
wizardcel
Lolicon, anti aoc advocate and sexual marxist.
★★★★★
- Joined
- Feb 15, 2018
- Posts
- 3,994
I like reading a lot of classical literature written by men who were alive thousands of years ago, and it always surprises how modern their problems look. It's as if nothing has changed from hundreds of years ago to our contemporary days. Anyway, I've purchased the confessions of Saint Augustine and I'm reading the intro to get familiarized with his work. And this is what it says:
"... After he ( Saint Augustine) had become bishop, the counselling of his married couples in trouble occupied much of his time and care, and he was well aware of the inconstancy of the human heart, of the tendency to have minor and trivial affairs which he once stigmatized as a disease, and of the existence of husbands who knew their wives to be unfaithful to them but nevertheless found their embraces too enthralling to part with. Some men treated their wives as harlots."
This is was at the height of patriarchy, in the middle ages. Even back then women were cucking their husbands with other men, and those husbands did nothing. Instead of punishing the femoids, they went to Augustine in search of counselling and advice. The pagan era was no different either.
"Some men treated their wives as harlots". Of course, because that's what they were. I think it's fair to assume that traditionalism -- at least as we've come to understand it, in the form of male dominance and female subservience -- has never existed. Women have always run the show, they've been running it since day one.
Don't fall for the bullcrap that your grandparents say. Your grandpa was probably being cucked by his wife and he pretended that he didn't know. Those bluepilled oldfarts know nothing. Go straight to the source, classical literature, to know how things really played out.
"... After he ( Saint Augustine) had become bishop, the counselling of his married couples in trouble occupied much of his time and care, and he was well aware of the inconstancy of the human heart, of the tendency to have minor and trivial affairs which he once stigmatized as a disease, and of the existence of husbands who knew their wives to be unfaithful to them but nevertheless found their embraces too enthralling to part with. Some men treated their wives as harlots."
This is was at the height of patriarchy, in the middle ages. Even back then women were cucking their husbands with other men, and those husbands did nothing. Instead of punishing the femoids, they went to Augustine in search of counselling and advice. The pagan era was no different either.
"Some men treated their wives as harlots". Of course, because that's what they were. I think it's fair to assume that traditionalism -- at least as we've come to understand it, in the form of male dominance and female subservience -- has never existed. Women have always run the show, they've been running it since day one.
Don't fall for the bullcrap that your grandparents say. Your grandpa was probably being cucked by his wife and he pretended that he didn't know. Those bluepilled oldfarts know nothing. Go straight to the source, classical literature, to know how things really played out.