Unborn Women


Very nice.

Comment from my daughter in response to my enthusiasm... "Feminist is another word for Sexist."

That girl may be too smart for her own good. ;-)

Comments

Ymarsakar said…
Villainous Company had an interesting post up concerning some comments women made about their sons.

It brings feminism into the light, so to speak.
Jonathan said…
Depends how you define feminism, I think. I suppose some feminists are sexist, but not all.

If you just want fair and equal treatment for men and women, historically that would make you a feminist, but I wouldn't describe it as sexism.
Synova said…
Oh, I agree. If that was what it was I'd happily call myself a feminist.

According to a little quiz I did once I'm an individualist feminist.

Popular posts from this blog

Tyranny.gov vs Tyranny.com

Compulsion is Compulsion, no matter who does it.  This is Brilliant Theft is Theft, no matter who does it. Freedom of Association has no room in it for *private* action   that takes that away Freedom of Association. If I have a business and have voluntary associations such that I choose to serve some people and to not serve others, that might make me a jerk and it might lose me business, it might make me smart and it might gain me business, but it's got to be my choice.  If I would normally serve the current disliked minority in my shop except for the fact that if I'm SEEN to serve them by the wrong people I'll have a private campaign against me as those people do everything possible to ruin me by preventing me from doing business physically or by attacking my customers or suppliers, then I am NOT free to make those choices. Does it really make a difference to losing my CHOICE to voluntarily associate if there's a law that says I may not serve "those people" o...

Some times some people.

 

What Cancel Culture is NOT

  Maybe we should talk about what cancel culture isn't. It's not a boycott.  It's not deciding to no longer go to a business. It's not giving a bad review for bad service. It generally involves two things. First, the offense is a matter of opinion. Second, secondary or even tertiary targets are threatened. Cancellation does not need to be successful, and often with very famous and wealthy people it is not successful. But it serves as a warning to vulnerable people who are not in a position to weather that kind of attack. The goal is terroristic in that it's about forcing social behavior in people who are not currently the subject of the attack. The message is always, this could happen to you. And the tactic invariably includes seeking out vulnerable people to threaten in order to put pressure on businesses or on the target of the attack. So it works like this: JK Rowling is invulnerable. But they can try, right? So what they do is they find out who works for the pub...