VatorMan
01-09-2013, 1:20pm
FEMINISM KILLS 27 AT US HIGH SCHOOL | Cornwall Community News (http://www.cornwallcommunitynews.co.uk/2013/01/04/feminism-kills-27-at-us-high-school/)
Today the world struggles to answer one question about Adam Lanza’s killing spree: Why?
As with many easy questions deliberately confused by the establishment, the answer is simple and in plain view.
‘Feminism’ killed 20 children and 7 adults at Sandy Hook school – not guns, not lack of ’support’ or ‘care’, and definitely not ‘evil’ DNA
Adam Lanza went from being relatively happy, highly intelligent, and a little insular to actively psychopathic after his mother threw his father out of their home.
The elephant in the room of the Lanza killings is the murder of his mother; the fact is, that terrible act of Lanza’s was not random.
His painful life and the extremes it drove him to represent the thin edge of a wedge rammed deep into the guts of modern society by self-centred ideological maniacs.
Feminism’s greatest end-result has been the explosion of fatherless children in the US and UK.
Outside of the extremities of mass killings, children from fatherless homes have been proven:
Five times more likely to commit suicide
15 times more likely to have behavioral disorders
10 times more likely to be convicted of rape
15 times more likely to be jailed
And 11 times more likely to exhibit violent behavior at school
Little wonder then that men today make up virtually the entire prison population, as well as 90 percent of adolescent repeat arsonists, and 72 percent of adolescent murderers.
And with roughly one out of three children brought up by their mother alone, the evidence is overwhelming: single mothers are raising a society of marginalised men.
Yet these single mother households, created by the state, and feted in popular culture, constitute the great wilful blind spot of academe, politics, and even science.
Our artificial society, sponsored and sustained by a state which rewards women for removing children from their fathers, and ruthlessly persecutes any fathers who resist, stands aloft from any blame for the myriad social ills everyone knows it is breeding.
So we beat our brows over questions to which we all know the answer.
Today the lives of the victims’ parents, and everyone in Newtown, Conn., are forever altered. These are wounds that will never heal, and our hearts go out to them. In an attempt to appear proactive, lawmakers will bring forth new gun-control legislation. It is unlikely that there is any law that would have prevented this horrible act. No more so than banning Big Macs would end obesity.
They’re missing the point.
In China last week a man slashed 22 children inside a school with a knife. The same week three 13- and 14-year-olds fatally shot a 22-year-old woman near Pittsburgh because she refused to give them a cigarette. In the first case we have an alternative weapon, and in the second instance we have an illegal gun. If legislation can’t keep guns out of the hands of 13-year-olds, how do we expect it to keep us safe from drug cartels, terrorists and suicidal maniacs?
The real question is not how we keep killers away from guns – we can’t – it is how we have come to a society that can produce such callous, alienated, angry individuals with such regularity?
Guns are an all-too-simple bogeyman.
What we should be questioning is the nature of the family in post-modern America. The way to prevent murders is to stop producing murderers.
And to do that we need to be producing fathers and husbands. The solution is not an ever-growing police state, Orwellian school systems and squads of droning psychologists; it is role models – confident, full-time dads, who enjoy equal rights to their wives, rather than existing at their partners sufferance, forever at the potential mercy of unjust and oppressive laws that will render them destitute and ‘absent’ them from their own children overnight: and of course leave their children dealing with the emotional fallout. Only once men and women are equal in so-called ‘family’ law (an equality best brought about by reforming that secret and undemocratic division of the law to the point of destruction), will the modern entitlement currently selfishly claimed by women alone be fairly spread between the sexes, and allow equal parenting more likely to instill healthy self-confidence in young men, than anger and alienation.
If we doubt the importance of a father in a developing child’s life – especially that of boys – we are not doing youth any favors.
Bo Jackson, US professional football and baseball legend, said this about growing up without a father figure.
“I had a father but I never had a dad.. Up until I was 11 I thought having a dad meant a man who came by every month and left 20 bucks. I missed out. That haunted me all the way up to pro sports. Here was Bo Jackson, all-star baseball player, football player, top of the world in my profession. But I was envious of my teammates, because they’d fly in their dad to have beers in the locker room after games. In all other aspects my teammates envied me for my athletic ability. But for a dad I would have traded all that in. Just like that.”
Mr. Jackson spoke recently about the anger he felt growing up and how it led him to fight with other children. He has dealt with his demons and become a wonderful father in his own right. But mothers deserve equal partners in child-raising, and children deserve fathers.
Let’s keep that in mind as we listen to what Ronald Reagan called the nine most terrifying words in the English language:
“I’m from the government, and I’m here to help.”
Today the world struggles to answer one question about Adam Lanza’s killing spree: Why?
As with many easy questions deliberately confused by the establishment, the answer is simple and in plain view.
‘Feminism’ killed 20 children and 7 adults at Sandy Hook school – not guns, not lack of ’support’ or ‘care’, and definitely not ‘evil’ DNA
Adam Lanza went from being relatively happy, highly intelligent, and a little insular to actively psychopathic after his mother threw his father out of their home.
The elephant in the room of the Lanza killings is the murder of his mother; the fact is, that terrible act of Lanza’s was not random.
His painful life and the extremes it drove him to represent the thin edge of a wedge rammed deep into the guts of modern society by self-centred ideological maniacs.
Feminism’s greatest end-result has been the explosion of fatherless children in the US and UK.
Outside of the extremities of mass killings, children from fatherless homes have been proven:
Five times more likely to commit suicide
15 times more likely to have behavioral disorders
10 times more likely to be convicted of rape
15 times more likely to be jailed
And 11 times more likely to exhibit violent behavior at school
Little wonder then that men today make up virtually the entire prison population, as well as 90 percent of adolescent repeat arsonists, and 72 percent of adolescent murderers.
And with roughly one out of three children brought up by their mother alone, the evidence is overwhelming: single mothers are raising a society of marginalised men.
Yet these single mother households, created by the state, and feted in popular culture, constitute the great wilful blind spot of academe, politics, and even science.
Our artificial society, sponsored and sustained by a state which rewards women for removing children from their fathers, and ruthlessly persecutes any fathers who resist, stands aloft from any blame for the myriad social ills everyone knows it is breeding.
So we beat our brows over questions to which we all know the answer.
Today the lives of the victims’ parents, and everyone in Newtown, Conn., are forever altered. These are wounds that will never heal, and our hearts go out to them. In an attempt to appear proactive, lawmakers will bring forth new gun-control legislation. It is unlikely that there is any law that would have prevented this horrible act. No more so than banning Big Macs would end obesity.
They’re missing the point.
In China last week a man slashed 22 children inside a school with a knife. The same week three 13- and 14-year-olds fatally shot a 22-year-old woman near Pittsburgh because she refused to give them a cigarette. In the first case we have an alternative weapon, and in the second instance we have an illegal gun. If legislation can’t keep guns out of the hands of 13-year-olds, how do we expect it to keep us safe from drug cartels, terrorists and suicidal maniacs?
The real question is not how we keep killers away from guns – we can’t – it is how we have come to a society that can produce such callous, alienated, angry individuals with such regularity?
Guns are an all-too-simple bogeyman.
What we should be questioning is the nature of the family in post-modern America. The way to prevent murders is to stop producing murderers.
And to do that we need to be producing fathers and husbands. The solution is not an ever-growing police state, Orwellian school systems and squads of droning psychologists; it is role models – confident, full-time dads, who enjoy equal rights to their wives, rather than existing at their partners sufferance, forever at the potential mercy of unjust and oppressive laws that will render them destitute and ‘absent’ them from their own children overnight: and of course leave their children dealing with the emotional fallout. Only once men and women are equal in so-called ‘family’ law (an equality best brought about by reforming that secret and undemocratic division of the law to the point of destruction), will the modern entitlement currently selfishly claimed by women alone be fairly spread between the sexes, and allow equal parenting more likely to instill healthy self-confidence in young men, than anger and alienation.
If we doubt the importance of a father in a developing child’s life – especially that of boys – we are not doing youth any favors.
Bo Jackson, US professional football and baseball legend, said this about growing up without a father figure.
“I had a father but I never had a dad.. Up until I was 11 I thought having a dad meant a man who came by every month and left 20 bucks. I missed out. That haunted me all the way up to pro sports. Here was Bo Jackson, all-star baseball player, football player, top of the world in my profession. But I was envious of my teammates, because they’d fly in their dad to have beers in the locker room after games. In all other aspects my teammates envied me for my athletic ability. But for a dad I would have traded all that in. Just like that.”
Mr. Jackson spoke recently about the anger he felt growing up and how it led him to fight with other children. He has dealt with his demons and become a wonderful father in his own right. But mothers deserve equal partners in child-raising, and children deserve fathers.
Let’s keep that in mind as we listen to what Ronald Reagan called the nine most terrifying words in the English language:
“I’m from the government, and I’m here to help.”