Matt Forney said:
AnonymousBosch said:
Matt Forney said:
When a target not only is unafraid of them but mocks them and fights back, they wilt like delicate little flowers
We fought back? I didn't think we even got past the mockery stage.
Social justice warriors are so emotionally fragile that re-Tweeting and Favoriting their remarks on Twitter upsets them and makes them have panic attacks. There was one Tumblr feminist who wrote about
she spent twenty minutes crying because Hugo Schwyzer favorited one of her Tweets. Whenever feminists Tweet at me and I favorite/re-Tweet their comments, they always go completely nuts (examples
here and
here).
In this chick's mind, re-Tweeting her Tweets and following her account unironically is tantamount to gang raping her.
The majority of Millenials strike me as improperly-socialised. It's like they exist in a bubble, and are so fragile their minds can't process anything unfamiliar, including the fact that other people exist as autonomous human beings and not little puppets that dance exactly the way they believe they're supposed to.
I suspect it's a development of overprotectiveness and helicopter parenting that took hold in the 90's: these children were never exposed to anything that wasn't pre-screened to not injure them physically or emotionally, and weren't able to learn from their mistakes because they weren't allowed to make them, or their failures were excused for them.
They're uncomfortable with other people because they weren't able to learn social norms - including how to make a goddamn genuine facial expression to a camera - and unable to truly connect due to dismissive-avoidant attachment styles built out of fear of needing other people who might eventually reject them, a style cultivated to deal with narcissistic parents, particulary, I suspect, careerist single mothers.
As ridiculous as it to us, and other properly-socialised Millenials, everything and everyone else is 'creepy' to them, in a real and genuinely-traumatic way. All Tinder really is a bunch of girls looking for an actor to lay their pre-approved fantasy over. Dance, puppet, dance. Roosh has correctly-identified this as being a 'good clown'.
When I saw the 'Personal Space Box' on here the other day, I wasn't the slightest bit surprised. The thing to remember when gaming any girl under 30, is the majority of them have this box around them: you just don't see it.
One other fascinating trait: they dream of fame, but are uncomfortable with any kind of attention. Look at the pictures of female celebrities under 30, and see how many actually look poised and comfortable with the camera versus how many are wearing weak, false smiles or exaggerated gurning faces like Miley Cyrus. So, you're right, when you turn the spotlight on them, of course their natural instinct is to wither from the light, because then someone might make value judgements about them.
On a related note, when I spoke about telling ghost stories to girls for game purposes a few weeks back, I mentioned the best kicker is to always suggest that, maybe, just maybe,
it followed you home. It freaks girls the fuck out. Explains your twitter responses.