Pearl Davis and callers debate how birth control reshapes modern relationships, with Davis citing 74% of divorces initiated by women and $200K legal costs for men while blaming hormonal contraception for suppressed fertility, mood swings, and autoimmune risks. Callers like RJ Isaac link it to declining birth rates and Social Security strain, while others—like Jana—report severe side effects like migraines or early menopause. Flow State warns of biological harm but prioritizes raising daughters with honesty over fear. The episode argues women’s choices now ignore consequences, from health to societal stability, framing birth control as a symptom of deeper cultural shifts. [Automatically generated summary]
Most answered very quickly, no, because men are useless.
I mean, this headline from The Hill, it caught my eye.
Most young men are single.
Most young women are not.
Young men have fallen faster than any demographic in America over the last 40 years.
It's a different world now.
Like, we don't need men the way that they used to.
The future is female.
Men and women are drifting further apart, and society is crumbling because of it.
A fascinating debate has broken out about the value of marriage.
You've kind of got the Trad COD versus Red Pill thing.
This men's rights crowd that sometimes just goes too far the other way.
Oh, you need to stop acting like grown boys and infants and actually become men.
Marriage is a bond and it's a sacred bond.
It's a machine designed to extract resources from you.
Now many of the red-pilled have taken the position that it's bad for men to get married.
Hannah Pearl Davis, or just pearly things.
One of the most controversial faces in all of the internet.
She goes on to say that marriage is a terrible deal for men.
Because if me and you were in a business contract, you would never sign a contract where I am paid to leave.
Gee, what could go wrong there?
74% or something of divorces are initiated by women.
Men have everything to lose, primarily their own children.
Men get killed by the courts and by divorce laws.
I had no idea that courts of family law were courts of equity, not courts of law.
Because in family court, you don't need evidence to accuse someone of abuse.
You need no evidence.
When you guys say get married young, a lot of these men don't know what they're signing up for, and you're not going to be there when their entire life falls apart.
I interviewed them on the other side.
I didn't meet my son until he was 15 months old.
How much did you spend trying to get him back?
The legal fees alone was about $200,000.
Before you know it, you're homeless.
You're literally just thrown out into the street.
We absolutely reinforce bad behavior from women.
Wives are taught to leave their husbands and then daughters grow up without their fathers.
Family is the foundation of the society.
Every problem in society comes from single mother homes.
A lot of women will just chase this negative rapid hole of happiness, endless happiness.
Feminism's biggest failure is it lies to women.
We tell women to date as many guys as possible.
We tell them to put off family into marriage.
You are allowed to leave your perfect husband.
You are allowed to end a relationship with a really great boyfriend.
Oh, freeze your eggs, have an abortion.
What?
You're evil.
I don't think there's anything else in life that we actually ever go into preparing to fail.
Like if you have the mentality of this is going to go wrong and be pessimistic, naturally the outcome is going to be that it's going to fail anyway.
It's self-sabotage.
And that's the thing.
Like women are so willing to leave marriages because they're not happy.
This is not about happiness.
The most important thing is the children.
And the problem is we have a modern society where it's me, me, me, my feelings, leave when I feel like it, instead of doing what's best for the kids.
This myth that we live in an age of male privilege.
Where's my male privilege?
They think, well, men have all the rights.
They have all the power.
Privilege patriarchal system that we have.
Why doesn't our society care about men's rights?
I have no friends, no wife, and no social life.
Men are alone in this situation.
Men are homeless.
Men are thinking about eating guns.
I've seen so many men on the brink of suicide and they didn't do anything wrong.
How are you equal if the men are the ones that have to fight and die to defend the country?
The men are the ones that build and maintain all the infrastructure.
Women are helplessly dependent upon men.
The so-called deaths of despair from suicide, overdose, or alcohol, three times higher among men than among women.
Culture is telling men, you are no good.
You gotta get your act together.
I think men have failed themselves.
What kind of a man are you?
What kind of a woman are you going to attract?
If men are in trouble, so are women.
Everybody knows this is a huge problem, but nobody wants to admit it.
Every single woman at the table said they wanted a man for a moment.
500K, 500, 200K, 300K, 200K.
Am I crazy?
Everything is really set up against you to fail as a man.
If men make less than women, women don't want to marry them.
So, you know who wants more economically and emotionally viable men?
Women.
I don't want to be an independent woman anymore.
I don't want to be a strong, independent woman.
I'm over it.
When is it going to be my turn?
Where are we meeting the men that don't?
I can't keep having these same conversations.
The only simp here is you, Pearl.
You sent for women.
I think you sent for women.
She's a provocateur.
She says stupid stuff, but Pearl is right about this.
It's already happening.
It's just not out in the open yet.
Now it's just hookup culture is going to be our fairy tale ending because men don't want a wife and women can't find a husband.
The future, if everybody follows your path, is there is no future.
If you don't want the population decline and our economy goes into decline, civilization will crumble.
The American story does not end well.
This is an existential crisis failing young men.
What's up, guys?
Welcome to another episode of Pearl Daily here on the Audacity Network.
I first want to start by thanking each and every one of you for supporting my channel.
As you guys know, I've been through ups and downs on this channel from interviewing a thousand women on the streets of London to almost being attacked by a whale one day.
And by whale, I mean a beautiful, majestic creature.
Those that get it, get it.
To getting demonetized, having to get rid of all my staff, having to go home, and then restarting this show, getting back into the monetization program.
I want to say thank you guys so much for all of your support.
It means the world.
I know that there's a lot of naysayers, there's a lot of haters, there's three-hour hit pieces, there's all of these craziness in the world today, but I really want to say that you guys give me the strength to keep going because I know that I'm not the only one that notices this craziness.
So, anyways, guys, that documentary trailer was for a divorce documentary.
Cost me an arm and a leg to get that done.
I'll tell you what.
So, we're trying to raise money for this documentary.
And it's going to, right now, we've raised $35,164.
I want to first thank Phil.
I want to thank John, Jonathan, and Rick.
Thank you guys so much for raising this money or for the donations in the last day.
We do have to get to $100,000 in order to get the documentary done.
So, if you guys want, feel free to click the GoFundMe or you can apply to pearlinvite.com.
That's pearlinvite.com.
That is our members-only community where we do educational content.
Okay, so today we're going to be talking about birth control.
So, I want to first start off by saying welcome to another episode of Pearl Daily.
So, the sexual revolution is most commonly referred to as the time in the 1960s and 70s, where in Western culture, American culture in particular, changed its attitude towards sex, physical intimacy between men and women.
One of the major contributions to this is the introduction of the oral birth control pill.
Women, for the first time, could have sex with men with a minimized risk of pregnancy.
The first oral contraceptive pill was approved by the FDA in 1960, and within two years, with over 1.2 million women using it, by 1965, one in four married women under the age of 45 were using or had tried the pill.
By 1984, 50 to 80 million women were using the pill, and by 2013, over 100 million women were using the birth control pill.
You're hearing these numbers and thinking, wow, this is a great solution.
It's like magic.
It solved all of women's problems.
But what these women did not consider were the side effects of hormonal birth control.
The most common side effects include nausea, headaches, increased blood, increased blood pressure, mood swings, weight changes.
More serious side effects include blood clots, anxiety, stroke, stroke, and deep vein thrombosis.
Birth control has become accepted as part of American culture that many mothers put their daughters on it at the age of 16 in their teenage years.
And this has led to many women being on birth control for decades without thinking because they're too dumb to think about the long-term side effects.
And by the way, the way I phrase that is that mothers put their daughters on birth control.
But to be honest, these daughters are sleeping with Pookie and Ray Ray.
These mothers don't know what to do.
They're like, F, I can't stop.
Or she's crawling through the window to sleep with Pookie and Ray Ray.
And so whenever women give these sob stories about getting put on birth control by their parents, I want you to ask yourself, why would the parents put them on birth control?
It's probably because she was doing some ho shit.
You know what I mean?
Now, the long-term effects of hormonal birth control is what we're going to talk about on today's show.
This will be a call-in show.
So when you do call in, tell me your opinion on the pill.
Do you think it was a good or a bad thing for society?
And what has your experience been with birth control?
And if you have a daughter, did she put herself on birth control?
Or did you put her on birth control?
Would you?
Now, I do want to give a little preface.
I want to tell you my experience with birth control.
So when I was 16, I was pretty innocent, to be honest.
Like, I was a very innocent.
I know, obviously, you probably aren't going to believe me.
I guess I'm a woman.
I've got to signal purity, right?
But I'll tell you what, when I was in high school, I just, I didn't do much.
I was very into volleyball.
I'm kind of the same as I am now.
I'm pretty into my channel.
So I was pretty busy, right?
And there were like, I always remember going to football games and being bored.
Like, I just, there's something wrong with me, I think, because I don't think I get social gratification from just sitting and hanging out all day.
I just don't.
I don't, I don't really want to sit and play.
I want to go learn something.
That's just kind of how I go do something.
That's just how I've always been.
You know, I always got most improved on the team because other girls had lives, not me.
So we got a $5 super chat.
Thank you so much.
Documentary got five on it.
Thank you.
Thank you very much for the donation.
So, you know, I've always just been kind of weird.
I've been a little strange, you know, a little odd, I'll say.
So when I was 16, I remember women on my team were going on birth control.
And at this time, I don't want to say when I became sexually active, you know, I'm 20, I'm 28 now, but I'll just say this.
At that time, I wasn't, right?
And the girls on my team were starting to get on birth control.
And I remember telling the women on my team at the time, hey, I think this could have side effects.
I don't know.
Like, I'm not, I'm not a doctor.
I don't know, but I'm just logically thinking about it.
And I'm thinking, this can't be good for you.
It just can't.
Like, you cannot shut off your fertility.
You can't shut off your fertility and not have any consequences.
I have a hard time believing that.
So I'll hear women like this, and I just thought of this when I was talking, like Alex Clark.
And these women take no accountability because when I, at the time, said this to my fellow teammates, They all laughed at me.
They all kind of looked at me like I was stupid.
And I thought, okay, have fun.
Now, I'm not going to, you know, purity signal here and act like I never tried the pill or anything, but I'll say this.
I barely did.
I was on it like one, maybe two years.
And my personal experience was I had no side effects.
I felt fine.
But I still just had this voice in the back of my head that said, I don't think I can be on this and not have a consequence.
So I, you know, against, I went to the doctor and I told them this.
And they all said, no, are you sure?
And I'm like, yeah, I'm pretty sure.
I'm going to, I'm going to get off it.
And, you know, because I always felt like my health was in my hands.
I always felt like my health was my responsibility.
It wasn't the doctor's responsibility or what society tells me.
And what all these women are going through is they hit 30.
They've gotten chlamydia too many times.
They're infertile, which if a woman tells you she has fertility issues, it very well may be chlamydia, gonorrhea, or birth control.
So a choice, right?
So here, this is Alex Clark.
I think it was this one.
Pediatricians wasted no time telling us that there was a magic pill that could solve all of our problems in a 10-minute wellness checkup.
Like, how stupid can you be?
You deserve it, Alex.
If you have issues because of being on birth control for a decade, that's your own fault.
You deserve it.
And I mean that.
You really do deserve that.
And it's kind of like, you know, the other day I got locked out of my Twitter account.
Some guy from India called me and I fell, I fell for a stupid scammer email.
It was so stupid.
And I got locked out of my account and they started pushing Bitcoin.
I have it back now, but I did get locked out for like a week.
And I didn't even feel bad for myself because it was so stupid.
I was like, I deserve that.
And Alex Clark is trying to blame the doctors when it's like, bitch, Google's existed.
And you could Google the side effects then.
I remember.
Because I remember, I remember Googling this stuff.
So I'm getting pretty sick and tired.
I'm getting pretty sick and tired of women blaming everybody else for the birth control side effects.
Can we change the title to Modern Women Blame Birth Control for the Consequences of Being a Hoe?
I just think that's better.
No informed consent about the risks or side effects.
What problems will we solving exactly?
A couple pimples.
We were advised to note that.
Now, this is the, oh my God, can you imagine this at home?
Oh, my God, the nagging.
So now she's going to blame it.
She's going to blame it on the, you know, because they did give you birth control for acne.
But remember, women love plausible deniability.
So, you know, the moms might be like, hey, honey, get on this birth control for the acne.
But really, you know, she's noticed that you've snuck out five times this week and is like, we got to, we can't have her get pregnant by Gavin the starving musician, Tyrone, Gloctavia.
Like, we can't do that.
So don't worry about learning to track our cycle or understand our hormones.
No conversation about how our likelihood to experience anxiety or depression.
I looked it up myself.
And that's why I get so pissed.
Because, okay, I didn't have, I went to Catholic school.
I got worse than you guys.
I got a chastity talk at Catholic school from a run-through hoe and a simp.
I went to Catholic school and they had Jason Everett and Christiana Everett and Chris.
You can google them Christian, you can google their speeches.
Christiana Everett, you know.
She came in and basically talked about how she was a hoe and now she hoes, no mo, and then she married Jason.
That that's like the gist of it, and we had that every year, no sex ed no, nothing.
But again, I wasn't retarded and I'm just so tired of women acting like, Look, everything in life is a calculated risk.
You can't do anything in life without taking risk.
So if you want to go get banged out or whatever and not get pregnant, then we're a condom.
If you can't do that, it's just.
That's just so irritating would increase by 80.
On the pill.
We stayed on the pill because no one advised us.
It was only ever supposed to be taken temporarily.
You're so stupid, oh my god.
Oh my god.
She's so dumb like I. You know what I mean.
I have no medical background none and I.
I could have figured that out.
I did figure that out and I, like I did, I was on it, but I was on it for a very short period of time and I got my fertility tested.
Look at I, got flying colors.
I, I got it tested last year.
They're like, fly your hormones flying colors.
It's called not being retarded, ladies.
Then we wanted to have children.
We got off birth control for the first time in our adult lives, only to discover that we had major fertility issues, that the hormonal birth control hid.
Suddenly bro, you have fertility issues because you're like 32 and i'm not knocking it like i'm 28.
You know, it's like i'm i'm old too, but it's like, come on.
Starting a family means spending tens of thousands of dollars on ivf and other fertility treatments, because even more medical interventions are always the first solution.
rather than addressing the root causes of the problem.
Pediatricians wait.
All right, let's go to the next TikTok.
I just, I just can't, I can't.
And do you know what?
10 years later, some of my friends did have hormone issues.
And do you know what?
I didn't feel bad for them at all birth control at all.
I didn't feel bad because it's like.
They're like, oh, nobody told me the truth.
You didn't want to hear the truth.
You wanted to go get banged out at college like, can we just call this what it is is one of the most damaging things you can put in your body, specifically for your body's biological stress response.
This is because birth control is linked to increased prefrontal brain activity when you're experiencing negative Feelings or emotions.
So, on birth control, your brain spends more time capturing memories of stress, fear, worry, and trauma than it does on memories of happiness, joy, and contentment.
And over time, that will disrupt your processing of those negative emotions, which is impacting the way you respond to both minor and major stressors.
Not only does birth control mess with the way that you handle stress, there's also evidence for increased potential.
So, look, my short time on it, I didn't really feel that different.
I also don't think it really makes you gain weight.
I think it's the environment because most women get on birth control in college, so you're drinking way more.
Like, I did gain weight, but I think it was because of what I was eating.
You know, our school cafeteria had some pretty bad food.
So, I get a little irritated when the women are like, oh, the birth control made me fat.
Really, it's not what you put in your mouth.
I don't know.
Like, I think at 1,200 calories, you'll still lose weight.
I just, I'm so tired of this.
Potential for nutrient deficiencies, weight gain, persistent low mood, and also a higher risk of experiencing a stroke, blood clot, and even a heart attack.
So, if you've been taking birth control for longer than a year, this might be why you're experiencing low mood, irritability, and you're also a compulsive warrior.
Yep.
All right, let's see what's next.
I don't know.
Sometimes I think like the side effects are just things that happen to women anyway.
And I'm not saying I bet the hormone imbalance, but like I've never met a woman whose hormones are so balanced that she's not crazy and doesn't have mood swings or doesn't get fat.
You know what I mean?
I know women on birth control that didn't get fat say that the birth control pill makes the doctors' lives easier and the patients' lives worse.
So many women will go to their gynecologist or their primary care.
Maybe they have irregular periods or maybe they have symptoms of PCOS or acne or some other hormonal symptom.
And it's like a reflex.
The doctor just writes a prescription for the birth control.
There's no discussion about lifestyle.
There's no discussion about risks.
I've seen patients prescribe birth control who were smokers, who should never be given birth control.
I've seen patients who had clotting conditions in their medical history.
There's good evidence birth control pills can disrupt some of the absorption of other vitamins, key vitamins, and minerals, as well as other side effects from it.
Rarely do I ever prescribe it.
I always try to encourage my patients to look at other options.
When you take a hormone, it will suppress your own body from making it.
So when we take birth control.
Okay, so this is how it goes.
Women, we have a tendency to want to do a stupid thing.
And so then, you know, the men are like, all right, we'll help you do the stupid thing.
You want to leave your husband and go, you know, my grandma, she passed away, but before she died, I asked her, because she really lived through all the divorces.
And I asked her, I'm like, what do you think caused all these like divorces?
Like, what do you think?
And my grandma told me birth control.
The other funny thing about my grandma before she died, she died like a year or two ago.
I asked her if she had any regrets in life.
My grandma had nine kids.
And she said she wished she had more kids.
I'm like, grandma, how many kids did you want?
She's like, I went on the pill for three years.
I would have wanted 12.
I'm like, grandma, you know, why don't these women get Pearl Reed?
Why don't these 304s know that birth control makes them infertile?
I've met women who are put on it by their doctors to give them more regular periods or reduced PMS.
I only heard this recently.
They don't want to know.
That's the thing.
Women want to do an irresponsible thing and they don't want to know.
Like, okay, women, when we want to know if a guy's cheating, there's apps that like completely let women air out dates and all this stuff.
Like, are we dating the same guy?
We go to the ends of the earth to find out tea on men.
But we don't go to the ends of the earth to find out what the side effects are of birth control.
Do you know what I mean?
It's like, we have the ability to do it.
We choose not to.
And I'm telling you, when I was 16, I had this thought that I'm like, this can't be good for you.
And I'm not acting like I'm some super moral person.
I went on it for a little bit.
And I had zero side effects.
And I just couldn't get rid of this sunken feeling that there's going to be problems later.
And I went off.
And the doctors told me not to go off.
And I just thought, you know what?
I can figure out how not to get pregnant.
I can.
So when I get tired, I really get tired of, I just get so exhausted of women, you know, just always blaming the men.
Because really, the men adapt to the market.
The women are like, we want to bang without getting pregnant.
The men say, here you go.
And they're like, well, we don't want to catch STDs.
They're like, here's a condom.
There you go.
And now the women made a mistake.
And now there's going to be all these industries based off of women's mistakes, like tattoo removals, et cetera.
Well, pills, the pituitary sees that and it shuts down.
Sometimes patients will come to me saying, oh, I want you to test my hormones, but they're on birth control.
And I said, well, the only hormone I'm going to be measuring is what's in your pill.
I try to just reassure people.
It's going to take a while for things to rebalance.
There's nothing else we can do by time.
There's no way to sort of.
I don't know.
I felt fine on it.
I felt fine after.
Like, I literally can't think of a single.
I did gain weight, but I just can't blame it on the pill.
I really can't.
I blame it on my decisions, you know.
All right, what do we got next?
I see you guys in the comment.
And some are saying I look old because I'm not wearing makeup today.
And some are saying they like the look.
But I just, I'm going to wear it less, guys.
I got a lot better in the last year of makeup, but I just, I don't like the feeling of paint on my face.
I'll still wear it sometimes, but I'm like, probably the older I get, I'll wear more, but I just can't do it every day.
Most people who agree to a birth control pill don't receive full informed consent.
They're not told that it'll raise the inflammation in your body by two to threefold.
it increases your risk of autoimmune disease, especially Crohn's disease.
It makes your...
Okay, I just want to show them informed consent.
All right, let's Google.
Birth control side effects.
Wow, right on the top of Google.
And, you know, they'll always say, well, you're just a kid when that happens.
Not really.
Not really.
I mean, you know, I mean, 15, 16, they know how to do the TikTok dances.
You can't figure out how to Google the side effects.
Control system for your hormones, less flexible.
It can rob you of testosterone.
It can lower your free testosterone.
It can shrink your clitoris by up to 20%.
I feel like if that was part of the informed consent, very few people would sign up for it.
And I went on a birth control pill when I was 16.
But I feel like there are some costs to it that a lot of teenagers and women in their 20s and 30s aren't aware of.
And for me, I feel like that awareness is really critical.
So who's it for?
I would say it's a simple entree into contraception, but I would much rather people use things like NIUD or condoms or some other barrier method that doesn't mess with their hormonal intelligence.
I don't know.
They don't care.
So I'm just talking about.
Is she crazy or is it the birth control?
Because if she's just crazy, it'll be easy to blame it on the birth control, right?
But the long-term effects of hormonal birth control on women's body.
And if you give women an out, like obviously they're going to take it.
So they're going to be like, no, it wasn't me.
It was my birth control.
Hormonal birth control suppresses our natural ovulation, which is why we don't get pregnant while we are on hormonal birth control.
So ovulation is actually really important for our overall long-term health.
And ovulation actually helps us avoid diseases like osteoporosis, heart disease, heart attacks, and even breast cancer.
The other thing they don't tell you when women have heavy periods.
I don't know if this is TMI.
I'll say I've had that issue.
And it's always related to diet.
Like, that's the thing.
Your health is so much more in your control than you think.
It's so much more in control.
Like, if you're eating like crap, of course you're going to have issues.
So all hormonal birth control suppresses our natural ovulation, except sometimes the hormonal IUP.
Pearl, no make it, knit makeup needed.
Longer hair adds a lot.
My hair doesn't grow.
I haven't had a haircut in almost a year.
And this is how long it gets.
I used to have extensions.
Those are great, but they're so uncomfortable.
I just can't do it.
And suppressing our ovulation for years, even decades in some cases, really does have long-term effects, even if our ovulation begins right after coming off of hormonal birth control.
So exposing our bodies to these synthetic hormones instead of our own natural hormones really can be a root cause for a lot of diseases.
So ovulation is important in so many ways and not just for conceiving.
Hormonal birth control, especially the hormonal birth control pill, destroys our gut microbiome.
So it's kind of acting like an antibiotic.
Destroying the balance of our gut microbiome.
If your doctor prescribes it affects our mood.
Oh my gosh, why is it doing that?
Okay.
I hear the gut microbiome.
I hear the gut microbiome.
And I always just think it's women being fat.
You know what I mean?
Destroying the balance of our gut microbiome.
If your doctor prescribes you a hormonal birth control pill, especially for PCOS, that it can actually make your symptoms worse with weight gain and insulin sensitivity because of the impact on your gut microbiome.
There's also a new research study showing that the hormonal birth control pill can actually trigger Crohn's disease, which is a disease of the gut microbiome.
Gut microbiome is something that is very new in the research field.
More and more studies are coming out how important a good, healthy gut microbiome balance is for our overall health.
Maybe you've heard that it affects our moods, it affects our skin, it affects our hair, it affects our hormones.
It really does affect everything.
A healthy gut microbiome is essential for good physical and mental health.
And now it is possible to obviously fix your gut microbiome, but it does take a long time.
I am now two years after quitting hormonal birth control pill, and I'm still figuring out the balance and still trying to heal my gut.
Hormonal birth control also increases inflammation in the body.
So if you are prescribed hormonal birth control pills like I was for PMS, like cramps, those issues are a symptom of hormonal imbalance and inflammation.
And so it does not solve and heal you.
Time being, it does not control.
What the?
Oh my gosh.
destroys our gut microbiome so it's kind of all right i don't Okay, I'm just going to exit out of this one.
My laptop does this sometimes.
Crashes out.
Hopefully it doesn't do it in the next one.
All right.
Emily, if you're watching, like, turn this off right now and girl talk.
But when I went off my birth control, my sex drive went through the roof because, you know, sometimes like birth control can affect that.
My Alexapro definitely affects that at times.
So I was feeling great.
Basically, I started to get really, really bad acne.
And this is when I, like, going into my senior year of college, but everything happens for a reason because I started posting about my acne online and that's how I got started on here.
But basically, I started to get the worst acne I've ever had in my entire life, like blistering cystic acne on my face, down my neck, everything.
And I was basically told from a doctor that like my testosterone levels were high and they're like, you need to get back on birth control.
Like you could maybe have PCOS.
So I'm back on birth control.
So my senior year of college, back on my birth control, whatever.
So that was for like two more years.
So last year I went off of the birth control.
So six months after in the fall of this year, I guess started to break out really, really bad again.
And I went on spirinolactone for my acne and I started a really, really good skincare regimen.
And my skin ultimately ended up like balancing out and figuring itself out.
But I personally feel a lot better not being on birth control.
But obviously that's also something you have to be very careful about, especially in a relationship.
All right.
So that's her experience on birth control.
Let's see who's next.
What do you wish you were told on that day when you were first given that little packet of pills?
If they were being completely honest with you and they Google, I can't take it.
I just can't take it.
You know, like the one person I know that was that went crazy on birth control, she was already nuts.
So yeah, like it doesn't shock me.
She went more nuts because she was nuts.
He knew what you know now.
What is the sort of the list of things you would have said to a young Sarah about this decision?
The thing that would have really made a difference to me is that your hormones make you who you are.
And when you change your hormones, you change who you are, right?
So the birth control pill is going to change you.
It changes the version of yourself that your brain creates.
And so if you're going to be going on this, you need to understand what that does.
So this, of course, begs the question.
Hi, Doug.
Thanks for going live and keeping doing great things.
Oh, yeah, you should check it out.
Doug MPA does do shows when I'm not here.
And I was checking out.
By the way, guys, the more I'm debating how nice of a place to get in the place that we're moving.
So I've been going back and forth looking at places.
Anyways, the more support we get, the more cool things we can get.
So I always try to reinvest into the studio.
Question.
What does it do?
And there's at least five different things that the birth control does to change who we are, right?
It changes our sexual desire and who we're attracted to.
It changes our emotional states, right?
Can affect our moods.
It can affect our ability to regulate.
Yeah, so it turns off ovulation.
So, yeah, I mean, it's going to decrease your sex drive because your highest sex drive is during ovulation.
And to manage stress, it influences sexual desire and sexual function.
It influences our ability to be able to put on muscle mass and affects our like nutrition and fitness goals, right?
It affects all of us.
And not knowing all of that and not knowing the potential risks of having side effects related to mental health and libido, all the way to everything, you know, to like who a person is attracted to.
I wish I would have known that.
That probably would have, you know, impacted again decisions that I would have made about staying on it when I didn't need to.
Well, you should have googled it.
You should have Googled it.
You should have Googled it.
Should have had some common sense.
I just can't take it anymore.
So we're going to put the Zoom in the chat.
If you guys do want to send a super, you know, we're in here day in and day out trying to make amazing, entertaining, funny, and informative content for you.
So feel free, right?
Send a super.
Please, no simping in the chat.
You know, I am a normal woman.
I am a mid.
Keep it at that level.
All right.
I love you guys, but we got to be real here.
And then we're going to bring up Doug MPA first and talk about, I think I actually, before we do, I got to think about, I've really said my piece.
I mean, the women didn't listen then.
I went on it for two years.
In that two years, I felt little to no side effects.
I did gain weight, but I think it was my poor choices.
And I got off of it because I just felt like there would probably, if there weren't side effects now, there may be later.
And that was my gut feeling about it.
So, oh my gosh, now you guys are calling me an eight.
Oh, my God.
It's just embarrassing for you.
What's up, Doug MPA?
Yeah, there's a lot of simping in the chat, guys.
Calm it down a little bit, please.
You know, I was saying on one of the recap shows, because you said that you were a five.
And that's why Pearl's bulletproof when people try to sue.
What do you rate yourself?
A five.
You know, the whole time I've known you, you said a five the whole time.
So I don't know what people expect.
Could have been six if I wasn't chubby when I was 20.
You should give yourself credit for your height, though.
You know, I, you know, you're in like the top 8%.
No, aren't you like in the top 1% of women for height?
Yeah, but guys don't usually like height.
They're kind of indifferent.
I know you're into that, but I feel like most people are different.
Yeah, and that whole tall men liking short women thing is not a myth.
Almost every tall guy I know is married to some woman that's like 5'2 or 5'3 or something.
I've noticed that 6'3, 6'4 go for 5'5 to 5'7.
That's what I've seen.
Yeah, I don't know what that is.
My brothers are into tall girls, though.
My brother dumped a girl because she was too short.
Really?
I went out with a girl one time that was because I'm almost 6'3 ⁇ .
I'm supposed to say 6'3.
And I went out with a girl that was 6'2.
And she was pretty too, but she wore these like platform-looking boot-type shoes that made her taller than me.
Okay.
Yeah, so she was like 6'5 with her like shoes on on the date.
And I was like, I'm not going to lie.
It made me uncomfortable.
I didn't call it back after that.
I was like, nah, I'm good.
Wait, really?
Yeah.
She was like 6'5, maybe 6'6 with her, with her, whatever kind of platform she was on.
It was uncomfortable.
I was like, no, thanks.
You know what's funny?
Most of the time, guys will bring up height before the girl does.
Like, from my experience, I've never brought up height because I feel like if I'm taller, it's kind of rude to.
But, like, the guys will bring it up first.
Well, but you're the only thing I have to counter that with is you'll date a guy where he's of a height that isn't your preference.
You at least go on a date with him or be in a position to talk with him about it.
Most women, if you're not tall enough, won't even let you in a position to be able to have the conversation about it.
Oh, I'm not different in that regard.
Most of the, like, like under a certain height, I probably wouldn't.
But like, if they were like the same height, it's fine.
I don't know.
That's, that's how.
I mean, I just feel like I'm too tall to be that picky.
Like, you know, that's like when it comes to height, anyways.
You know, go ahead.
What were you saying?
I said, when it comes to height, anyways, I feel like I'm too tall to be like.
Yeah, I just have a rule.
I don't think if tall women, they just have to be extra feminine and try to be extra attractive and just put the attitude.
Because I think tall women are kind of like dark-skinned black women where they want to get you before you get them.
They feel like the world just doesn't like them because they're tall.
So they kind of want to get the world before the world gets them.
Yeah, that makes sense.
I found that like it's usually two to three inches shorter.
Super tall girls go than their height.
Like just because I played volleyball for 10 years, so I've seen a lot of couples.
Obviously, like the women, their first choice is going to be taller.
But like they'll do, like tall women will do a strong face card two to three inches shorter.
Like my friend was 6'3.
And actually, you know who she was dating.
You've seen about the show, but her boyfriend was 6'1.
Oh, oh, she was taller than him.
Yeah, she was 6'3.
He was 6'1.
Oh, wow.
Okay.
Yeah.
He was all heartbroken when they broke up.
Yeah.
That was hilarious.
Stop it.
All right.
What's your opinion on birth control?
So honestly, I have to say, anything to stop whores from having less children.
I just don't like that.
Hey, I'm serious.
And, you know, I always say we judge fathers harshly, but we don't judge mothers as harshly as fathers when mothers inflict infinitely more damage on their children than fathers ever do.
So anything to stop women that should never have kids from having kids, if they want to sit on birth control, more power to it.
My biggest problem is the whole culture of putting a woman on birth control right when she's like 15 or 16 or 17.
I don't like that at all.
Yeah, I'd like to see the birth rate keep going down because these women can't be moms.
You want to read that super chat?
Yeah, Pearl, you're not a 10, but you're not mid either.
Not being a feminist grants you a couple points.
No, it doesn't.
That doesn't get you invited on the yacht or put in Playboy.
I appreciate the saddening, guys.
Yeah, but I would say, so that's my biggest thing with birth control.
And then I don't like that when you talk about birth control, women automatically say the pill.
There's so many different forms of birth control, you know, IUDs and stuff like that that don't involve, that don't involve hormones.
And then I guess I'll say one more thing about birth control.
You know me, guys.
They haven't effectively made a male birth control yet.
But women know not what they ask for if a male birth control pill comes on the market.
They'll never let that happen.
Yeah, but why, and why is that?
Because that would be giving up way too much power.
They won't do it.
100% true.
100%.
Because men control access to relationships in marriage.
Can you imagine if they control access to having children too?
Could you imagine?
There'd be no more buzzer beaters.
You know, these women that they wake up when they're 35 and they realize, oh man, I'm going to be alone.
So I got to have a kid.
And then they sleep with some loser and get pregnant.
And then they have the magical out the rest of their life saying, well, he was irresponsible.
And I thought that he would step up.
That would all be gone.
And guys, don't get it twisted.
Most men that had something to lose, they'd be like, I'm not taking that, but they'd be taking it.
I guarantee it.
Hey, you know, I still think some guy would sign up, unfortunately.
The buzzer beater.
I just don't see that.
I've seen too much Doug MP.
In general, if a woman wants to go on birth control, I mean, I would recommend another form of birth control besides hormonal, but we need less horrible mothers and less hoes having kids.
It's just don't put your daughters on birth control when she's 15, 16 automatically.
Come on now.
So that's my take.
Well, but that's the thing that they don't talk about what the daughters were doing to get put on birth control.
Every girl I know that was put on birth control that young, she was doing some crazy stuff.
Like one of them, the one girl I'm thinking of, well, she was 16.
Her parents worked a lot.
They couldn't micromanage her.
And she kept sneaking out of the house and they just, they didn't think they could stop her.
So what are they supposed to do?
They don't want her to get pregnant by Pookie or Ray, right?
Yeah.
Or Gavin is targeting me.
Yeah, that's what the women, they always leave out.
Whenever they say my mom put me on it, they leave out what the F they were doing to be put on it.
Because some, you know, especially being part of a big family, you see how different like personalities are and like different parenting is for different kids because, you know, kids are different.
And I'm like, well, some of these women, they were just crazy teenagers.
Mid women get flown out and invited into the yacht all the time.
Stop it.
All right.
Well, I missed the, I missed the invite.
I missed it.
Like they didn't, they never invited me.
All right.
Could you imagine if you had a daughter and you seen, you see her with her behavior on a one-way trip to whoredom?
And there's nothing you can do.
That's why you said it multiple times.
Oh, my daughter wouldn't do that.
Okay there, bud.
You don't know.
I would just daughter was a teenage single mom.
TG Jakes.
Who's that?
TG Jakes?
Oh.
The pastor.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Do you know what?
I would just let her do it.
I'd say, look, wear a condom, get tested once a month, once every three months, as much as you can.
These are going to be the consequences.
And if you're willing to accept those, it's not my problem.
Sounds good.
All right, you guys, like the stream, please.
We appreciate that.
We have 446 people in here.
Let's try to get to 400 likes.
Let's get 100% engagement, please.
Subscribe if you haven't already.
We are on the root to 3 million.
Thank you for getting Pearl over 2 million.
We really appreciate that.
Hit that super chat button.
All donations go towards the divorce documentary and go to pearlinvite.com to join Pearl's invitation-only learning community.
We're building a great community over there.
First up, we have Doug MPA.
What if your friends started banging your daughter?
Oh, that would be brutal.
Like, one of my friends, my age, yeah, you know, here's the thing: first off, guys, I don't have any kids, number one.
But number two, there's a lack of fathers in almost every community now.
And so, if you're a single guy who has a very paternal nature, like you get hit on by younger women all the time.
A lot of these women that have daddy issues, especially, guys, work in a restaurant and watch all the older guys banging the younger host girls and servers.
I'm telling you, dude, it's awful.
Don't let your daughter work Doug MPA notes.
All right, sorry, who's on the line?
Oh, Brad, are you there?
Yes, sir.
How's it going?
Hey, Brad, how are you?
I'm doing good.
I'm a huge fan.
I want to say thank you for all the work you do.
Thank you.
So, what are your thoughts on the topic?
Um, do you know anybody that's had side effects from birth control?
And if you had a daughter, would you suggest she goes on it?
Oh man, if I had a daughter, I don't even want to think like that.
Don't even put those thoughts in my head.
Hey, I got to.
I got to.
I got to put the thoughts.
It's the question of the day.
Mental torture.
Yeah.
What you do with that?
No, I don't know about that.
I know, obviously, it's very bad for them.
Man, I tried calling in like last show, but my phone was having difficulties.
But last show was like women cheating.
Oh, man, I would have so much to say about that.
But birth control, I don't know.
I don't really talk to women about their birth control or whatever, but it's very bad.
I mean, they shouldn't be on it.
Or they, you know, bad for their health.
Is that the main topic of the show?
Just like our experience with women being on birth control.
What's your opinion?
Okay, so how about this?
The advent of the birth control pill has it been good for society or bad?
What do you think?
Overall, probably bad.
I think it's been great for like it's probably helped some guys avoid knocking up some crazy women.
So it's been good on that.
It's been a double-edged sword, I would say, but probably overall bad.
But I would say I always tell every guy, what I personally do and what I tell every guy is like, it's 100% your responsibility not to get her pregnant.
Because if you get some random chick pregnant, especially a girl like you don't want to be with, that's a crazy chick or whatever, like at the end of the day, she's pregnant and that's it.
So it doesn't, you could point the finger at her, like, oh, she lied to me, she told me this, but bro, at the end of the day, she's still pregnant, you're still fucked.
So just put 100% of the responsibility on yourself not to get her pregnant in the first place.
You know what I mean?
Cool.
Uncle Tiger says, one more and I'll stop the bomb, Bromet.
Would you have ever dated a short king?
How short?
Probably.
What's the lowest you'd go, bro?
Probably 5'8, 5'9.
5'8.
Okay.
But I mean, who knows?
When I'm 42, I'd probably go.
You know what I mean?
So, Brad, you said that you had, you know what?
Just for the sake of you calling in.
So you have a good cheating story?
Yeah, man.
I got a few.
Dude, I ain't gonna lie.
I love like if you pick up a girl and she's like, if it's one of your boys, obviously don't do it.
But if it's like, if she's got a boyfriend or a husband, you don't even know the guy, it just makes it like the icing on the cake.
Oh, what?
Yes, sir.
And the thing is, like, you like to be the guy she cheats with 100%.
It's just like the icing on the cake.
And the thing is, like, most guys are completely naive to this stuff.
Like, you know, what guys got to understand is like the girl that looks innocent and wholesome in the library on a Wednesday is most of the time the same girl that would look like a hoe in the nightclub on a Saturday.
Yeah, it's a strategy.
So have you ever done a thing where a girl will go out with a guy for dinner and then like show up to your house afterwards and give you the leftovers or something like that?
No, not yet.
Not that I know of.
But I can tell you, I can run you guys through.
I can run you guys through a story.
I would say like maybe one minute.
Oh, yeah, go for it.
Okay.
So I've done a lot of jobs.
You know, I bounced around jobs.
There was a time I was a bouncer and that was cool because you get to watch everybody in the club.
You get to watch the dynamics of like, you know, some guys try to get our girls, whatever.
And sometimes you get opportunities with girls.
Now, I was a little more proactive about it.
You got to be a little low-key about it.
But I was more like trying to kill two birds with one stone.
Like, I was trying to holler at some girls.
And there was a MILF.
I was doing the front door.
There was a MILF that came up.
Bro, she had tattoos, big titties hanging out, big ass, white chick, all that.
So I'm like, hey, you look like you know how to party.
Immediately receptive.
So I'm like, okay, green light, let's go.
So start talking to her, flirting by me, and get her number, all that.
And then the thing about being a bouncer, though, it can give you opportunities, but it can also cock block you because you got to stay till the club's closed.
You got to help clean up and all that.
And by that time, a lot of the girls would have to, it's a whole thing.
But anyway, basically, I got off a little early that night because the club was kind of dead.
And this was around the same time she was about to leave.
So we're coordinating to go to her place.
And she had with her, I'm going to just skip details for the sake of time.
Okay.
But she had with her adult niece and her best friend.
Okay.
When they saw what was going on, the adult niece was cool with this.
She was actually on my side.
The best friend was like, started slut shaming the hell out of her and was like, you fucking whore.
You have a boyfriend of three years.
This is wrong.
What you're doing, blah, blah, blah.
And the girl, the MILF had never mentioned a boyfriend to me, but the friend's like trying to do all this, right?
So anyway, I overcome the cock block, go to the MILF's house.
She had a big house, home bar, and everything.
So we get drunk and whatever.
Or, I mean, we don't get drunk.
So I don't know, whatever.
But, you know, basically, we smash like three times that night.
Dude, I busted on her face twice, bust in her once.
I had a vasectomy, so I just do that.
And then I barely, and so like we bang on and off all night.
And in the morning, I take an Uber back home.
I barely missed the boyfriend by like 10 minutes.
I'm pretty sure.
Because in the morning, the boyfriend called, right?
Me and the church are laying naked in the bed.
And the boyfriend called.
She answers the phone, and I can only hear her side of it, but she answers the phone.
Oh, hey, baby.
I love you so much.
I'm so happy to see you today.
Blah, Oh, okay, cool.
Hangs up the phone.
Oh, my boyfriend's coming over.
You know, you got to get out of here.
I said, okay, I want to fuck you one last time.
She said, okay.
So fuck her one last time, bust on her face.
And then she's like, oh, I got to hop in the shower.
And then, because the boyfriend was like, I guess the time was getting close for him to be there.
And then I take an Uber home.
And it's like, you know, that shit happens all the time.
Like, and the thing is, like, the guy, how is he supposed to even know?
I mean, sure, there could be red flags.
Like, obviously, if your girl's going out, you know, without you, dressed like a man.
Like, you're going to let a girl with a bunch of tattoos and big titties go to a club by herself.
What do you think is going to happen, dude?
Yeah, so I agree with that.
Obviously, if your girl's going out, you know, without you, dressed like a hoe to bars and clubs at late at night.
Yeah, obviously you're naive if you, you know, that's a different thing.
But let's say hypothetically that she didn't even do that.
But like these guys really have sometimes there's really no way to know because women are really good liars.
Like you could be putting off an image to the guy.
So Pearl is one of the key figures in the movement of just assume a woman's a whore until proven otherwise.
I agree.
Like if you're if you're a man worth a dang, just assume that your girl's gonna cheat sooner rather than later.
Seriously, why not?
Yeah, it's a rental.
It's a rental.
Why you buy it?
Like this is a renter.
This is a renter's market, you know?
No one owns homes at homes anymore.
No one owns women, you know.
Yeah, because here's the thing.
You know, ultimately, look, guys, society is, it's always going to be, it's always going to be the man's fault.
If the, if the relationship ends and the man did something wrong, it's his fault.
If the relationship ends and the woman did something wrong, it's his fault.
So honestly, guys, if you got got, it's your fault.
You might as well cheat too, King.
Yeah, why not?
Yeah.
All right, Brad.
We're going to move on to the next story, buddy.
Thanks for having me.
Can I say one, if I like 30 seconds, can I say one thing before I hop off?
Sure, go ahead.
Okay.
Like I said, Pearl, your work is very appreciated.
I know it comes with like a huge sacrifice that like so many people come at you attacking you with bullshit, but you're really paving the road for the red pill for the new breed of conservatism.
You're one of the realest people on YouTube.
I just want to say thank you because you're helping a lot of men.
Like you're really saving lives.
So thank you so much.
And one piece of like constructive criticism I would give you real quick is you're doing everything super good.
But I see on these debates, the one thing the conservatives, the Tradcons press you on is they say, are you telling men not to get married?
Are you telling men not to get married?
And then you say, I'm not telling men to do anything.
I would just advise, just own it.
Just say, yeah, I'm telling them not to get married.
Because me personally, I tell guys not to get married.
If you're going to ask me, I'm going to tell you, don't get married.
It's a fucking bullshit deal.
The contract's fucking bullshit.
It's setting you up to potentially get destroyed.
Don't fucking do it.
So that's all I'll say.
So thank you very much, Pearl.
Thanks for calling in.
So Fria says, boyfriend probably knows and lets her hoe.
Probably.
Let's bring in.
Guys, make sure to keep hitting that like button, please.
How many likes are we at?
Are we going to have to scold?
What?
171 likes with 450 people in here.
Hit that like button, please.
You'd really appreciate it.
Thanks for all the super chats.
Thanks to everyone at the Audacity chat.
We have Licindia Almanza, William Shane Stischer, Colton, Daniel C. Thank you for being in the Audacity chat.
We really appreciate that.
Next up, we have nevermarrieddating.com is coming up.
Hey guys, if you have any opinion on birth control, if you're a woman and you had a bad experience with birth control, who could call in?
If you're a man and you were dating a woman who was on birth control and would always complain about his side effects or something like that.
Or did you have a woman that said that she was on birth control and she really wasn't?
How about that?
Oof.
Call in.
We'd love to hear from you.
Nevermarrieddating.com.
You're on mute.
Is that better?
Hey.
Hey, how's it going?
Hi, Pearl.
I just wanted to call in and let you know, people are saying you're five today on the podcast show.
We're not wearing much makeup, but I just wanted to call in.
My statement was, I think you're 10 today.
I think it takes a lot of gumption to go on there and not use a lot of makeup.
People always are into this makeup thing.
And it's so much nicer and refreshing to see a person that doesn't wear makeup.
You know, that's all I really had to say.
Thanks.
Do you have any opinions on the topic?
Birth control?
The birth control.
Is it good for society, bad for society?
What do you think?
Well, the society birth control is used.
So they, you know, most people know this, or they don't get pregnant, but our problem in America is, you know, people aren't people over 40 not having kids.
And it's a dramatic drain on the system, not having kids after 40.
If you're, if you're, if you're going to, you know, especially if you want to have a legacy, people want about their legacy.
I have a friend that has a legacy.
He has five kids.
And I was like, yeah, he was the only child.
But people over 40 aren't having kids, and it's like a phenomenon.
And we're being taken over by other countries that are overpopulating us.
So, you know, that's a problem.
You know, what's crazy is I'm old enough where when I was in elementary school and maybe middle school was when they were still talking about, oh, this is giving me too many people overpopulation.
Now we don't have enough children to replace the population.
It's crazy to think about.
Great.
Now these women were.
It is 25% of 40-year-olds haven't been married.
So, and this is a question or fact.
I know the answer to it, but do you know what the state with the most highest rate of never married people?
It's a good interesting fact if you don't know your listeners might.
What is it?
Oh, the state with the highest rate of most never married people is Pennsylvania.
I was going to guess New York.
Okay.
Why do you think that is?
Well, I can guess, theorize it's because maybe the cold climate.
Pennsylvania is mostly blue-collar, a lot of industrial workers and Pittsburgh and Philadelphia.
But it's right next to New York.
So I can't figure out why it would be New York or California, but most of the never people are in Pennsylvania.
And the president, there was only one president in the history of the United States that was never married.
And he was from the state of Pennsylvania.
I'll fight you naked.
Says my girl went off the pill, then she hated me.
She moved out within six months after three years.
My article on Medium is called The Family Killer.
Okay.
Do you have anything else that's interesting, though?
The Pennsylvania.
I wouldn't have guessed that.
You know that Oregon and Maine have the highest rates of women on birth control.
No way.
Utah has the most marriages.
If you figure Utah has the most marriages anywhere.
You know that?
You know that Salt Lake City has the worst prescription pill problem of any major city.
Yeah.
Oh.
Yeah.
All right.
Pearl, I was going to give you a super chat tonight.
I got a new gift card, and I was going to do a Rumble super chat.
I don't know what the issue is.
Rumble, does anybody have a problem using gift cards for donations or super chats?
I'm just trying to do it tonight.
Do you know anybody having that problem?
I don't know, but I'll ask.
I'll ask the, I'll have our team make a note of it and see if they can look into it.
Yeah, that would be nice because I was going to do a super chat.
I got a gift card.
I was like, I'm going to do that for Pearl.
So it didn't work.
Well, thanks so much.
Have a wonderful rest of the week, and I appreciate your show so much.
You're the best podcaster around.
So I appreciate it.
Thank you so much.
I appreciate it.
My wife took under the skin and wouldn't stop bleeding.
What is oh, like the thing in your arm?
Yeah.
I had a friend that was on birth control, and then she married her husband, and she stopped birth control so they can have a kid.
But she had for months, it was just like a non-stop period for like months.
And she went to the doctor.
I was like, what's going on?
I'm talking, imagine if for three months, Pearl, straight.
She's like, what the?
But she had been on it since she was 16 and she stopped it at 28.
Wow.
Yeah.
I mean, it's just common sense.
Like, I remember being on it for the little bit and even before I got on it, just thinking, like, I can't be on this too long because there's just going to be problems.
So.
Yeah.
Anyone, there's no one else on the lines.
Anyone else want to call in and talk about birth control?
Because, yeah, there's no one else.
I guess everyone's happy that birth control is a thing.
The guys are like, yeah, we get to nut in these hoes.
Yeah.
I'm not saying you should.
I'm not saying that is not a recommendation.
I'm just saying there are men that take advantage of that.
The thing about it is, there's no way to know if a woman's on birth control if she says she's on birth control.
There's no way to know.
Never assume, guys.
Can guys feel IUDs?
I mean, wait, could we pull the chat?
Can you feel IUDs?
Yes, no.
I don't know.
Make that the poll.
Go ahead.
Yeah.
I just think, once again, like I said before, it's funny how women always say, well, you know, birth control didn't agree with me.
What kind of birth control are we talking about?
Because go ahead.
I mean, I've never been on it.
I've never had a pregnancy scare.
It's really not hard.
Like, come on.
Yeah.
It's not hard.
Never had a pregnancy scare.
Never had an abortion.
Nothing.
And even, look, guys, I'm just going to say it.
The pull-out method, it works.
The only time you're like MPA.
Don't ask me how I know.
But yeah.
So, because the biggest problem with the pull-out method is that guys will be in there having a good time.
Like, oh, yeah, I'm going to pull out.
But then they don't pull out.
So it's like this thing where they're like, okay, I'm going to do it.
I'm going to go for it.
I'm going to pull out.
And then they just don't pull.
They just take the risk and just go for it.
And that's how guys get caught up.
Like, you know, I'm sorry.
They try to say it doesn't work.
It doesn't work because guys are so dumb at the moment that they don't pull out.
That's the only reason why the pull-out method doesn't work.
I just am so, I get so pissed off when I see women crying about the side effects.
Like, do you know what I mean?
Like, if you took steroids, Doug MPA, and you went to the doctor and they said, hey, here are some steroids.
There's no side effects.
Wouldn't you just logically think, ah, there might be some side effects?
And like, this is a calculated risk, like any procedure.
Yeah.
Or like any medication.
I take Advil.
That's a calculated risk.
There are people that die from Advil.
There are.
I mean, it's not that common, but I'm just saying.
And here's the thing.
You see these actors, right?
Like Hugh Jackman and Chris Hensworth.
Look, you have to get on steroids to have the biotype, but they're maintained by a doctor and they only do it for a limited.
They do it for the movie role and then they stop.
So it's like birth control.
I mean, what if a woman just wanted to whore around for like nine months, get on birth control for nine months and then stop whoring and get off birth control?
Be smarter than being on it for a decade.
Do you know what I think?
I was with a woman in my early 20s who had IUD activities knocked out of place.
She experienced all sorts of menstrual problems, eventually leading to her infertility.
It's not worth it, boys and girls.
Look, most women I know that got off birth control were fine.
And I'm just being honest.
Or maybe they didn't tell me, right?
But the ones I know, they did have some hormonal side effects, but they all were able to have kids later.
That's what I've seen.
But, you know, but like to act like nothing's going to happen, it's just, it's a calculated risk, and you might take the L.
And I'm just really tired of women.
Like, life doesn't, every procedure is a risk.
You know, every medication is a risk.
And if you're going to take something that's not natural, it might affect you.
Yep.
RJ Isaac, are you there?
RJ.
Hey.
RJ, how's it going?
Hey, it's going well.
So tell me, RJ, what's your opinion on birth control?
Do you know any women that were on it and did they have any side effects?
I really couldn't speak to whether, no, I don't know any women that were on it or having side effects.
I mean, I've heard of stories about it happening, but I haven't had any personal experience with it.
My wife, she wasn't on birth control, which was good because, again, I do hear all these situations where women will go and marry a guy and she takes birth control beforehand.
Oh, yeah.
And after they get married, then they don't like him anymore.
So I guess I dodged that bullet.
But I wanted to more address the idea of whether or not birth control is a good thing or a bad thing.
And I think that the big problem here, I don't think birth control overall was a good thing.
I think the problem is that all the promisecuity that we see right now is a direct result of the pill being introduced.
And it has basically given women permission to go out and be promiscuous.
And this really seems to be one of the bigger problems that we are facing in the country.
Again, as was previously mentioned about the problem where we're not having enough children, this is a big issue.
And one of the things that, particularly for my sake, I have three kids.
Okay.
And my brother, he has made a decision not to have any kids.
And as many people else have.
And one of the things I started to realize is that, particularly with the way that this social security system is set up in the United States, that what's going to end up happening is that my brother makes good money, so he's not the best example, but him and his wife, they both work.
They're both able to contribute to 401ks.
They're not having the expense of having kids.
But when it comes to actually getting the social security benefits, it's my children that are going to be paying for their social security benefits, as well as the benefits that are coming to me.
And whereas my wife and I, we've had to make sacrifices to be able to live on one income, to be able to look for ways to cut, plus, pay for all the expenses of having kids.
And as a result, we're going to have a lower social security benefits if it's still around, of course, when we get to that age.
And we are the ones that our kids are going to be supporting all the current generation that are currently contributing to Social Security right now.
And this is a, I see this as a really, again, this really, I think, highlights the issue where if we aren't having people, if people aren't having kids now, then all these benefits, all the comfort that we have seen in the United States is going to really start collapsing very quickly.
And I've mentioned in when I've talked with you before, I've lived outside the United States for some time.
And my assessment right now is that the United States is basically like life, you know, you don't have bullying.
You have those bumpers on the side where you don't get gutterballs.
Yeah, life in America is like bowling with the bumpers up.
And you start living in other countries around the world and they don't have the bumpers down.
And the problem is they end up learning better skills about how to actually just live and get through things and handle challenges.
Whereas people don't have that.
I agree.
Have you ever been to the African continent?
I have not.
Bro, let me tell you, that's why it always makes me laugh when people of color in America that they complain about racism and poverty.
You've never first offered racism, go to South America, Latin America.
You'll see some racism there.
Then poverty, go to the African continent, man.
Nothing will make you more patriotic to be an American than spending some.
Now, I'm not saying that the places in Africa I've been to were nice, but I'm glad I was only there for a limited amount of time.
Sure, I can understand that.
I couldn't do it.
You could deal with anything when there's a finish line.
But I couldn't imagine having lived, I'm not going to say where I've been, but I've been to three different countries, man, and each time I was glad to get back on that plane to the good old USA.
Well, and this is, and a good example of this is, like, I'll talk to people like, oh, I'm having a hard time.
Like, I was trying to find a kettlebell for some workouts, and I could only find a 16-kilogram kettlebell, and I wanted something heavier.
And some people, oh, just order off Amazon.
I'm like, oh, I don't really have access to Amazon.
And this was actually one of the things I wanted to get away from.
Like, when I was living in the U.S., I saw how comfortable and how easy it was just to get things almost instantly from Amazon.
And having to get away from that, go and actually shop at local stores and do all this stuff, I think, was one of the things I wanted to do.
But I think that this level of comfort is not sustainable unless we're able to go and have more kids.
And this is a big problem where the birth control pill has resulted in this.
And I don't think this is even like if again, if I was supreme emperor ruler and I did have the choice, I would actually get rid of it.
There are some things I don't think once the genie's out of the bottle, you can't get it back in, so to speak.
I don't think this is one of them.
I think, again, pragmatically right now, of course, in reality, we're not going to be able to.
But if there was a way for us to, or more people were aware at least, of what the downsides of birth control were and had, you know, maybe perhaps more education on that, maybe we can go and see some more babies happening.
Because again, even I'm 35 and people my age don't have kids.
I'm like the only one has kids and my oldest is 10 years old.
And it's just very alarming to me at this point.
How do you feel about the population decline and the fact that women, over the next 10, 15 years, women are going to have like 1.5 kids?
I think it's good because they'd be terrible mothers.
Most women.
I'm sure there's bad effects for society, like he was talking about with Social Security.
But I just, when I interviewed the 1,000 women, I just, maybe 10, 20% I could see being good moms.
Yeah, I think so too.
Because what you and I have both said, mothers do infinitely more damage to their children than fathers do.
Because guys, I've said it on here before.
Who's the person that called you?
Who's the first person to say that you're too tall, you're too short, you're too fat, you're too thin, your nose is too big, your eyes are crossed, your eyes are too big, look, they're too small.
Who's the first person you've ever called you've ever heard call a woman a whore?
It was your mom.
And I had the same experience too.
And I honestly, I don't think that matters.
I think the problem that we've had bad moms throughout all of human history.
This isn't anything new.
And I think there's plenty of men who will make great dads.
Obviously, there's challenges with the legal system and everything.
But if, again, regardless of the fact that there's going to be bad moms out there, we still need people.
And, you know, even hardships that people go through set them up to be able to have future successes in different ways.
And just being saying that, well, a lot of people are going to be bad parents.
Most people, like most, again, half of parents are below average.
Like, that's just a reality.
And we just, we need the people.
Wow.
Okay.
Cool.
Good luck convincing women to have them.
Yeah.
Sorry.
Soravia said between birth control and two abortions.
My ex was infertile, dumped her for a younger fertile one.
I got five kids.
Stay away from the pills and pull out.
All right.
All right, I'm sorry.
Sorry, one 30-second thing.
One other big point I want to make also about the difference between being in the U.S. and outside the U.S. In the U.S., anytime I'd go around with three boys, people would look at me and say, oh, I'm so three boys.
You must be so tired.
It has to be so hard.
Outside the U.S.
No, that's the dream.
Sorry, go ahead.
For me, anyway.
Anytime men see me with three boys, like, they're all yours.
You're so lucky.
So it's very, the attitude outside the U.S. is different.
Again, at least for the place I've been, I'm not going to say it's everywhere, but it's a big difference too.
But that's all I have.
Thank you.
I was going to talk to you, buddy.
I mean, that sounds awesome.
Yeah.
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Next up, we have Jana.
You know, the best housewife I've ever met told me that she cried the day she found out she only had boys, like tears of joy.
One of my friends, he's an absolute savage when it came to women and college and stuff like that.
And him and his wife just had a daughter.
He's like, dang it.
That's a cool feel.
If she asks what kind of man not to date, you could tell her how you used to be when you were young.
Don't date you when you were young.
Wait, what's the name of the person on the line?
Jana.
Jana, Jaina.
Jaina.
Hi, can you hear me?
Yeah, how are you?
Good.
I just thought I'd call in and help you get your show back on track.
Birth control, girl.
Sure.
So, did you go on birth control or do you know someone that did?
I was on it very briefly, probably in my 20s.
I was on the, I don't know if you remember what's called the Neuva ring.
That sounds familiar.
Yeah.
If you Google it, you'll see it's actually like a ring that you would actually insert up.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I remember that.
Okay.
Yeah.
I was on it for four months.
It was awful.
And one day I woke up with horrible migraines.
And so I immediately just went to the bathroom, took that sucker out and flushed it.
So that was the last time I was in the middle of the day.
And did your symptoms completely go away?
Yeah, after the migraine, yeah.
That's what really freaked me out the most was the migraine.
And did you ever go on?
After that, I talked to my mother and she's like, yeah, I can never be on birth control myself.
I'm like, thanks, mom.
Why couldn't you tell me that before?
So did you ever go on any other types of birth controls or no?
No.
No.
That was it.
What about like your friends around you at the time?
Did you see them have consequences or side effects?
Well, it's fun.
Like all my friends have been on it since they were 16.
But one thing I have noticed is like some of my older friends, like in their 40s, they've gone into menopause way early.
No way.
Yeah.
And I think we're going to see a lot of that.
And I can't say it's directly because of birth control, but I think it is.
Because every single one of them were on birth control from the age of 16 or 18 or whatever.
Yeah, because you know what?
I just think it's common sense, like that there might be side effects from something you're putting into your body.
Do you know what I mean?
I'm just like, I don't know how nobody thought.
Like, I don't know if you had this conversation, but I remember having the conversation with people my age at the time, and they all looked at me like I was nuts.
They're like, no, the doctor said it was fine.
I'm like, you don't think there might be okay, you know?
Yeah, it's like when like you talk to, when I talked to my girlfriends about not being on birth control, at least, you know, back when I was younger, they were looking like I was horrified, like I was, you know, playing Russian roulette or something.
Yeah, and they didn't, and they didn't care about their health or their safety at the time.
So all these women that are like bitching in their 30s, it's like they'll blame the doctors, but like, come on, they just wanted to have sex raw.
Like, come on.
Like, get the fuck out of here.
Go ahead.
Exactly.
And it's not like it's always effective.
I called him before and told you about my friend who had abortions.
Yeah.
And she was on birth control at the time.
She still got pregnant.
So.
Well, it's because you have to take the pill at the same time every day.
I'm assuming she was on the pill.
No, she had the shot in her arm.
I forget what was that called?
Was that called?
Well, okay.
I guess she, you know, the one they place in your arm.
Yeah, I know what you're talking about.
I don't know.
Did you see any women gain weight?
She's on the Depo Pavera shot.
Depo.
Yeah.
The women that I saw gained that said they gained weight from birth control.
In my experience, they just seemed like they're eating too much because a lot of the time when you get on birth control.
No, because a lot of the time when you get on birth control, it's a time when you're in college, right?
That's when most women, like some started in high school, and then some started in college.
Both.
That's when you're starting to drink.
And you can't drink heavy.
You get that freshman 15, right?
Everybody does.
So, like, I didn't get on it till halfway through school.
So I'm like, I gained the weight before, you know what I mean?
And after.
Well, I mean, like, if you think about it, birth control kind of mimics, you know, or pauses your cycle and all that.
So, like, there are certain times in the month when we're hungrier than others.
I mean, oh, do you know what?
That actually makes a little sense.
You probably keep on water weight, but I just, I have a hard time believing it makes you like gain fat.
Let me see.
No, it's probably a lot of bloating too.
Yeah, you're probably right.
Like, I just, I like, cause I guess that would make sense because before your period for two weeks, you're heavier, but it's not like you look that different.
It's just like, that's my guess.
I'm not a medical professional.
That's just what I've seen.
You're heavier and hungrier.
Yeah, maybe.
But it's like everyone's drinking.
So maybe you're hungrier because you're hungover.
I ate a lot, you know, after a night.
I would eat like a whole piece.
You know, I ate a lot after a night out.
And also the wrong crap, too.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So you're right.
Thanks for calling in.
Call it anytime.
Yeah.
Thank you both.
Bye.
Bye.
Hey, that is everyone.
And I'm not saying like, maybe birth control.
Okay, wait.
Let me ask.
Why does birth control?
I'm going to ask Grock right now.
Why does birth control make women gain weight?
I want to know the reasoning behind it.
You know what?
I'll ask Chat T EBT at the same time and we'll see if they come up with the same estrogen and progesterin.
So it contains synthetic versions of estrogen or progesterin.
These hormones can influence appetite metabolism and fat storage.
Estrogen may increase retention and alter.
Do you know what it is?
It probably is that your body thinks you're pregnant.
Yeah.
Because you're not ovulating.
It's just fat distribution.
Hormones like progestin may change how your body stores fat, especially in areas like hips, thighs, and breasts.
These changes can make it seem like you gain weight even if your overall weight has increased.
Muscle versus fat confusion.
Some women report a change in body composition, feeling softly, which can be more noticeable than changed on the scale.
Yeah, and it says not all women gain weight on birth control.
Genetic factors, lifestyle.
Yeah, bullshit.
Okay.
I bet it makes you hungrier, but it's still a choice what you put in your mouth.
That's what I think.
There were women that were on it that didn't gain weight.
Some perceived weight gain may be due to lifestyle changes, aging, or unrelated factors.
Studies show that weight gain on hormonal contraceptives, contraceptives is often minimal one to two pounds and not significantly different from the placebo effect in many cases.
That's what I would expect, one to two pounds, because after your cycle, you lose one to two pounds.
But like 10 pounds, like, do you know how many calories 10 pounds of fat is?
How many?
I can't remember.
Calories.
I know because I'm trying to lose it.
You know what I mean?
Take forever.
So, so according to Chat BT, the Chat GPT, I put, has the birth control pill been good for society?
She said it's a positive impacts.
The pill gave women unprecedented control over reproduction, allowing them to plan if and when to have children.
This has been fundamental to women's rights and autonomy, giving them more freedom to pursue education, careers, and personal growth.
Personal goals.
Yeah, how's that going?
Right?
Studies consistently show that access to the pill has increased college graduation rates for women, led to higher labor force participation and income levels.
Yeah, how's that going?
Helped close the gender wage gap, although disparities still exist.
And then the health benefits are that they regulate menstrual cycles, reduce acne, lower the risk of ovarian and endometrial cancers, and treat conditions like PCOS and endometriosis.
Oh, the endometriosis would make sense because when you're pregnant, like I think that's the one that you remember the guy called in and said when you're pregnant, it stops.
Yeah.
So it kind of would kind of make sense.
But it says 10 pounds, guys, 35,000 calories.
That's what you have to burn or eat extra if you gain 10 pounds.
That's a lot of like people, you people don't realize how long it takes to lose 10 pounds.
Like it's not easy.
It was 35,000 calories.
How many calories a day is that for a month?
It was either Patty LaBelle or Laritha Franklin or Aretha Franklin, one of the two.
And she would blow up between tours, like you know, get really big.
And then she, but she'd always start a tour.
This is when she was in her 30s and her 40s.
You know, after that, she didn't give a dang.
But she'd be walking around doing interviews before a tour just big as a house.
And then she started the tour like the tour, like 50, 60 pounds lighter.
And they said, how do you lose the weight?
She just, you know, she said, I just stopped eating.
Yeah.
No, because really, she's like, yeah, I just, I just stopped eating.
She said, I, I, I've always been able to do it.
I just stop eating.
And, you know, she'll drink coffee and you know, maybe some pancakes in the morning.
And that's it.
She's like, I've always been able to do it.
Then she hit her 40s and she wasn't able to do it anymore.
Yeah, because like it's just so much.
I feel like now that I'm almost to the end of this, like, of losing the weight I gained in my early 20s, I'm almost to the end of it.
I'm like, it's so much work to learn everything you're eating, but there's just no other way to do it.
You have to know what you're eating.
That's my opinion.
Like, all these like diets and stuff, like, people will just quit.
Fasting, fuck that.
Like, no.
Well, and I've said this many times.
That's why I don't mind if you hear these women, it's not fair that models have to be a size zero.
I hate plus-size models.
I hate them because they're doing no work and making money.
Guys, you know, I have a job during the day I have to get up and go to, and I have to do what my boss says.
I have to do everything there.
I have to, you know, I have to work for my money.
Plus-sized models, they don't have to work for anything.
That's why I don't mind that a woman has to.
This one girl I knew in undergrad, she spent from 16 to 19 as an international model.
And she said that she was 5'10, and she had to be 116 pounds, 117 pounds, right?
She's 5'9, had to be 116 pounds.
And she said that how she stayed skinny.
She smoked like a chin.
Smoked Marlborough Reds and then she ate apples, bananas, and drank black coffee.
Yeah, she's like, I've been all around the world, you know, Milan, Australia, all these places, but I had to make that sacrifice to get those privileges.
And then when she hit 19, she didn't want to do it anymore.
And I don't have a problem with that.
People that try to make money and not do any work, I hate it.
I hate that whole concept.
Yeah.
Yeah, I agree.
I just came 35,000 calories.
I forgot what I was going to say.
I'm spacing out a little bit.
I think that's all I got today.
You got anything else, Doug MPA?
Yeah, you know, I'm all for the birth control.
You know, I think that less hoes need to have kids and less horrible mothers need to have kids.
I wish that there's a way that we could encourage good families to have more children.
I'd rather see, you know, one married mother and father with five kids than a bunch of single moms running around.
But yeah, I'm all for the birth control, man.
I just don't just try to have, you know, try to have, you know, a little bit of don't put a young girl on birth control when she's 15, 16, 17 years old.
Don't do that.
Unless she's really a hoe.
That's my opinion.
If she's really hoeing, like, aren't some of these high schoolers like banging criminals?
Yeah.
Yeah.
If my daughter was banging criminals, I would put that IUD right up there.
We actually have one more caller.
Sure, we could do one more.
Okay.
Flow State.
It's coming on up.
He's been on before, right?
Yep.
I remember Flow State.
I know everyone keeps saying I'm sunburnt.
Yes, guys.
I'm very, very sunburnt.
Your audio is connecting.
There he is.
Flow State, are you there?
What's up, Flow State?
Oh, Flow State.
There he is.
We can see you, Flow State.
Are you there?
What about now?
I can hear you.
How's it going?
Hey, good.
You?
I'm good.
So, what's your opinion on birth control?
Did you know somebody that was on it?
I've known lots of women who were on it.
I cannot tell you specifically who has or hasn't had health effects from it.
I mean, it makes sense to me that if you can't just turn off a key biological function and not have negative outcomes.
So you think it's been bad or good for society?
I was about to ask.
Do I think it's been good or bad for society?
Yep.
For society, probably bad overall, but for me personally, probably good overall.
But I've got a 15-year-old daughter, and I am not having her anywhere near that.
Yeah.
What if you had a daughter that was going crazy?
Would you put her on it?
I'd probably just put an ankle bracelet on her.
I don't know.
Luckily, knock on wood, we're not there.
She's a good kid, but it just seems like the I haven't done a lot of research into it, but from what I'm aware, just it doesn't seem like it's worth the risk.
I don't think so.
I don't think it's necessary.
Like, I think it's pretty easy to not get pregnant, even without birth control.
Yeah, you can, you can count days or whatever.
The pull-out method worked for me until it didn't.
Okay, that wasn't a kid because I've always made the argument where the pull-out method doesn't work because guys don't actually pull out.
Is that your experience?
It worked for me for two years solidly.
And then, you know, the issue is that you have no margin of error.
So if you pull mostly out, if you get like 90% out, you still could be in trouble.
Is that what happened?
It was like a 90% type of thing.
Yeah, it was like a one-stroke too long sort of thing.
And I knew I messed up when it happened, but you didn't have plan B back then?
We were together.
I'd been with my daughter's mom for about two years at that point.
And so now, also, I figured, what are the odds?
What are the odds?
In two years, I have one kind of misfire.
It'll be fine.
Luckily, it wasn't.
Luckily, because even though I wouldn't have chosen it at the time, it was one of those blessings in disguises.
Cool.
Cool.
Well, thanks for calling in, Doug MPA.
You got any other questions for him?
So what because there's a thing.
Okay.
Your daughter's a good daughter.
So you've raised her well.
What kind of parenting did you have to do to raise a daughter that's not headed down the path where you would have to put her on birth control?
Because I could tell by the way that you said that your daughter's a good kid, that she actually is.
But we see some guys that are like, oh, my daughter would never do that.
And it's just like, bro, you never know.
So what would you, what kind of parenting would you recommend to a man that has a daughter to have a good daughter like yours who isn't headed down the wrong path?
So I think that a couple things that I did differently from a lot of parents is one, I tried to be honest with my daughter and with myself, right?
So that whole my daughter would never do that mindset.
That's that's the opposite of what I think.
I think that, you know, I'm raising, I'm not sheltering my daughter from the world.
I'm raising her to be able to operate in it herself.
So that's one thing.
I'm honest with her and I don't, and I don't believe in sheltering or hiding kids from things really that they're going to experience in adulthood.
The other thing is I raised her.
So her mom and I got divorced when she was two and I got custody and I raised her as a single dad most of her life.
Good job, man.
Awesome.
And so I remember when I was in high school and middle school, the girls who had low self-esteem got taken advantage of.
And so it was very much in the front of my mind to raise her in a way where she had confidence.
And I've created a monster.
Is she a little you?
In many ways, in many ways.
That's a compliment, man.
I recognize it and I appreciate it.
You know, everyone's their own person.
She does have a lot of my traits, but she's also got some that are uniquely hers.
That's awesome, man.
Awesome.
I agree with the sheltering things.
The women that crash out the hardest are like pastors' kids.
And like, I mean, Nala was a pastor's daughter.
So they're all.
I didn't know that.
And you see kids where they get upset at their parents for not giving them the tools to face the real world.
You know what I'm saying?
Or even worse, you have kids.
So parents, I mean, I'm not a parent, but my mother was absolutely terrible, right?
So parents are supposed to do the emotional maintenance to foster their children and to be confident, successful people like you did with your daughter.
But horrible parents, they require the children to do emotional maintenance on them.
It's like the other way around.
You know what I'm saying?
And so we have too many parents that the kids are forced to have to do the emotional maintenance on their parents or pick their parents up.
And it's just, but I have a lot of friends who get mad at their parents for not doing what you're doing with your daughter and giving them the tools necessary to face the world.
It's rough out there, man.
Rough.
Are you going to put her in, like, like, do you have any plan for, are you going to try to assist her in finding a boyfriend or a husband when the time comes?
Are you going to put her in like environments you think she'd meet somebody?
Like, are you going to like, I was thinking that I'll just auction her off for, you know, whoever can give you the most goats.
No, I was just curious.
Are you going to help her set up a dating app?
Like, do you have a plan with that?
No, she's, she's got a boyfriend.
He's a nice guy.
Okay.
I don't plan to meddle in that unless like there's an issue.
Okay.
Yeah.
And again, she brought him home and you were cleaning the handguns when he came.
I was actually doing something with my truck and he, the first thing that he said was that I had a cool truck.
So that was a good way to, you know, increase that relationship.
Awesome.
Cool.
All right.
Well, thanks so much for calling in.
Doug MPA, you got anything else for him?
Nope.
Always good talking to you, Flossy.
Yeah, thanks for calling in.
Take it easy.
Cool.
That's everybody.
Cool.
Just so everyone knows, tomorrow we're going to do the Single Mother Survivor Show at the request of one of our loyal viewers.
So you can call in tomorrow with your stories of surviving a horrible single mom or even if you, you know, if your parents were married and your mother treated your dad like garbage and the kids like garbage.
Because hopefully one day in my lifetime, we will judge.
We judge fathers harshly, but hopefully in my lifetime, we'll judge mothers as harshly as we judge fathers.
So stay tuned tomorrow because we're going to have the single mother survivor show.
And then Friday, we are going to do another SCD show on HPV.
You guys seem to really, really like the.
No one else is talking about it.
No one else is being, I'll do the dirty work.
Let's talk about these STDs.
Yeah.
So because we did a previous show on HIV and Herpes, and then we did the last one on Chlamydia and Gonorrhia.
We're doing this one on HPV on Friday.
So make sure to tune in.
We go live at 7 Central 8 Eastern, Monday through Friday.
So make sure to check out the shows on Thursdays and Fridays.
We'd really appreciate that.
Cool.
All right.
Well, thanks so much for helping me out today.
My opinion is I don't really care if people get on birth control.
It's not my problem.
My experience, it's not really necessary.
I don't think it's the hardest thing to not get pregnant.
Yeah, I don't think it's that difficult.
So, anyways, guys, let me know what you think in the comments.
Make sure you like the video on your way out and subscribe to the channel.