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March 8, 2023 - Slightly Offensive - Elijah Schaffer
07:32
The SECRET Dark Powers that Control Feminism | SLIGHTLY CLIPS

Who controls feminism, who created it? The answer may surprise you, but it all to similar... ________________________________________________________________ I'm now fully INDEPENDENT so JOIN the mission at https://elijahschaffer.locals.com/ You won't regret it! ________________________________________________________________ ⇩ SUPPORT THE SPONSORS ⇩Show more GROW TREES FAST: Join the over 1.5 million satisfied customers already enjoying their trees/plants/shrubs from Fast Growing Trees! Plus get all the support you need to make sure your plants grow strong and tell. Get ahead of the Spring time and get 15% right now at https://fastgrowingtrees.com/so ________________________________________________________________ ⇩ FOLLOW RACHEL⇩ YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/@rachel.wilson TWITTER: https://twitter.com/Rach4Patriarchy LINKTREE: https://linktr.ee/RachelLWilson ________________________________________________________________ Slightly Offens*ve Merch: https://slightlyoffensive.com/shop/ ________________________________________________________________ DOWNLOAD AUDIO PODCAST & GIVE A 5 STAR RATING!: APPLE: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast... SPOTIFY: https://open.spotify.com/show/7jbVobnHs7q8pSRCtPmC41 (also available Google Podcasts & wherever else podcasts are streamed) _________________________________________________________________ ⇩ SOCIAL MEDIA ⇩ ➤ INSTAGRAM https://www.instagram.com/slightlyoffensive ➤ TWITTER: https://twitter.com/ElijahSchaffer ➤ FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/officialslightlyoffensive _________________________________________________________________ Show less

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And it is interesting to me, though, how quickly we've gone.
I think you say there's only about 4% support for suffrage.
And for the SOBs that are out there, if you guys don't know what that means, it's not talking about suffering under listening to feminists have to speak to you day in and day out about how they should get paid as much as you, but have a four-hour day work week.
This has to do with like voting and actually having that contribution.
And voting is so much more than just like casting a ballot like today, where they say, oh, everyone should vote, everyone should vote.
Voting used to be something respectable.
It meant you were informed.
It meant that you made, you know, you were a decision maker in the family.
You were probably a provider.
You paid taxes.
There was something significant about it.
So the move to suffrage wasn't just about giving women a voice.
Because I always say this: women had a voice.
If women were married and women were in a family, then they would make united decisions and that men would vote in a way that things would be beneficial for his family, anyways.
Because no guy, let's just be real here, no guy wants to piss off his wife and wants to have an unhappy wife at home, have a wife that feels like he doesn't provide.
If anything, all men do is try to provide and work to make sure that their wife is protected, that she's provided for, and that she's at least happy to the extent that a woman can be.
And so, so I don't understand the if only 4% of people were actually supporting suffrage, how did a movement like that actually gain enough votes or enough passing to become a national movement?
And we look at like a civil rights victory.
Yeah, well, that's a very good question.
And I think it's one of the most important things that I detail in the book that I think most people don't know.
It was a small group of intellectuals and then a small group of wealthy elite who were kind of in contact with each other, similar to now, how you have academia and you have certain intellectuals, public intellectuals, who kind of inform the politicians and the wealthy elites as to what the agenda should be, right?
So we had this circle of intellectuals who tended to be very anti-Christian.
They felt that Christianity, specifically traditional Christianity, because even in the 1800s, there was a progressive Christian movement happening.
And these people opposed the traditional Christianity.
They felt like all progressives do, that by having boundaries and roles and things like that, that it was limiting progress, right?
And they were kind of proto-New Agers who wanted to see this futuristic melding of genders.
People think this is new, but it's actually very old.
This goes back actually to ancient times, but there was a huge movement in the middle 1800s among fortune tellers, spiritualists, theosophists, and ultra-progressive Christians.
I wouldn't consider them to be, I would consider them to be like heterodox Christians, but they specifically wanted to destroy the influence of traditional Christianity.
And they thought the nuclear family was limiting things like sexual liberation.
And so we need to tear all this down.
We need to get rid of all this so that we can rebuild society in the image that we want.
And of course, the wealthy elites of the time really loved this idea because the first industrial revolution had just happened.
We had these huge transnational corporations for the first time, people like Rockefellers and Carnegie's, you know, railroad and oil magnates who wanted big factories with huge labor pools, very cheap labor, and politicians who wanted to double the tax base.
So the same group, you might know about the Jekyll Island Club in 1910, who met at Jekyll Island in secret to draft the legislation that would become the Federal Reserve Act.
And then that would lead into the income tax in 1913.
This same group of people wanted women's liberation because they thought if we can get women out of the home and have them working in factories or even have children, women and children working in factories, this will be great because we can, it will lower the wages because we'll have a surplus of labor all of a sudden.
So we'll get cheap labor and we'll also be able to put children in daycares.
In the Soviet Union, they were called crushes.
And that will be perfect because they were just establishing the public education system at the time, which was designed by Horace Mann, Elizabeth Peabody, and others who liked the Prussian model, which was going to turn citizens into well-conditioned little corporate cogs in the wheel.
And instead of teaching them like a classical education, we will train them to be good worker bees and good soldiers, good obedient citizens, right?
So if you're the elite at the time, this is a great plan because it gives you everything you want.
So it was actually Elva Vanderbilt Belmont, who was married to William Kissim Vanderbilt, divorced him, married his best friend, and was one of the first beneficiaries of getting a giant divorce settlement.
She became one of the wealthiest women in the world at the time.
And then her second husband, Mr. Belmont, who was a Rothschild banker, also died.
And then she had this huge sum, this huge fortune, and she gave it all to the suffrage movement.
She created their headquarters.
She did most of the paid for all the marketing, got all the suffragettes who were doing terrorism out of jail, things like that.
So really without her and her influence, it would have taken at least much longer.
And then shortly after she funded that and suffrage was passed, we had like the Rockefeller family, the Ford Foundation, and all of these giant philanthropic entities also helping to fund and accelerate feminism because again, they really loved this idea of we get all this cheap labor, we double the tax base, and then the children are in state institutions all day where we can basically train them and propagandize them however we want.
So it gave them total control.
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