Women Confess to "Daily Mail" How Desperate They Are To Get Married

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This topic contains 26 replies, has 24 voices, and was last updated by Ironheart  ironheart 2 years, 6 months ago.

Viewing 7 posts - 21 through 27 (of 27 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #544222
    +3
    Zuberi Tau
    Zuberi Tau
    Participant
    10606

    “Women who are DESPERATE for a proposal confess to feeling ‘insane’, jealous and depressed”

    That’s their own f~~~ing fault!

    #544270
    Bstoff
    bstoff
    Participant
    4865

    ‘dem bitches better buy a ring and find a fool to propose to themselves.
    Sadie Hawkins proposals are about to become popular.
    Next will be ridiculing, shaming, taxing and maybe imprisoning men who refuse to wear the ball and chain of marital imprisonment.

    #544286
    +2
    OldBill
    OldBill
    Participant

    … Sadie Hawkins…

    ugh Is that s~~~ still a thing? I remember with dread those Hawkins dances in November of each school year. I managed to avoid all but two.

    For our younger members there was a hugely popular daily newspaper comic strip called Li’l Abner which ran for decades. It was set in Appalachia in a town called Dog Patch and focused on a family of hillbillies called the Yokums. Abner was the oldest son. The strip was much more than just a string of hillbilly jokes and stereotypes, it was also loaded with fierce social and political satire. Like the movie’s Looney Toons, the humor worked on several levels at the same time with kids laughing at the slapstick while adults got the sly inferences and references.

    The strip influenced and still influences a lot of American culture. The Beverly Hillbillies was basically a rip-off of it and the later Dukes of Hazzard owes a lot to it.

    Anyway, one year the strip featured a story arc about Sadie Hawkin’s Day and how it came to be celebrated in Dog Patch. Sadie was the daughter of the town’s founder and the ugliest women in the county. When she was still unmarried at age 35, her father proclaimed “Sadie Hawkins Day” and invited all the unmarried men to a party. When they arrived, they were informed they were going to run a foot race and whoever Sadie caught would have to marry her.

    The town spinsters and other women thought the race was such a great idea that “Sadie Hawkins Day” became a yearly holiday with single women chasing single men all across the county and forcing them to marry at gunpoint.

    When I think about it, Li’l Abner had a lot of red pill content. The strip’s hero, Abner himself, successfully avoided marrying Daisy Mae Scraggs for decades despite the constant efforts of Daisy and her thuggish family. (The Scraggs were so awful there was a running gag in the strip about their being declared officially inhuman by an act of Congress!)

    Sadly, Daisy finally managed to trick Abner thanks to a story line in Abner’s favorite comic book Fearless Fosdick. That’s right, Li’l Abner often featured a comic strip inside a comic strip, that’s how well written it was.

    Do not date. Do not impregnate. Do not co-habitate. Above all, do not marry. Reclaim and never again surrender your personal sovereignty.

    #544300
    +1
    FunInTheSun
    FunInTheSun
    Participant
    8283

    If marriage was a combination of Disneyland and a whorehouse, with no negative side effects, I’d wouldn’t hesitate to sign up for it.

    Women expect men to give, give, give, and they don’t understand the fairness of GIVING BACK. They create this scenario:

    1. Screaming babies.

    2. Constant nagging about money, bills, chores, leaking faucets, boredom, or anything trivial.

    3. Rationing sexual encounters the same way you’d ration food and water when crossing the Sahara Desert.

    How many men would make a marriage proposal if they could see themselves being miserable in the future? Women are lucky we spend our money for their company.

    "I saw that there comes a point, in the defeat of any man of virtue, when his own consent is needed for evil to win-and that no manner of injury done to him by others can succeed if he chooses to withhold his consent. I saw that I could put an end to your outrages by pronouncing a single word in my mind. I pronounced it. The word was ‘No.’" (Atlas Shrugged)

    #544321
    +2

    Anonymous
    13

    This one meme sums it up for me.

    As KM said, it’s not YOU they want it’s the wedding.

    Anyone will do.

    The very fact they dump you if you don’t marry PROVES it’s the wedding/marriage and not the actual man that matters.

    If she truly loved you (haha I know) she’d not care about that and just want to be WITH YOU.

    The wedding should just be a bonus.

    No.

    SHE wants a big day to show off and a MARRIAGE CONTRACT.

    #544365
    +1
    Max Power
    Max Power
    Participant
    2721

    … Sadie Hawkins…

    ugh Is that s~~~ still a thing? I remember with dread those Hawkins dances in November of each school year. I managed to avoid all but two.

    For our younger members there was a hugely popular daily newspaper comic strip called Li’l Abner which ran for decades. It was set in Appalachia in a town called Dog Patch and focused on a family of hillbillies called the Yokums. Abner was the oldest son. The strip was much more than just a string of hillbilly jokes and stereotypes, it was also loaded with fierce social and political satire. Like the movie’s Looney Toons, the humor worked on several levels at the same time with kids laughing at the slapstick while adults got the sly inferences and references.

    The strip influenced and still influences a lot of American culture. The Beverly Hillbillies was basically a rip-off of it and the later Dukes of Hazzard owes a lot to it.

    Anyway, one year the strip featured a story arc about Sadie Hawkin’s Day and how it came to be celebrated in Dog Patch. Sadie was the daughter of the town’s founder and the ugliest women in the county. When she was still unmarried at age 35, her father proclaimed “Sadie Hawkins Day” and invited all the unmarried men to a party. When they arrived, they were informed they were going to run a foot race and whoever Sadie caught would have to marry her.

    The town spinsters and other women thought the race was such a great idea that “Sadie Hawkins Day” became a yearly holiday with single women chasing single men all across the county and forcing them to marry at gunpoint.

    When I think about it, Li’l Abner had a lot of red pill content. The strip’s hero, Abner himself, successfully avoided marrying Daisy Mae Scraggs for decades despite the constant efforts of Daisy and her thuggish family. (The Scraggs were so awful there was a running gag in the strip about their being declared officially inhuman by an act of Congress!)

    Sadly, Daisy finally managed to trick Abner thanks to a story line in Abner’s favorite comic book Fearless Fosdick. That’s right, Li’l Abner often featured a comic strip inside a comic strip, that’s how well written it was.

    Old Bill, you are on another f~~~ing level. I salute you, sir.

    #544640
    Ironheart
    ironheart
    Participant
    942

    Why get married when you can just find someone you hate and give them half your belongings.

    Classic lol.

    "Women have become so full of hatred that they are blind to reason and humanity. That which they practice will be the end of humanity, long before any war that men may fight.." "Women are predators by nature. Why else do you think they are so quick to gang up and go after a man they hate for showing any sign of weakness?"

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