Some women claim to be pro-natal in the context of "women's rights," but their "rights" are a structurally anti-natal social construction; they are like bureaucrats expressing a desire for less paperwork as they gleefully stamp everything in triplicate
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It is not possible to reconcile the modality of woman as a capitalist laborer with the modality of woman as mother, because the demands of labor and the demands of motherhood are diametrically opposed. Labor's incentives are a fertility shredder and everyone knows it
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ZERO HP Lovecraft 🐬 Retweeted ZERO HP Lovecraft 🐬
The new womanhood is a child of its father, capital and its mother, feminism. Companies that embraced the new womanhood were able to lower their labor costs and allocate their resources to other facets of competition. It made everyone worse off.https://twitter.com/0x49fa98/status/1129539526366384128 …
ZERO HP Lovecraft 🐬 added,
ZERO HP Lovecraft 🐬 @0x49fa98Competition between sellers benefits buyers, to the detriment of sellers. If one woman wears makeup to get better mates than her sisters, then all women have to start wearing makeup, no woman is better off, and all women now have to pay a makeup cost. https://twitter.com/0x49fa98/status/1047115237478912000 …Show this thread2 replies 31 retweets 182 likesShow this thread -
Arguably, companies that embrace wokeness are trying the same trick: anything that dissolves extra-corporate obligations is a short-term win for corporations. The idea that we can chain this demon with regulation or centrally planned economies is naive
@wokecapital1 reply 19 retweets 141 likesShow this thread -
Women's "liberation" is not liberation from men, it's liberation from biology, it's liberation from the parts of womanhood that are not socially constructed. Women thus liberated are sterile, and it's a sterility they impose upon the whole of the humanity
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Women's liberation is a suicide meme, because until very recently in history women didn't have a choice over whether to get pregnant. Evolution didn't equip them to have this choice, and as soon as they got it, they collectively decided to end their lineage
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Replying to @0x49fa98
I mean birth control has existed throughout history, but whatever dudehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_birth_control …
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Replying to @mutual_ayyde
A 10x change in quantity is a qualitative change
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Replying to @Alrenous @mutual_ayyde
The Romans were lucky they never figured out how to cultivate it
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If it was easy to cultivate there would be massive evolutionary pressure to select for people who don't understand agriculture
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