Feminism Has Abolished Women



The implication of letting men identify as women, and compete in women’s sports and use women’s toilets and showers is that women are being made extinct.
The Illuminati Jews don’t want the goyim to reproduce. This means that woman’s  raison d’etre – marriage and motherhood — are being eliminated.
When that happens, so are women. YouTube is full of videos complaining that men don’t want marriage or children any more. The Illuminati have made these into a trap for men.
Women have been conned into abandoning their biological role and are left with nothing but a gold watch at the end of an arid career. 





The bestselling author of Theology of Home, Carrie Gress shows that fifty years of radical feminism have solidified the primacy of the traditionally male sphere of life and devalued the attributes, virtues, and strengths of women.

Feminism, the ideology dedicated to “smashing the patriarchy,” has instead made male lives the norm for everyone. After fifty years of radical feminism, we can’t even define “woman.” In this powerful new book, Carrie Gress says what cannot be said: feminism has abolished women.

Hulking “trans women” thrash female athletes. Mothers abort their baby girls. Drag queens perform obscene parodies of women. Females are enslaved for men’s pleasure–or they enslave themselves. Feminism doesn’t avert these tragedies; it encourages them. The carefree binge of self-absorption has left women exploited, unhappy, dependent on the state, and at war with men. And still, feminists cling to their illusions of liberation.

But there are real answers. Real answers for real women. Carrie Gress–a wife, mother, and philosopher–punctures the myth of feminism, exposing its legacy of abuse, abandonment, and anarchy. From the serpent’s seduction of Eve to Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein to Kate Millett’s lust, violence, and insanity to Meghan Markle’s havoc-ridden rise to royalty, Gress presents a history as intriguing as the characters who lived it. The answers women most desperately need, she concludes, are to be found precisely where they are most afraid to look.

Only a rediscovery of true womanhood–and motherhood–can pull our society back from the brink. And happiness is possible only if women are open to making peace with men, with children, with God, and–no less difficult–with themselves. For feminism’s victims, Gress is a welcoming voice in the darkness: The door is open. The lights are on. Come home.

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