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Culture War Roundup for the week of November 17, 2025

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Women in the military

I'm watching Avatar: The Last Airbender: that kid show from 2005 featuring the bald boy with a Reddit downvote on his face. I'm sure you've seen the memes.

It's a mostly tolerable show from a culture war perspective, the early 00s being a more innocent time, except for extreme girlboss feminism. Every few episodes, the writers repeat the trope where a male warrior says it's inappropriate and against the precepts to train women to fight — always in the most sniveling, dismissive, chauvinistic way possible — then he proceeds to get his butt kicked by a girl. Said male warrior, embarrassed, learns his lesson that gender roles are bad, m'kay.

Am I the only one who finds this line of thinking incredibly dumb?

And no, I'm not talking about women strength or endurance or bone fragility or whatever. Let's ignore that. That's not the issue here.

Let's concede, for the purposes of argument, that women and men have equal potential for different tasks, such as soldiering. Or, to steelman progressives, that a meaningful fraction of women are equal to men, and so those ones should be trained. (This is probably more plausible in a universe where 1% of the population has magical combat powers, like Avatar-land, but whatever.) I don't think it's true even in the real world, with firearms, but let's concede it.

The main reason to direct men to become soldiers, not women, does not lie there.

Soldiers, like every other job, work for the health of society. Soldiering does not exist for the self-actualization of the soldier. Neither is soldiering an end in itself. We have armies for the security and continuation of the country.

But the career of a soldier coincides with the fertility window of a female. If she is getting married, becoming pregnant, and having kids — things that are necessary for both the health of society and the self-actualization of the woman — her soldiering and child-rearing will come into conflict, even in peacetime. In wartime, however, her dying in battle will prevent a new generation from being born, and leave her orphaned children psychologically crippled.

The reality is that men are fairly expendable. Society can afford for 30% of young men to die in the trenches and recover fairly quickly; their widows receive help from the community to raise children, and later they marry older widowers. Meanwhile, if 30% of young women die, the population pyramid of the next generation will crater, and society will be burdened by orphans with lifelong mental problems due to attachment disorders, triggered by loss of mothers during infancy.

The only reason, I think, our society doesn't see this is that we haven't had a war with existential stakes since women joined the military in any appreciable numbers. Even during the most rigorous war in recent memory, Vietnam, the US army was <1% female, and most of them nurses.

Then again, a lot of my arguments could also apply against training women to be medical doctors and other all-consuming vocations. We do that. So maybe our society really is insane enough to send millions of 20yo women to get mowed down by drones in WW3.

I think it was CovfefeAnon who stated "The most radical position you can hold in modern politics is believing people before the 1960s were sane and had rational motivations for doing what they did." Well, I think armies throughout history were perfectly sane for not sending women to combat, even in roles where women could have been effective.

Am I the only one who finds this line of thinking incredibly dumb?

No. I’ve essentially thought the same thing forever.

I think it was Mike Huckabee who said when he was on the debate stage years ago, “… the military isn’t a social experiment. The military’s job is to kill people and break things…”

When you’re a society as affluent as the US is, you can afford to have your head deep in your own ass and believe all kinds of absurd nonsense like this when you have no real problems to deal with. People in third world countries don’t have time for this shit, so they get real logical and strait laced about the correct attitudes much easier when their daily bread and way of life is under threat.

I used to sometimes teeter around a bit in how I should view this. On the one hand they should be kept out of combat roles. On the other hand, if you’re stupid enough to sign up for the front lines, natural selection will fix the problem for you by eliminating people who think this way and it’ll strengthen future generations with less of those people anyway. So long-term it’s a win/win. Nature will beat you over the head with the correct answer whether you like it or not.

Militarily women have no business being a front line soldier. That’s a suicidal death sentence.

We all have complimentary roles to play for one another.

I really think the barrier to people accepting this (obviously correct) perspective is that while there are many, many, many important things that men can generally do better than women, there's almost nothing that women can do better than men except that it has to do with bearing and raising children. In which case they do shine!

But people notice this and fundamentally flinch away from the idea, because our entire generation has been raised to hate it and find it low-status.

If we flinch away from the idea, it is because we realize that such norms are incompatible with dignity of womanhood. If woman's sole appropriate domain is the bearing and raising of children, then Schopenhauer and Thales are substantially correct:

Because women in truth exist entirely for the propagation of the race, and their destiny ends here, they live more for the species than for the individual, and in their hearts take the affairs of the species more seriously than those of the individual. This gives to their whole being and character a certain frivolousness, and altogether a certain tendency which is fundamentally different from that of man; and this it is which develops that discord in married life which is so prevalent and almost the normal state.

[...]

It is only the man whose intellect is clouded by his sexual instinct that could give that stunted, narrow-shouldered, broad-hipped, and short-legged race the name of the fair sex; for the entire beauty of the sex is based on this instinct. One would be more justified in calling them the unaesthetic sex than the beautiful. Neither for music, nor for poetry, nor for fine art have they any real or true sense and susceptibility, and it is mere mockery on their part, in their desire to please, if they affect any such thing.

- Arthur Schopenhauer, On Women

There are three attributes for which I am grateful to Fortune: that I was born, first, human and not animal; second, man and not woman; and third, Greek and not barbarian.

- Thales

It is only the man whose intellect is clouded by his sexual instinct that could give that stunted, narrow-shouldered, broad-hipped, and short-legged race the name of the fair sex; for the entire beauty of the sex is based on this instinct. One would be more justified in calling them the unaesthetic sex than the beautiful.

I am reminded of AntiDem's advice to Nick Fuentes:

Since Nick Fuentes is young, he still can occasionally be blind to things like the sometimes-thin line between based and gay. So, to help:

Based: "Feminism has really hurt our women. It has turned them into what both God and nature never intended them to be, and it's making both them and us quietly miserable. I hope we can rescue them from it all soon - to heal their hearts and the relations between us, so we can be partners and helpmates again."

Gay: "Eew! Girls are icky! Get them away from me!"

It is only the man whose intellect is clouded by his sexual instinct that could give that stunted, narrow-shouldered, broad-hipped, and short-legged race the name of the fair sex

I know nothing about ole Artie there, but this is sounding very strongly gay. Have to go run off and look up "Schopenhauer sexuality" which is not a Google search I thought I'd be doing today:

Despite his later celebration of asceticism and negative views of sexuality, Schopenhauer occasionally had sexual affairs—usually with women of lower social status, such as servants, actresses and sometimes prostitutes.  In a letter to his friend Anthime he claims that such affairs continued even in his mature age and admits that he had two out-of-wedlock daughters (born in 1819 and 1836), both of whom died in infancy.  In their youthful correspondence Arthur and Anthime were somewhat boastful and competitive about their sexual exploits—but Schopenhauer seemed aware that women usually did not find him very charming or physically attractive, and his desires often remained unfulfilled.

Huh. So maybe more sour grapes than gayness there: "that bitch turned me down, well I don't care, women are all ugly in fact and stupid and dumb and don't care about important things like me and my guy friends do and they're smelly poopy-heads, why won't the girls give me a chance, I'm a nice guy! why can't I get a hot upper-class girlfriend instead of having to pay for sex?"

I get the distinct impression he would approve of the phrase "riding the cock carousel".

If we flinch away from the idea, it is because we realize that such norms are incompatible with dignity of womanhood.

Quite the opposite, insisting that we're equal is what is incompatible with the dignity of womanhood. If we're the same, but women fail to reach the same heights as men, that has far harsher implications than if we're different, and have different strengths. This is why we end up with "systemic sexism" and other epicycles to keep the theory alive, and to drive men and women even more at each other's throats (which really is the whole point of the equality meme to begin with).

Thales

Oh no, not a barely-out-of-the-bronze-age pagan!

If womanhood is synonymous with femaleness (that is, performing the biological role of the female sex), then woman has no more claim to dignity (that is, the natural sense which leads us to value man over animal and noble over savage) than any other mammal.

Oh no, not a barely-out-of-the-bronze-age pagan!

If you would prefer an abrahamic source:

[…] who has created me a human and not beast, a man and not a woman, an Israelite and not a gentile, circumcised and not uncircumcised, free and not slave.”

- fragment of a prayer, Cairo Geniza

If womanhood is synonymous with femaleness (that is, performing the biological role of the female sex), then woman has no more claim to dignity (that is, the natural sense which leads us to value man over animal and noble over savage) than any other mammal.

Sure it does. Any value that humanity has above other animals is completely dependent on motherhood, and is therefore subordinate to it.

Also, you haven't addressed anything I said in the previous comment.

If you would prefer an abrahamic source:

I think you'll need to be a bit more specific than that to move me.

Any value that humanity has above other animals is completely dependent on motherhood, and is therefore subordinate to it.

This, of course, is why garbage men and truck drivers are among the most admired and desirable professions.

If we're the same, but women fail to reach the same heights as men, that has far harsher implications than if we're different, and have different strengths.

The point is that, from a bioessentialist framework, the female role requires little to no particular strength of character. Pregnancy is a completely automatic process, caring for babies may be arduous but is not particularly skilled work, and if you believe the hereditarians, the actual raising of children has little effect on how they turn out. Additionally, none of the above tasks is particularly suited to cooperative effort, stunting the potential for camaraderie; as the saying goes, nine women can't make a baby in one month. Thus, if woman's sole or primary duty is to fulfill the female biological role, she will be naturally baser and ignobler than the men she pairs with, who must cultivate virtue in themselves to become capable protectors and providers.

The question, then, is how much impact has this lack of incentive for virtue had on the evolutionary development (or lack thereof) of the female mind. While I personally believe that ingrained differences in potential for virtue between men and women are relatively minimal, what differences exist are surely exaggerated by restrictive norms surrounding women's options for societal contribution.

This, of course, is why garbage men and truck drivers are among the most admired and desirable professions.

Not everything is a market, and so not all value is derived from supply and demand. Otherwise jokes like this or this would not land.

The point is that, from a bioessentialist framework, the female role requires little to no particular strength of character. Pregnancy is a completely automatic process, caring for babies may be arduous but is not particularly skilled work, and if you believe the hereditarians, the actual raising of children has little effect on how they turn out.

I'd say in a pure bioessentialist framework there is no such thing as a "female role". You either are a man or a woman, which may have implication as to your strengths and weaknesses, but what you do with that is up to you.

But in any case, I reject the claim. The biological function of conceiving and giving birth might not require any particular strength of character, but motherhood absolutely does. Patience, wisdom, or love, are all strengths of character.

Additionally, none of the above tasks is particularly suited to cooperative effort, stunting the potential for camaraderie; as the saying goes, nine women can't make a baby in one month.

That's... a bizarre way to look at it. There's plenty of room for camaraderie with the father of the children, and with the extended family, and I don't see how the inability to ship off the production of babies to China, to be done at scale, would be a detriment to that.

Thus, if woman's sole or primary duty is to fulfill the female biological role, she will be naturally baser and ignobler than the men she pairs with, who must cultivate virtue in themselves to become capable protectors and providers.

The question, then, is how much impact has this lack of incentive for virtue had on the evolutionary development (or lack thereof) of the female mind. While I personally believe that ingrained differences in potential for virtue between men and women are relatively minimal, what differences exist are surely exaggerated by restrictive norms surrounding women's options for societal contribution.

You're using some strange definition of virtue, because I don't think men's physical strength, ability to rotate shapes in their mind, hand-eye coordination, or what have you, are virtues, so I don't really see a reason to disagree with the statement that the difference in men's and women's potential for virtue are minimal. But if you do associate virtue with these traits than I think you're pretty obviously wrong, social constructivists have been trying for decades force equality, but sex-differences keep reasserting themselves. The idea that there currently are any restrictive norms on women is absurd on it's face.

Finally, you're still not really addressing my point, you're just elaborating on yours. I said that if according to you men and women are the same, and should be judged by the same criteria as men, any failure to perform at the same level as men is proof that they're inferior. It is therefore your framework that robs them of their dignity.

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