Tag: patriarchy
A Federal Judge Nominee Said Disabled People Shouldn’t Be Wed. In Fact, Many Can’t.
The Subjugation of Women Under Capitalism: The Bourgeois Morality
Heritage Foundation Admits It: Push Women Out of Careers & Back to Babies
UK: A Working Class Experience of Alien Abduction! (18.11.2025)

The capitalist will say (and do) anything that justifies the endless accumulation of profit. To this end, the emphasis of individualism is vital – as it is through this loss of collective identity that humanity learns to routinely brutalise its own existence and being. Inflicting pain and harvesting gain is the only permitted exchange which locks out all other modes of possible interaction. Love becomes a limited commodity which can be bought for a short time period before the clock runs out and its flow dries up.
UK: A Working Class Experience of Alien Abduction! (18.11.2025)
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Siegfried Sassoon: Repression of War Experience
Reba Maybury’s Art Subverts the Patriarchy by Making Men Work for Her
What the Most Famous Book About Trauma Gets Wrong
The intersection of sex, capitalism, and militarism
The intersection of sex, capitalism, and militarism
The intersection of sex, capitalism, and militarism highlights how these systems often intertwine, with capitalism’s focus on commodification leading to the exploitation of sex work, while militarism frequently creates environments where women and vulnerable populations are particularly susceptible to sexual violence and trafficking, often due to the presence of military forces in a region, further perpetuating power imbalances and economic disparities. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]
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Communism vs. Feminism
Porn, Feminism & the Meese Report
Feminist theory is not just flawed thinking; it is the product of a middle-class view of the world. In the prosperity of the 1960s, radical feminism was marked by its extreme utopian nature. Demands like “smash sexism” and “abolish the family” abounded—with absolutely no program that could win them. Since feminists rejected Marxism and with it the one class that actually has the power to revolutionize society, their utopian maximalist rhetoric dissolved inevitably into the most pragmatic minimalism. In fact, because the reformist strategies of the ’60s—above all the overwhelming support of feminists for the Democratic Party—failed to bear ample fruit, a fertile ground for cynicism was laid. The root of the current feminist support for the thoroughly capitulatory Dworkin is the cynicism born of defeat.
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