Avatar
curt finch
5bbb392c31d8df7eea9c15f88a19832b397d5d480d141ef143f98945f545001d
on alby

soon there will be devices that can read your mind everywhere you go and the thought police will take care of it for us

yeah unfortunately all over the floor

don't get too excited

#Bitcoin has convincingly break above 74k

at food poisoning all night

bring gun

shoot me

gm

should I switch from primal to Alby?

right now primal crashes whenever I try to see replies on my Android. in other words click on the Bell

if any #primal people want to help me get my app to stop crashing you have to DM me cuz I can't see responses because when I click the little bell it blows up

smart people like you should poop out as many children as they possibly can and I hope that you should be so lucky

I have three kids and three grandkids and I wish it was 30 and 30

I could work in a daycare and have way more fun

artificial intelligence will allow us to be morons even faster

Replying to Avatar Lyn Alden

Masculinity is under attack lately. But I like masculinity actually.

I know, shocker.

The fact that so few U.S. presidential or vice presidential candidates have had beards in modern history is funny to me. I think men usually look better with facial hair, and the older they get the more likely that is. 20-somthing or 30-something strong jaw dudes often look great without facial hair. But when men are 50 or 60 or whatever, that salt-and-pepper beard is so rad and almost always beats the no-beard weak-chin look. I actually think it's weird that neither Biden nor Trump have a beard. JD Vance looks like shit without a beard. Growing a beard is the best move he ever made, imo. And yet the media is like, "A vice president candidate with a beard?"

Masculinity can be rough around the edges, but that's what we need sometimes. It's usually balanced by other societal aspects. In some societies it gets extreme and needs to be pushed back on. My husband has a temper, but his temper is part of his power and why he impacts the world to the extent that he does. So when I interact with his temper, it's not about eliminating it, but rather it's about appreciating it but making sure it's directed in the right direction.

Masculinity and femininity are good. They don't need to be forced. Nature is diverse but society tries to categorize nature into narrower categories. Feminine men and masculine women are cool too. But that doesn't change the fact that masculine men and feminine women are also cool.

I grew up kickboxing and submission grappling. I'm a tomboy. I'm a feminist in terms of promoting equal gender rights. But at the end of the day, I appreciate masculine men. I was never attracted to men who were weaker than me in any capacity, but rather was always attracted to men with gravitas.

The easiest approach to life is to 1) respect biology as it is but then 2) also appreciate the divergences that inherently exist within it.

Trying to equalize nature is to fight against it. And yet trying to eliminate the diversify of nature is also to fight against it.

Nature is fascinating, and I do my best to appreciate it.

facial hair is the only thing men have left

in the '80s the supreme Court said you can't hold people against their will unless they've committed a crime and crazy people had typically committed no crime

so they shut down the nut houses and let them all loose and now they live in the forests all through my beloved City of Austin Texas

the city greenbelts are full of needles and shopping carts

everybody blamed Ronald Reagan at the time but really it was the supreme Court and in fact it was a liberal Justice that was the swing vote on the supreme Court that caused this problem

the case that started the problem was that some man had put his wife and stepchildren in The nut House on trumped up evidence that they couldn't fight because they didn't seem credible after they'd been in the asylum for a while

apparently this was a common way to get rid of an annoying wife and her annoying kids