• Re: You Should Really Read Ugly Lying Activist Whore E. Jean Carroll's

    From Misandrists@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jan 27 21:59:32 2024
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.guns, alt.feminism
    XPost: talk.rape

    On 28 Feb 2022, Wi1liam T <weakamerica@gmail.com> posted some news:svj5mh$1ue4e$49@news.freedyn.de:

    Would you fuck this ugly whore? https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/6nYcDzaoglpuxo76vwYC0ZsWYlw=/249x13 8:2193x1232/750x422/media/img/mt/2019/07/RTS2JMHK/original.jpg
    Reuters / Courtesy E. Jean Carroll

    Trump wouldn't either.

    In the southeastern corner of Missouri is a tiny town that was named by
    a man, local lore has it, in honor of his girlfriend. She was Shawnee;
    when it was time to make his tribute to her official, the man, Samuel
    Green, came to the realization that he was unable to fully pronounce—or accurately spell—his beloved’s name. So he paid her what he determined
    to be the next-best form of appreciation: He named the town after the
    only Native American woman whose name he was able to spell. Pocahontas, Missouri, was born.

    The writer E. Jean Carroll hears this bit of myth while visiting
    Pocahontas over the course of the extended road trip she takes for her
    new book, What Do We Need Men For? A Modest Proposal. At a local pie
    shop, she asks the owners about the provenance of their town’s name.
    Getting her answer, Carroll finds herself considering the fate of the
    woman: “I like to imagine the Shawnee girlfriend,” she writes, “mounting
    her stallion, galloping out of Missouri, riding across America, founding
    her own town, and, because she can’t keep white guys straight, calling
    it DermotMulroneyDylanMcDermottDeanMcDermott.”

    What Do We Need Men For?, which publishes this week, began as a conceit
    in search of an insight. Carroll, the initial plan went, would travel to American towns named after women—places such as Charlotte, Vermont;
    Tallulah, Louisiana; Marianna, Arkansas; Angelica, New York; and
    Pocahontas, Missouri. She would visit more than two dozen locations that celebrate, at least as far as the map goes, the lives of women—and then
    ask those towns’ residents a central, Jonathan Swift–ian,
    satirical-serious question: What do we need men for? It was a
    hero’s-journey setup, promising the kind of extended jape Carroll has specialized in, as a journalist and as a gimlet-eyed advice columnist
    for Elle magazine: roving, curious, compassionate, whimsical. Its
    emphasis on geography would add a cheeky new dimension to that
    foundationally feminist argument: that women navigate a world designed
    by, and for, men. “The whole female sex,” Carroll writes at the
    beginning of the book that resulted, “seems to agree that men are
    becoming a nuisance with their lying, cheating, robbing, perjuring,
    assaulting, murdering, voting debauchers onto the Supreme Court,
    threatening one another with intercontinental ballistic nuclear
    warheads, and so on.”

    https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2019/07/e-jean-carroll- what-do-we-need-men-for-memoir-review/593245/

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