There are, sadly, weak, insecure little man-babies who feel threatened — “triggered” — by real or even fictional women’s achievements and advances instead of appreciating how much those advances contribute to and enrich all of our lives, and these insecure little man-babies want to disrupt those opportunities.
Men of QUALITY are not threatened by women of EQUALITY and appreciate (and benefit from) the contributions each person has to offer, and which enrich us all, regardless of race, gender, ethnicity, orientation or any other immutable characteristic.
In the words of anthropologist Steven Jay Gould, “I am, somehow, less interested in the weight and convolutions of Einstein’s brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in the cotton fields and sweatshops.” …to which I add, “or were forced to labor as housewives in kitchens because they were not allowed to work in laboratories or places of invention.”
How much more advanced would our civilization be if all the women or people of color who were prevented from contributing could have been allowed to make the inventions and contributions that could have eradicated so much suffering in the world and enriched us in so many ways, but which we lost because they were not allowed to make them?
There are, sadly, weak, insecure little man-babies who feel threatened — “triggered” — by real or even fictional women’s achievements and advances instead of appreciating how much those advances contribute to and enrich all of our lives, and these insecure little man-babies want to disrupt those opportunities.
Men of QUALITY are not threatened by women of EQUALITY and appreciate (and benefit from) the contributions each person has to offer, and which enrich us all, regardless of race, gender, ethnicity, orientation or any other immutable characteristic.
In the words of anthropologist Steven Jay Gould, “I am, somehow, less interested in the weight and convolutions of Einstein’s brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in the cotton fields and sweatshops.” …to which I add, “or were forced to labor as housewives in kitchens because they were not allowed to work in laboratories or places of invention.”
How much more advanced would our civilization be if all the women or people of color who were prevented from contributing could have been allowed to make the inventions and contributions that could have eradicated so much suffering in the world and enriched us in so many ways, but which we lost because they were not allowed to make them?