User blog comment:Cdc1998/Random Questions from Charles/@comment-1824274-20130804195943/@comment-1824274-20130807225918

I agree. I am all for womens' rights and all that jazz, but sometimes feminists can be the biggest, and most easily offended hypocrites in the world. For example, I was talking to this girl, and somehow the conversation ended up heading in the women/men's rights direction. I said that men get a lot of the manual labor jobs (like construction workers, garbage collectors, etc.) because they are physically stronger than women. She freaked the FUCK out at me. I tried telling her that I meant that men naturally have bigger muscles than women do, and I wasn't trying to be sexist at all. And she was all like, "Are you saying that women can't lift heavy objects? Blahblahblah" and she kept twisting my words around, making it seem like I was saying something horribly offensive to her. I said sorry, which I don't think I had to give her an apology. Still, at least she left me alone after that lol.

My point is, that hardcore feminists can get way too easily offended and make men look like monsters in an arguement. It can also irritate me that sometimes feminists actually are anti-male, and advocate for discriminating against males, more or less.

Feminists can also be hypocrites sometimes. This happens on the guys' side as well, so I'm criticizing this flaw in our society, more or less, but I just wanna point this out: Why do men have to hold doors open for women? Why is it the man who usually proposes, not the woman? Why does the man have to ask the woman out on a date, and risk rejection? See what I'm getting at? BOTH sides are sexist in a way, if you really think about it.

Sorry to all the ladies on here, I was just trying to say how it can irritate me how hardcore feminists twist words on people and make them look like they're against womens' rights when they're really with their cause. Don't let this comment make you think that I'm sexist, because I'm really not. I was just stating my views on this age-old flaw in American society.