animucel
homucel
★★★
- Joined
- Jan 25, 2018
- Posts
- 244
Schools cover everything, "sexual education"(which is basically just how-to on how to put penis in vagina without STDs), biology, physics, mathematics, sport, pretty much everything. In school they will even warn children of "pedophiles".
However, in no school on Earth do people teach children how to get a wife, girlfriend, a partner. No one explains how to make yourself attractive to the opposite sex. Not even parents will tell their children anything except the most bluepilled useless advice.
Why do schools so actively avoid the science of attraction and finding a partner? There's plenty of scientific peer-reviewed studies done on the subject. It could be incorporated into biology for example. I don't know of any school, be it elementary, middle school/junior high, high school, or universities to touch this topic. Only top-level scientists with doctorates ever dare to touch it, it isn't taught to undergraduates anywhere despite overwhelming scientific evidence e.g. http://jonathanstray.com/papers/Langlois.pdf . Maybe to some psychology majors in some universities.
Is it supposed to come absolutely naturally to people? Why is that topic avoided pretty much everywhere? Is it considered taboo? The more people know about this, the better for us. We need to get blackpill out.
However, in no school on Earth do people teach children how to get a wife, girlfriend, a partner. No one explains how to make yourself attractive to the opposite sex. Not even parents will tell their children anything except the most bluepilled useless advice.
Why do schools so actively avoid the science of attraction and finding a partner? There's plenty of scientific peer-reviewed studies done on the subject. It could be incorporated into biology for example. I don't know of any school, be it elementary, middle school/junior high, high school, or universities to touch this topic. Only top-level scientists with doctorates ever dare to touch it, it isn't taught to undergraduates anywhere despite overwhelming scientific evidence e.g. http://jonathanstray.com/papers/Langlois.pdf . Maybe to some psychology majors in some universities.
Is it supposed to come absolutely naturally to people? Why is that topic avoided pretty much everywhere? Is it considered taboo? The more people know about this, the better for us. We need to get blackpill out.