By Sicebise Msengana
Masculinity and patriarchy have been the bedrock of civilizations for thousands of years. However, in modern discourse, these concepts are often misrepresented and attacked, framed as oppressive and outdated.
By Sicebise Msengana
Masculinity and patriarchy have been the bedrock of civilizations for thousands of years. However, in modern discourse, these concepts are often misrepresented and attacked, framed as oppressive and outdated.
By Sicebise Msengana
Feminism and Its Branches: A Comprehensive Overview
Feminism is a multifaceted movement advocating for gender equality and the dismantling of patriarchal structures that oppress women and marginalized genders. It has evolved over centuries, taking on various forms and ideologies, each responding to different social, political, and cultural contexts.
By Sicebise Msengana
Chapter One: The Meeting
The village of Mavuno lay nestled between rolling green hills and the mighty Zambezi River, where baobab trees stood like ancient sentinels, watching over generations of love and loss. In this village, love was not just whispered between lovers but carried by the wind, woven into the fabric of tradition.
By Sicebise Msengana
Introduction
The "Red Pill" movement is a loosely defined ideological and online community that claims to reveal "hidden truths" about society, gender dynamics, and power structures. Its name is derived from the 1999 film The Matrix, in which the protagonist, Neo, is given a choice between taking a blue pill, which allows him to remain in blissful ignorance, or a red pill, which awakens him to the truth of reality.
Feminism is one of the biggest legalized scams. I have always said feminism or gender equality is an establishment ploy to masculinize women and sexualize them, while feminizing men and regarding them as deposables. Feminism is a war against masculinity, family and femininity.
The Rockefellers and other elites funded feminism because they want to profit from women, birth control, broken homes and taxes. To do this, they convinced women that men are the enemy and that women can be as tough, ambitious and career minded as men. So they attacked the idea of women having families and being mothers. Motherhood, family making and traditional family unit were portrayed as being toxic and worse life prospects. Then getting jobs, having casual sex, birth control, being single, divorced and breaking up the family unit is being free from oppressive patriarchy.
According to various studies, more than 40% of women are unhappier now than 40 years ago. In fact, a majority of women are less satisfied with their lives nowadays. Contrary to popular opinion, most women don't get satisfaction from climbing the corporate ladder, being the boss lady, casual sex, and equal rights with men. Feminist ideologies are the same patterns that make women unhappy but feminists will blame the existence of patriarchy. Having casual sex has made women more miserable, birth control has been linked to escalating suicide rates among women.
Some women are waking up and realising that the workplace, degrees, no kids, no husband and no family is just an illusion sold to them by the elites. Big businesses profit from women in the workplace and government profit from taxes they get from women. Feminism is the biggest money maker for the system. Feminism may be good for the workforce, but it is destructive for both men and women. Its socio-economic and political repercussions has real life implications for society.
By Sicebise Msengana
A Traditional Xhosa Man in a Postmodern World
Last week, I was asked about my views on modernity. My response was simple: I am a traditional Xhosa man living in a postmodern world. While I acknowledge the advancements shaping our era, I cannot say I support everything unfolding in this technologically driven age. Liberalism and multiculturalism, for example, often clash with my worldview.