Exploring 50 Hilarious, Heartwarming, And Bizarre Airport Moments Captured In Photos
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A remainder to watch what you post!
Prior to the Internet, the majority of idiotic things uttered were simply forgotten, as if they had vanished into thin air. Oh no, it's gone.
But now that everyone's voice is amplified because of Twitter, there are so many incorrect opinions—the majority of them are drenched in testosterone—that it would be a tragedy to let them fade away unappreciated. The 'Hot Masculinity Takes' community steps in to help with that.
The true genius of the "Hot Masculinity Takes" collection resides in the lack of irony used when being silly and degrading to women. In 2021, four years after the page was started, the founder tells Bored Panda that its first intention wasn't to make fun of "toxic masculinity."
Hot Masculinity Takes has established itself as a page we don't deserve but one that we need—now, more than ever before. From terrible Andrew Tate wannabes spewing impossibly ridiculous thoughts to gigachads," who, as you'll see in today's list, equate Socrates to the man himself, the site has demonstrated its worth.
"Welcome to the Alpha Zone," my dear readers so keep scrolling and enjoy.
Although the phrase "toxic masculinity" has recently gained popularity among feminists, many people will be surprised to learn that Shepherd Bliss, a psychology professor at John F. Kennedy University in Orinda, California, actually first used it in the mythopoetic men's movement of the 1980s and 1990s in order to describe his "father's militarized, authoritarian masculinity."
Nobody in those days would have imagined that Ernest Hemingway, one of America's best authors and the quintessential man's man, could be "the avatar of toxic masculinity." Hemingway may be just as detrimental to young men's manhood now, depending on who you ask, as rock and roll was to our grandparents.
It's not surprising that in recent years, people's perceptions of masculinity have changed, with more people connecting it with aggression and disregard for others.
Like anything else, the desirableness of masculinity relies on how it is defined. Highlighting that inappropriate behavior should not be solely attributed to a person's gender but rather to their psychological makeup.
Otherwise, males can begin to worry that once-respected qualities like assertiveness, speaking truth to power, or standing up for what's right have been "villainized in our conflict-avoidant society."