Wednesday, November 15, 2006

On The Verge Of History?

With ol Jorge's boys being kicked out of the Capitol by a fed-up American Electorate (far too late in my humble opinion), it was understandable and indeed expected that a huge sense of reilief and euphoria swept the globe. A major part of the revolution in Washington is that Congress is set to get its first-ever female Speaker. Naturally, this development has provoked joyful choruses from oppressed womenfolk the world over, who see it as a stepping stone for a first female President of the United States.

Even with this in mind though, I was sorely underprepared for the the back page of This Day on Saturday, November 11, 2006 which contained an article titled "On The Verge of History". Not only did the piece claim that women were better at delivering results, setting goals, etc. than men, it went further to claim women were better leaders than men, period.

I'm no chauvinist (which would normally mean I am) and I'm truly all for womens' rights, but before the bra-burning brigade dismisses all men have done with a wave of the hand, let me chip in my two cents for my maligned species. Yes, men have been responsible for many major disasters, and have led humanity to the brink of extinction on more than one occassion. However, many of the worst have had women vociferously cheering them on.

Sani Abacha had Maryam on standing ovation duty, Eva Perron (forget Madonna's version) gleefully bragged about her collection of thousands of pairs of shoes while the poor in her country starved, Eva Braun was there to massage Adolf Hitler's temples whenever the pressures of trying to enslave the world threatened to overwhelm him, and Marie Antoinette was immortalised, then beheaded (or was it the other way round?) for her statement that if the poor couldn't afford bread, then they should eat cake! The list could go on forever.

Conversely, I suppose Martin Luther King, Mahatma Gandhi, and Jesus Christ must have been women in drag, such were their leadership skills.

The funny thing is this - whenever women begin spouting their demands for equality and so on, they tend to draw the line when it comes to paying for dinner and the movie. They'll insist to the death that those are "men's jobs".

Women already wield far too much power in the world as it is. For, while we learned to run fast, climb trees, ride bikes and so on all in a bid to use our physical prowess to impress girls, they were being taught to use subliminal imagery and psychology to control us. Which is why all the muscle in the world won't stop her from wathcing that sappy romantic movie while your football match is on. And when she demands you sit beside her and forget about the Champions League/World Cup Final, you'll mumble and mutter then plonk your ass down on the couch and beg for popcorn with an idiot grin on your face. Yet they're asking for more direct power.

And they call us "power hungry"?

7 comments:

Chxta said...

I think I once had a post that relates very well with the last paragraph here...

Anonymous said...

I always wonder why they choose to call me rude when I refuse to pay after a meal?...We're both equal, aren't we?...Seems like they do not want all the bad things that come with inequality and rightly so, but they also want to keep the good ones except for the feminists. I love the women by the way!

Anonymous said...

he hates madonna, but his iyawo made him watch! http://toksie.blogspot.com/2006/11/see-me-see-trouble-madonna-invades-my.html

Nilla said...

Very interesting posts. I like it.
But while your claiming many of the bad leaders in the past had women by their side. You dont want to acknowledge some of the good ones had women by their sides too.

The Law said...

Aye, Nilla, but you will recall that the post isn't about the good guys, but about how women almost never claim the "credit" for their part in evil schemes...
:D

Nilla said...

lol. Who wants to claim something bad? None I guess.

Bébé's History said...

I have to agree with you. I'm bothered women cry out against inequality but are comfortable with the idea that paying for dineer etc is a 'man's job'. I'm so proud of the progress women have made, but my womenfolk embarass me when it comes to this. Who says men too don't want to feel pampered?

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